Abstract
The Babatha archive contains thirty-five legal papyri dating from 94 to 132 CE. They belonged to a Judean woman Babatha, from Maoza on the south-eastern shore of the Dead Sea, where date cultivation was a valuable cash crop. The Salome Komaïse archive, also concerning a family of date farmers until the kingdom became the Roman province of Arabia in 106. These papyri provide a rich array of evidence relating to the life of Babatha, Salome Komaïse and her mother Salome Grapte, and of other women, Judean and Nabatean, in this context. Particularly noteworthy is that women possessed considerable wealth, in cash and real property, and regularly acted as business-women, including by loans to their husbands. The papyri also reveal seizure of assets and frequent recourse to litigation by these women in defence of their rights. Although this was a patrilineal and patrilocal culture, the papyri provide striking examples of potent female agency, as women deployed and protected their wealth by every legal means.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 362-393 |
Number of pages | 32 |
Journal | Dead Sea Discoveries |
Volume | 26 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 15 Nov 2019 |
Keywords
- Babatha
- Salome Komaïse
- Dead Sea
- Female agency
- Legal papyri
- Archival ethnography