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Ghulam Husayn Khan's endowment, 1919
Ghulam Husayn Khan Sardar Mujallal, son of Haj Sulayman Khan Bihjat al-Dawlah, has transferred his properties near Kirman and Bam to Mirza Husayn Khan Sardar Nusrat, son of Murtaza Quli Khan Vakil al-Mulk, in exchange for some crystal candy. The condition is that Mirza Husayn Khan endows these properties after Ghulam Husayn Khan’s death. Nine hundred and thirty tumans is the annual budget to cover the costs of hiring people for reading the Qurʼan and rawzah, repairs, cleaning the tomb in Najaf, and expenses of coffee, sugar cubes, tobacco, charcoal, water pipes, and lamps. Aman Allah, son...
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Letter
Justifying himself in regard to the dispute between Mr. Kazimi and Sar Lashkar, the writer discusses his and his wife’s attempts to visit the addressee and his wife in Tehran, and complains that the addressee did not even say farewell. He also mentions the issue of buying salt water
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Sale document, 1841
‘Ali Akbar Bayg, Karbalayi ‘Abbas, and their two sisters, Karbalayi Ruqiyah and Zaynab (or Zinat), sold their paternal inheritance to Karbalayi Muhammad, son of Abu al-Qasim, for forty tumans and a detriment fee of ten tumans. These properties, after some transactions became the possession of Husayn, son of ‘Askar, who in turn sold them to Ishaq Khan for twenty-five tumans and a detriment fee of five tumans.