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Dr. Mohamed Ahmed

Al Maktoum Associate Professor (Near & Middle Eastern Studies)
      
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Dr. Mohamed Ahmed

Al Maktoum Associate Professor (Near & Middle Eastern Studies)

 


Dr. Mohamed A. H. Ahmed is an Associate Professor in Middle Eastern Studies at the School of Languages, Literatures and Cultural Studies, Trinity College Dublin (TCD), and a leading scholar in the field of Arabic poetry in the Cairo Genizah. He currently serves as the Deputy Director of Research for the School, having also undertaken the role of Acting Director of Research. His career is dedicated to establishing new frontiers in Middle Eastern studies, utilizing complex manuscript discoveries to reveal the hidden literary and linguistic worlds of the medieval and pre-modern time. A core pillar of Dr. Ahmed's scholarship is his extensive research into bilingualism between Hebrew and Arabic. His expertise spans the sociolinguistic variation between the two languages, the typology of written code-switching, and the dynamics of script-switching in both Modern Hebrew and medieval Judaeo-Arabic texts. This profound interest in cross-linguistic cultural exchange is reflected in his acclaimed monographs, notably Arabic in Modern Hebrew Texts: The Stylistics of Exophonic Writing (Edinburgh University Press, 2019) and Iraqi Jews: From Baghdad to Exile (EMDCO Press, 2018). As a proven leader of high-impact international research, Dr. Ahmed is the Principal Investigator of the European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant project, "Arabic Poetry in the Cairo Genizah" (2020-2026). In this capacity, he successfully managed an interdisciplinary international team and supervised postdoctoral researchers, while also developing open-access digital humanities resources like the online index of Arabic poetry in the Cairo Genizah. His current ERC leadership builds upon a remarkable trajectory of securing highly competitive, externally funded grants, including a DFG Fellowship (2017-2020) hosted by the University of Cambridge and the Woolf Institute, and a Thyssen Foundation Fellowship (2015-2017), hosted by Berlin Free University. Dr. Ahmed is a prolific author with a publication record that includes five monographs and edited volumes (including three forthcoming), alongside over 25 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters. He has major forthcoming collaborative works under contract with Brill, including a landmark volume on Arabic Poetry in the Cairo Genizah. His standing in the field is further evidenced by his role as an invited reviewer for top-tier journals such as the Journal of Semitic Studies (Oxford University Press). Prior to his tenure at Trinity College Dublin, Dr. Ahmed served as a Research Associate at the Genizah Research Unit at Cambridge University Library and as a Visiting Researcher at the Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Cambridge. His strong academic foundation began at Mansoura University, Egypt, where he earned his BA in Oriental Languages in 2004, and his MA in Semitic Languages in 2010 (graded Excellent). He subsequently secured a highly competitive DAAD scholarship to complete his PhD at Leipzig University (Simon Dubnow Institute for Jewish History and Culture) in 2015. His doctoral dissertation, Arabic Use of the Iraqi Jewish Novelists: A Stylistic Analysis of Selected Early and Late Hebrew Novels, laid the critical groundwork for his ongoing, internationally recognized research into Hebrew-Arabic bilingualism.
  Arabic   Arabic Language/Literature   BILINGUALISM   bilingualism and multilingualism   Hebrew   Hebrew Language/Literature   Iraqi Jews   Judaeo-Arabic   Language and/or Literature, Poetry   Middle East Studies   Poetry Studies
Project Title
 Arabic Poetry in the Cairo Genizah
From
01-JUL-2020
To
30-JUN-2026
Summary
Poetry enjoys a special place in Arabic culture and literature. For centuries, Arabs of all faiths have considered poetry a key source for knowledge, intellectuality and wisdom. In the pre-Islamic era, poetry was considered as `the Arab knowledge" and `the Arab cultural archive", in which the social and cultural history, language, arts, music, religious and Arab"s human experience were stored and preserved. Being a part of Arabic culture, Jews of Arab lands equally enjoyed writing and reading poetry. APCG will investigate for the first time a hitherto neglected collection of Arabic poetry fragments written in Hebrew script (in Judaeo-Arabic), which has been preserved in arguably the most important Jewish treasure trove: the Cairo Genizah. The fragments, numbered in the hundreds, constitute a unique source for understanding medieval and Early Modern Egypt from three main perspectives: Arabic studies, Jewish social and cultural studies, and anthropological studies. The core aims of the project are: " to make the entirety of Arabic and Judaeo-Arabic poetry in the Cairo Genizah accessible to both academic scholars and to the public in a comprehensive database and in critical editions; " to reveal, through the study of poetry, hitherto hidden aspects of social and cultural history of the Jews in the Middle East with regard to literacy, education and intercommunal relations; " to explore hierarchies, interpersonal relationships and the social function of poetry in medieval and early modern Egypt through the study of Genizah poetry. To achieve the planned main objectives, APCG carries out a thorough interdisciplinary study of Genizah"s Arabic poetry. This approach involves research from philological, linguistic, literary, historical and anthropological perspectives.
Funding Agency
ERC
Programme
Starting Grant 2019
Project Type
Grant
Project Title
 From Tuscany to Alexandria: Arabic and Hebrew letters in the Prize Paper Collections, hoated by Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Cambridge/ UK.
From
01-FEB-2017
To
January 2020
Summary
From Tuscany to Alexandria: Arabic and Hebrew mercantile letters in the Prize Paper collections The Prize Paper Collections in the National Archives in Kew Gardens contain a sack full of business letters in Arabic and Hebrew script, which were seized in 1759 by British seafarers as part of the loot on a Venetian ship bound for Alexandria. Virtually untouched since that time " most of the letters are still unopened and have been since they were archived in the 18th-century " they present a most exciting opportunity to investigate the interaction between Christian, Jewish, and Muslim merchants across borders in the 18th-century Mediterranean. The letters, numbering in the dozens, are particularly valuable as very little comparative material in Arabic script from that period is known and virtually nothing has been edited and published on the topic. Traders make an extremely important subject for studies on historical interfaith relations for a variety of reasons. Firstly, it is usually business activity that creates the only opportunity for people of different faiths to meet in a neutral place and work for a common benefit. Commerce therefore really establishes an arena in which people deal with each other regardless of their respective religious background. Secondly, being part of a community of merchants also provides a facet of identity to people that may become as important as their religious identity. Merchants therefore often feel as much part of a perceived community of traders as they see themselves as Jews, Muslims or Christians.
Funding Agency
DFG, Germany (€ 147600)
Programme
Fellowship
Project Type
salary-award
Project Title
 "Code-switching in Religious, Secular and Philosophic Judaeo-Arabic Texts". Hosted by Freie Universität Berlin, Germany.
From
To
Summary
Funding Agency
Thyssen Stiftung Fellowship (€ 24000)
Programme
Fellowship
Project Type
Research
Project Title
 Arabic Use of the Iraqi Jewish Novelists, hosted by Leipzig University/ Germany.
From
01-OCT-2011
To
01-SEP-2015
Summary
Funding Agency
DAAD PhD Scholarship (€ 81800)
Programme
PhD Scholarship
Project Type
salary-award
Project Title
 DAAD (GERSS) Scholarship
From
11/2009
To
04/2010
Summary
Funding Agency
DAAD (€ 6000)
Programme
Visiting student
Project Type
Research

