Bat ha-Levi (12th-century), was an Iraqi Jewish scholar. She gave lessons to male students and had a remarkable position for a Jewish woman in 12th-century Iraq. [1]
Her name is not known, and she is known under the name Bat ha-Levi, meaning 'the daughter of the Levite'. She was the only child of Rabbi Samuel ben Ali (Samuel ha-Levi ben al-Dastur, d. 1194), the Geon of Baghdad. [2] [3] In the Medieval Middle East, education was normally low for Jewish women, but Bat ha-Levi was a famous exception. [4] She was active as a teacher and gave lessons to her father's male students from a window, with her students listening from the courtyard below. This arrangement intended to preserve her modesty as well as prevent the students from being diverted. [1]
A eulogy in the form of a poem by R. Eleazar ben Jacob ha-Bavli (c. 1195–1250), is believed to describe the virtues and wisdom of Bat ha-Levi. [1]
Her activities were reported in the medieval travel diary Petachiah of Regensburg.
She married one of her father's students, Zekharya ben Berakh'el, who died before her father did. [2] [3]
Madama Europa was the nickname of Europa Rossi, an opera singer, the first Jewish opera singer to achieve widespread fame outside of the Jewish community.
The Worms massacre was the murder of at least 800 to 1000 Jews from Worms, Holy Roman Empire, at the hands of crusaders under Count Emicho in May 1096.
Simon, son of Boethus was a Jewish High priest in the 1st century BCE and father-in-law of Herod the Great. According to Josephus, he was also known by the name Cantheras. His family is believed to have been connected to the school of the Boethusians, and a family whose origins are from Alexandria in Egypt.
Sara de Sancto Aegidio was a French physician.
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Qasmūna bint Ismāʿil, sometimes called Xemone, was an Iberian Jewish poet. She is the only female Arabic-language Jewish poet attested from medieval Andalusia, and, along with Sarah of Yemen and the anonymous wife of Dunash ben Labrat, one of few known female Jewish poets throughout the Middle Ages.
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The Daughter of Joseph of Baghdad was a Jewish mystic active in Baghdad in c.1121. She was the daughter of "Joseph, the son of the physician". The only source of information about her comes from a letter, written for a recipient living in the Egyptian city of Fustat soon after the events it describes. The story of the daughter was written on the back of a deed.