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Cambridge University Library

Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit.

WARNING: the Genizah Research Unit website is currently moving to a new address, with a slight change in style. The older website will no longer be updated and will eventually be taken off line. We apologise for any inconvenience this migration may cause.

Please visit the new website at this address and update your bookmarks and favourites accordingly:

http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/collections/departments/taylor-schechter-genizah-research-unit

 

 

The Taylor-Schechter Genizah Collection is a window on the medieval world and has been colourfully described as ‘a refuge for writings’ and ‘a battlefield of books’. Its 193,000 manuscript fragments, mainly in Hebrew, Judaeo-Arabic, Aramaic and Arabic, are an unparalleled resource for the academic study of Judaism, Jewish history and the wider economic and social history of the Mediterranean and Near East in the Middle Ages and Early Modern period. They shed light on the mundane as well as the religious and cultural activities of that world, since the Collection preserves a huge number of personal letters, legal deeds and other documents, alongside literary and sacred texts. The manuscripts were recovered from the Ben Ezra Synagogue in Fustat, Old Cairo, in 1896–7 by the enterprising Cambridge scholar Solomon Schechter with help from his colleague Charles Taylor. In the 1970s Cambridge University Library established the Genizah Research Unit to carry out a comprehensive program of conservation, cataloguing and research on the manuscripts, which is leading to all manner of important discoveries about Jewish religious, communal and personal life, Hebrew and Arabic literary traditions, and relations between Muslims, Jews and Christians from as early as the ninth and tenth centuries CE. The Genizah Research Unit relies upon external support for its projects.

Thinking about visiting the Collection? Please see our Frequently Asked Questions page first.

High-resolution images and detailed descriptions of more than 17,000 Genizah fragments from our Collections are now available on the Genizah section of Cambridge University Digital Library. Hundreds of new fragments are uploaded each month. Click here to see them.

 

April 2015's Fragment of the Month focuses on a shipping inventory from the Classical Genizah Period, which readers will find utterly absorbing... Click here to read it!

 

Life in Fragments: Stories from the Cairo Genizah, a 5-episode series for BBC Radio 3's 'The Essay'.
Produced by Nightjar, the show features five researchers from the Unit offering a personal take on life in Medieval Cairo. To listen to the episodes, click here.

The latest issue (April 2015) of Genizah Fragments, the Unit’s twice-yearly newsletter, is now available to read and download here.

 

Have you found our website or databases useful? Would you like to make a donation to further Genizah research and the production of online Genizah resources at Cambridge? You can now give securely online via the Cambridge University Development Office. Please follow this link.

 

Genizah Research Unit

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