{{Short description|First businesswoman in history}}

'''Ahaha ''' ({{fl.|{{circa}} 1850 BC}}E) was an ancient Assyrian investor and one of the earliest documented businesswomen in history. She is known for falling victim to financial fraud and pleading to her brother to retrieve stolen silver for her.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Hardach |first=Sophie |date=January 13, 2021 |title=The secret letters of history's first-known businesswomen |url=https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20210111-the-secret-letters-of-historys-first-businesswomen |access-date=November 17, 2024|website=BBC |language=en-GB}}</ref> It is unknown if her pleas were answered.

== History == Ahaha lived during the Old Assyrian period and grew up in Assur. Her mother, Lamassī, raised Ahaha while her father was primarily stationed in Kanesh engaging in business affairs.<ref name="Women of Assur">{{Cite book |last=Michel |first=Cécile |author-link=Cécile Michel |year=2020|title=Women of Assur and Kanesh |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Women_of_Assur_and_Kanesh/ |isbn=9780884144557 |pages=411–414}}</ref> During this time, it was customary for women to head the household and make financial decisions while their husbands traveled extensively as merchants.<ref>Michel, C. (2020). [https://www.csmc.uni-hamburg.de/news/2022-06-20-thus-speaks-taram-kubi.html Women of Assur and Kanesh: texts from the archives of Assyrian merchants (Vol. 42). SBL Press.]</ref><ref> [https://images.cnrs.fr/en/video/7315 Thus speaks Tarām-Kūbi, Assyrian Correspondence Documentary. (2020). Video]</ref> Women operated joint-stock companies and dealt with loans, real estate, and market trends.<ref>{{cite web |author=<!-- not stated --> |date=June 20, 2022 |title=Thus Speaks Tarām-Kūbi |url=https://www.csmc.uni-hamburg.de/news/2022-06-20-thus-speaks-taram-kubi.html |website=University of Hamburg |location=Hamburg}}</ref> Assyrians made money facilitating trades between Babylon (and other foreign lands) and Kanesh, traveling in long-distance caravans funded by investors, who earned profits such as gold and silver when trades were successful.<ref name=":0" /> Following the death of her mother, Ahaha took control of the paternal estate.<ref name="Women of Assur"/>

== Investments == As a businesswoman, Ahaha made investments in various joint-stock companies, including one managed by her father's partner, Pazzur-Aššur. One of Ahaha's brothers, Buzāzu, also invested in the same joint-stock company and was tasked with managing his sister's share. However, Buzāzu exploited this responsibility by withdrawing her funds for his own business.<ref name="Women of Assur"/> In a financial venture common in the Old Assyrian period, Ahaha invested in a donkey caravan that was set to carry out a long-distance trade between Assur and Kanesh. When the caravan returned, Ahaha was promised a share of the profits in silver. However, Ahaha concluded that she had been defrauded when no silver was actually returned to her.<ref name=":0" />

== Fraud recovery letter ==

Cuneiform tablets excavated at Kanesh reveal that Ahaha suspected the fraudster was her own brother, Buzāzu.<ref name=":0" /> In a clay tablet written to her other brother, Ahaha begged for help:

<blockquote>I have nothing else apart from these funds... Take care to act so that I will not be ruined!... Let a detailed letter from you come to me by the very next caravan, saying if they do pay the silver... Now is the time to do me a favour and to save me from financial stress!</blockquote>

The letter highlights the urgency of the retrieval of her stolen silver and her request for a notice upon retrieval.<ref name=":0"/>

==See also==

*Ama-e *Ea-nāṣir *Complaint tablet to Ea-nāṣir *Ninšatapada

==References== {{reflist}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Ahaha}} Category:Ancient businesswomen Category:Ancient businesspeople Category:19th-century BC women Category:Ancient Assyrians Category:Ancient Mesopotamian women Category:Ancient merchants Category:2nd-millennium BC births Category:2nd-millennium BC deaths