Page 1 of 2
Details Date
Invited Chapter Author, "Musical Lives: Volume 1 Identities, Communities, & Encounters" (MUSLIVES project, King's College London). Chapter: 'Rhythm, Dance, and Desire: A Lost Song Poem from the Medieval Cairo Genizah'.
Invited Peer Reviewer for Northern European Journal of Language Technology (Linköping University Electronic Press)
Invited Guest Interlocutor, "Musicality of Texts" Workshop, Music Department, King's College London. September 2024
Expert Academic Reviewer and Evaluator for a highly competitive annual Research Fellowship in Dublin Since 2022
Invited Guest Editor, Special Issue (in Arabic and English) on the Cairo Genizah for Ostour, a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies (ISSN: 2305-2473).
Invited Book Reviewer, Journal of Jewish Studies. Reviewed: Mordechai Akiva Friedman, A Dictionary of Medieval Judeo-Arabic. Vol. 69(1), pp. 212-214. (DOI: 10.18647/3366/jjs-2018).
Invited Chapter Author, "Multiscriptism in Literary Texts and Contexts" (Palgrave). Chapter focuses on Arabic/Hebrew script switching in Arabic poetry from the Cairo Genizah.
Invited External Reviewer for a Senior Academic Promotion application to Full/Associate Professor, The American University of Kuwait (AUK).
Invited Book Reviewer, Journal of Semitic Studies (Oxford University Press). Reviewed: Boris Liebrenz, Arab Traders in Their Own Words: Merchant Letters from the Eastern Mediterranean Around 1800. Vol. 69(2), pp. e42-e44. (DOI: 10.1093/jss/fgae011).
Invited External Examiner for a PhD Defense, University of Limerick (Declined due to other commitments).
Invited Speaker, "Arabic Business Letters in the Prize-Papers Collection," Cairo Conversations (funded by Mellon Grant), The American University in Cairo, Egypt. Dec 2018
Invited Peer Reviewer for Al-Masaq: Journal of the Medieval Mediterranean (Routledge / Society for the Medieval Mediterranean)
Invited Speaker, "The Cairo Genizah and Arabic Literature: Kalila wa-Dimna as an Example," Al-Maktoum College of Higher Education Online Middle Eastern Studies Webinar. Jan 2022
Invited Speaker, "The Cairo Genizah as a Treasury of Arabic Literature," The NYUAD Institute, Abu Dhabi, UAE. Feb 2023
Invited Speaker, "Arabic elements and Arabic interference in modern Hebrew texts written by Iraqi Jewish authors," Semitic Philology Seminar, Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Cambridge. Oct 2017
Invited Book Reviewer, Journal of Modern Jewish Studies (Declined due to other commitments).
Invited Speaker, "The Cairo Genizah and Arabic Literature: Kalila wa-Dimna as an Example," Research Colloquium Kalila and Dimna", AnonymClassic, Freie Universität Berlin. Dec 2021
Invited Speaker, "Cultural Translation in Iraqi Jewish Fiction: Possibilities and Problems," Seminar for Semitic and Arabic Studies, Freie Universität Berlin. Jan 2017
Invited Peer Reviewer for Journal of Semitic Studies (Oxford University Press)
Invited Chapter Author, "From the Battlefield of Books" (Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit, Brill). Chapter 12: 'Six Leaves of the Arabic Kalila wa-Dimna in Hebrew Characters'.
Invited Peer Reviewer for HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research (De Gruyter Brill)
Invited Reviewer for an Arabic translation of poems by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill from Irish (via English), as part of the Galway 2020 European Capital of Culture project "Aistriú: crossing territories, languages and artforms".
Invited Speaker, "The Art of Arabic Correspondence in the Ottoman Empire," Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies (FAMES), University of Cambridge. Apr 2016
Language Skill Reading Skill Writing Skill Speaking
Arabic Fluent Fluent Fluent
English Fluent Fluent Fluent
German Fluent Medium Medium
Hebrew Fluent Medium Medium
Details Date From Date To
Poetics and Linguistics Association (PALA) 2016 2020
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF PROFESSORS OF HEBREW 2019
Irish Network for Middle East and North African Studies 2023
Judaeo-Arabic Documents Intercepted in the Year 1800: Prize Papers on Three Algerian Jews and the Ship 'Venus'., Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, Leiden:, Brill, 2028, -, Notes: [A book contract has been signed with Brill], Critical Edition (Book), APPROVED
Arabic Poetry in the Cairo Genizah, Mohamed A. H. Ahmed & Dr Ben Outhwaite (Cambridge), Brill, 2027, -, Critical Edition (Book), APPROVED  URL
Arabic Clerical Letters in the Prize Papers Collections, Dr Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, Leiden:, Brill, 2027, -, Notes: [A book contract has been signed with Brill], Critical Edition (Book), APPROVED
Between Literature, History, and Anthropology Fragments of Arabic Poetry in the Cairo Genizah, Mohamed A. H. Ahmed Ahmed Sheir, a special issue (in Arabic and English) on the Cairo Genizah for Ostour, Doha, Ostour, 2026, [Mohamed A. H. Ahmed], Notes: [Invited to be the editor of a special issue (in Arabic and English) on the Cairo Genizah for Ostour, a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies (ISSN: 2305-2473).], Item in dictionary or encyclopaedia, etc, ACCEPTED
Mohamed A. H. Ahmed & Sally Abed, Cultural Insights from Arabic Poetry in the Cairo Genizah, Review of Middle East Studies, 2026, Journal Article, IN_PRESS
Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, Arabic Poetry in the Cairo Genizah Documents: A Comparative Historical Study" (in Arabic), Ostour, a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, 2026, Journal Article, SUBMITTED
Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, Between Literature, History, and Anthropology Fragments of Arabic Poetry in the Cairo Genizah, 1st May 2025, 2026, TCD, Mohamed A. H. Ahmed Ahmed Sheir, Ostour, (Special Issue), Meetings /Conferences Organised, SUBMITTED
Mohamed A. H. Ahmed Sally Abed(ed.), Anthropology of Texts: Crossroads and Connections, The Review of Middle East Studies (RoMES)., TCD, (Special Issue), 1 - 2 August 2024, Cambridge University Press, 2026, Proceedings of a Conference, IN_PRESS
Mohamed Ahmed, Ben Outhwaite, Bilingualism and Script-Switching in a Poet"s Notebook from the Genizah, Zutot, 2025, p1 - 14, p1-14 , Journal Article, PUBLISHED  DOI
Six Leaves of the Arabic Kalila wa-Dimna in Hebrew Characters in, editor(s)Nick Posegay , Magdalen M. Connolly , and Ben Outhwaite , From the Battlefield of Books: Essays Celebrating 50 Years of the Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit, Leiden, Brill, 2024, pp187-190 , [Mohamed A. H. Ahmed], Book Chapter, PUBLISHED  TARA - Full Text  DOI
  

