The Ottoman Genizah

The Ottoman Genizah

From Ottoman History Podcast by Ottoman History Podcast

May 23, 2026

About this episode

Jane Hathaway discusses the insights gained from Ottoman-era documents found in the Cairo Genizah.

with Jane Hathaway hosted by Maryam Patton | What can a single, discarded scrap of paper reveal about life in Ottoman-era Cairo? In this episode, Jane Hathaway discusses her open-access book Ottoman-Era Documents from the Cairo Genizah . A genizah is a storeroom or repository where Jewish communities preserved worn-out texts and papers, especially those containing the name of God. Long famous for its medieval Jewish materials, the Cairo Genizah also preserves a rich and still understudied corpus of later Arabic- and Ottoman Turkish-script documents. The conversation explores some of this archive’s unexpected Ottoman afterlife, from Sharia court summaries and commercial records to petition letters, Sufi poetry, and an ilm-i hal primer on Islamic practice. The book, which presents the documents fully transcribed and translated with a scholarly commentary, sheds light on Jewish merchants and bankers, Ottoman officials, port customs in Damietta and Alexandria, sugar supplies bound for Istanbul, and the dense networks linking Cairo to the wider empire, and much more. The conversation also invites us to reflect on archives themselves: how documents survive, how scholars decipher them…

People in this episode

Host: Maryam Patton

Guest: Jane Hathaway

Topics covered

  • Ottoman history
  • Cairo Genizah
  • Jewish history
  • archival studies
  • Islamic practice
  • Sufi poetry

Keywords

  • Ottoman
  • Cairo Genizah
  • Jewish merchants
  • Sufi poetry
  • Islamic practice
  • archival research
  • historical documents

Mentioned in this episode

Books & works: Ottoman-Era Documents from the Cairo Genizah

Places: Cairo, Damietta, Alexandria, Istanbul

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