List of names with Coptic numerals (perhaps contributors and their contributions).Condition: torn, holes, rubbed, faded, stainedLayout: 18 lines (recto); various lines (verso)
Recto: 4 lines of Arabic at the top of the page comprise a bill for building material with Coptic numerals. Recto and verso: Psalms 92:1-93:5.Condition: torn, holes, rubbed, stainedLayout: 13 lines + 4 lines (recto); 2 lines (verso)
Recto: calendar providing the molad and the qeviʿa of each month, and giving the dates of holidays. Verso: account in Arabic script, using Coptic numerals. The account is marked as deleted by a set of vertical strokes through the columns.Condition: torn, holes, stainedLayout: 15 lines (recto); 8-17 lines in 2 columns (verso)
F. 1: calendar for the 19-year cycle 259 (beginning in 1142-3 CE), giving for each year of the cycle the days of the week of the beginning of all months of the year, of holidays and fast days, and the date and time of the tequfot. F. 2: pen trials in Arabic script, pen trials in Hebrew script, and calculations in Coptic numerals.Condition: torn, rubbed, stainedLayout: 3-12 lines
Recto: jottings in Hebrew and Arabic. Verso: calendrical table with days of the week of the New Moon and holidays. Coptic numerals.Condition: slightly stainedLayout: 19 lines
Recto: work on calendar reckoning mentioning the maḥzorim, the moladot and the different kinds of Hebrew year; names of the months of the year and the numbers of their days in Ladino are written vertically on the leaf. There are also a few draft lines of some phrases contained in the petition that appears on verso, and a list of figures in the marginalia, as well as an endorsement of the petition that appears on verso. Verso: petition to Saladin from ʿAbd al-Bāqī b. Yaḥyā, the Jew, a resident of Malīj, in the province of al-Ḡarbiyya, in the Delta. Ca. 564-589 AH (= 1169-1193 CE). ʿAbd al-Bāqī b. Yaḥyā complains about the tax collectors, who forced him to leave his family and job and to work for them, and asks for the production of a rescript that would allow him to go back to his town and family. Arabic on recto: answer to the petition maintaining that since ʿAbd al-Bāqī b. Yaḥyā had some experience as a tax collector, he could not avoid this service.Condition: Torn, holes, slightly stainedLayout: 21 lines + marginalia (recto); 46 lines + marginalia (verso)