Page 1 of 4
Sally Abed & Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, Loss and Alienation in Arabic Poetry from the Cairo Genizah, Between the Personal and the Public: Representations of Crisis in the Cairo Geniza Fragments, in the International Congress on the Study of the Middle Ages, Leeds University, 1st - 4th July 2024, 2024, Oral Presentation, PRESENTED
(ed.), The Cairo Genizah and the Preservation of Egyptian Cultural Heritage, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, 28th " 29th February, 2024, Proceedings of a Conference, PRESENTED
Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, 'Hidden Literature', Dublin, Scotland, UAE, Spain, USA, 2022, -, Exhibition, EXHIBITED
Mohamed Al-Temawy, 'Exit in Five Days (in Arabic)', 1st, Abu Dhabi, Thaqafa, 2022, -, Fiction and creative prose, PUBLISHED
Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, 'Wasaya Al-Tufan (Poetry Collection in Arabic)', Cairo, Al-Said, 2021, -, Poetry, PUBLISHED
Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, 'Nurani Stork (Novel in Arabic)', Dubai, Thaqafa Publishing House, 2020, -, Fiction and creative prose, PUBLISHED
Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, 'Likorna (Novel in Arabic)', Dubai, Thaqafa Publishing House, 2018, -, Fiction and creative prose, PUBLISHED
Mohamed Ali Hussein Ahmed, Likourna: The Story of the Lost Letters, 2018, -, Miscellaneous, PUBLISHED
Mohamed A. H. Ahmed, 'Ghurbat Al-Sufi (Poetry Collection in Arabic)', Cairo, Rawafed, 2018, -, Poetry, PUBLISHED
Mohamed Ali Hussein Ahmed, My Pala Mother Tongue, 2016, Poster, PUBLISHED

