רשומה קשורה ל-מכתב: T-S AS 156.237 + T-S AS 156.238
מכתב T-S AS 156.237 + T-S AS 156.238- ציטוט
- S. D. Goitein, India Book vol. 7 (unpublished) (in Hebrew).
- Location in source
- ז70א
- ז70ב
- Relation to document
- מהדורה
- ציטוט
- S. D. Goitein, "Portrait of a Medieval India Trader: Three Letters from the Cairo Geniza,"Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 50, no. 3 (Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 1987), 449-464.
- Relation to document
- Digital Translation
- תרגום
- ציטוט
- S. D. Goitein, unpublished editions.
- Location in source
- Relation to document
- מהדורה
Translator: Goitein, S. D. (in English)
T-S AS 156.237 1r
T-S AS 156.237 recto
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[Your servant took notice of... and your yearning] for him, a feeling shared by me. [May God ordain that]
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prosperity and health prevail in your court and grant in his grace that I be united with you. As to what you have m[entioned]
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in your kind letter about your longing to meet me, I have an even larger part and a greater
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share of this. In God all matters are united. The reason for writing this letter is to tell your excellency what
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happened to me on this voyage. In my p[revious] letters to your excellency I informed you
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about my travel to Sindabur. God granted me safety, I finally arrived in al-M[alībā?]r and
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bought what God, the exalted, made available, to the extent reported in my previous letters.
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We intended, on our way home, to travel to Aden, but riots and bloodshed occurred,
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and [who]ever was in the town fled. The [shipmas]ter, namely, 'All Nawak, wan[ted] also to flee, but I discovered this
T-S AS 156.238 1r
T-S AS 156.238 recto
- [and informed X. about it], but he did not believe me. We loaded the
- textiles and the iron during the night, for he (Nawak) had the power to keep us back [by refusing to sail]. Finally, we all fled to Faknur. I had left
- some of the pepper and many of the smaller items with Jacob Ibn Thābit. We arrived
- in Faknur, where ʿAlī Nawak disembarked and remained, while we went on in the same ship to Kulam and stayed there for some time.
- When the night of ... arrived, we loaded and set sail, 35 days before New Year.
- The captain had been ill while still in town, but we sailed for ten days.
- When we encountered a large pusht (a reef, or another underwater obstacle), water being five fathoms high, and did not know whether this was the Fal (the northern end of the Laccadive Islands) or not,
- God granted us safety, but the captain had a stroke and died. We threw his body overboard into the sea. So the boat remained
- without a commander and a . . ., and we had no charts. A crowd
- in the ship was afraid the ship would be lost, if it landed in an Arab country. However, if we returned to
- India, there too the same might happen. They got the upper hand and returned us to Kulam. We gave up hope of saving our goods.
- After twenty days we arrived in Kulam, the place we feared. But God granted us
- delivery immediately. The .. ., the .. ., and the manager came on board and took
- the ship from us, confirming its rights to its proprietor, being afraid of ʿAlī Nawak.
- They provided us with water and wood. Two captains travelled with us, after they had signed documents (confirming their obligations) towards us,
T-S AS 156.238 1v
- and we set sail. We arrived in Aden in the shortest possible time, prior to all others. I sold the
- iron for a good price, 20 dinars a bahār. I had with me 72 bahār and 50 separate pieces, 30 mann
- saqat and 40 mann clove. After customs I had obtained 1,500 dinars
- [and] a lot in other currencies. I had planned to travel home, but learned that a bahdr of pepper cost 35 dinars (in Aden). I could not
- tarry so long until I could buy pepper in Aden (for a reasonable price). Having sought God's guidance,
- I decided to travel to Faknūr in the same boat in which we had arrived, for it had been blessed for me.
- I rented from them storage space for 150 bahārs, 100 for pepper and 50 for various other goods. For the 100 bahār for pepper,
- I paid 90 mithqals of Adenese coinage. Sheikh ʿAlī Ibn al-Kūfī and
- Sheikh Bundār had stipulated with them (the captains) for me that I would not pay them a dirhem until I had bought the pepper myself.
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I sent with Sheikh Abu 'l-Karam and Sheikh Abu 'l-Surūr three loads of brazilwood and with them 27
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less a quarter Maliki dinars for the custom duties and . . . made of lālas, 50 red furjiyyas (robes open in the front) in mats,
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and ... a necklace made of Sīlī (Ceylon?) beads. Please take note of this. Also with Sheikh Abu 'l-Husayn Zayd
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Ibn Abū Manṣūr, the Alexandrian, ten lālas robes. Take note. Accept my
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greetings. And greetings to the family [the writer's wife], to Sheikh Abū Isḥaq and to Abū Naṣr
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... and all those you care about.
T-S AS 156.237 1v
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Sheikh ...
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...., May your well being increase and never diminish.
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The date of this letter is Wednesday, 29th Ab.
- To the illustrious Sheikh, my lord ʿArūs, son of Joseph (may he) r(est in) E(den)
- May God prolong his life and make his honoured position and welfare permanent.
4. His servant, may he become his ransom, ʿAllā[l] (or: ʿAllā[n]), son of Ḥassūn (may his) e(nd be) g(ood).