After her first husband’s death she eventually remarried, but her second marriage was not a success (made worse by this husband’s lack of business skill). She uses Jewish folk and religious teachings to illuminate her thoughts and internal life, showing how accessible stories and texts created a parallel, female tradition of moral and ethical instruction.īorn in 1645 into an affluent merchant family, Gluckel was married young and had 14 children, but remained active in the business affairs of her family.
Gluckel’s financial dealings, her piety and personal conduct, and the family and community events she describes bring us into a world we rarely glimpse. This memoir by a late 17th to early18th-century Jewish business woman is completely unique. Memoirs by pre-19th century women are exceedingly rare.