  


Dr. Ahmed's primary research agenda centers on recovering the marginalized literary and social histories of the pre-modern Middle East. He is the Principal Investigator of the groundbreaking European Research Council (ERC) project 'Arabic Poetry in the Cairo Genizah' (2020-2026). Through this flagship initiative, he spearheads an international research team dedicated to making the entirety of Arabic and Judaeo-Arabic poetry within the Genizah fully accessible to global scholars and the public via a comprehensive database and definitive critical editions. By utilizing poetry as a historical lens, Dr. Ahmed's research pioneers new approaches to uncovering the hidden socio-cultural dynamics of Jewish communities in the Middle East. His work reveals the complex realities of historical literacy, education, intercommunal relations, and the nuanced social functions of poetry within the hierarchies of medieval and early modern Egypt. Expanding his archival focus across the Mediterranean, Dr. Ahmed is a leading authority on the Arabic and Judaeo-Arabic documents preserved in the UK National Archives' Prize Papers Collection. Supported by a DFG (German Research Foundation) Fellowship (2017-2020), his project "From Tuscany to Alexandria" systematically explored these highly significant maritime archives. He is currently producing comprehensive editions of clerical Arabic letters within the collection under contract with Brill. Building upon major archival discoveries, Dr. Ahmed is currently producing the first comprehensive critical edition, translation, and linguistic analysis of previously unexplored 18th-century Algerian Judaeo-Arabic letters from the Prize Papers. This landmark volume, currently under contract with Brill, offers an unprecedented window into the socio-economic history, linguistic realities, and expansive trans-regional networks of Jewish merchants operating across North Africa, Italy and the broader Mediterranean basin. Underpinning Dr. Ahmed's archival discoveries is a profound methodological expertise in historical sociolinguistics and Hebrew-Arabic bilingualism. This theoretical framework was significantly advanced during his Thyssen Foundation postdoctoral fellowship (2016-2017) at Freie Universität Berlin, where he investigated the mechanics of code-switching in religious, secular, and philosophical Judaeo-Arabic texts. Today, his research continues to interrogate the phenomena of mixed-language texts, written code-switching, and script-switching.