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1Images
Bibi Maryam's sale document, 1920
Bibi Maryam, daughter of Sharif Khan, and her son (son of the late Asad Allah Bayg) sell some orchards to Karbalayi Haydar and Husayn Jan, sons of the late Mashhadi, in exchange for sixty-four tumans. Tax and other expenses are the responsibility of the buyers and the detriment fee is one hundred dinars and some wheat.
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195Images
Financial transactions
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46Images
Financial transactions
Documents, with Zahra's seal, addressed to Arbab Jahangir for payments from 10 to 50 tumans
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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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Khanum's promissory note, 1919
Khanum’s promissory note, which includes prices for two sets of china dishes, thirty regular and thirty deep plates; as well as a request for payment of one tuman and eight thousand dinars
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Marriage contract of Bibi Jan and Mulla Qanbar, 1918
Marriage contract of Bibi Jan, daughter of ‘Ali Bayg (son of the late Darvish Bayg), and Mulla Qanbar, son of Mulla Husayn. Mahr includes thirty tumans, carpets worth fifty tumans, copperwares worth fifty tumans, and gold worth ten tumans.
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Marriage contract of Khavar and Haydar, 1919
Marriage contract of Khavar, daughter of the late ‘Ali Akbar, and Karbalayi Haydar, son of the late Karbalayi ‘Ali Quli; the mahr is fifty tumans, some gold worth ten tumans, some copperware worth five tumans, a carpet worth five tumans, a male servant/slave worth five hundred tumans, one-sixth of a house in Faridun Bayg along with a piece of land adjacent to it, and one female slave, dated February 16, 1919. On December 18, 1925, Khavar settles her mahr with her husband for two thousand [dinars] and some sugar cubes as he has taken her several times for pilgrimage to the holy shrines in Iraq.
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Mirza Baqir's petition about the death of his wife and child, 1919
Mirza Baqir, an employee of the Finance Ministry in Kirman, claims that while he had left Hutkan to collect his wages in Jiruft, Mirza Muhammad ‘Ali from Sarbanan had taken the writer's wife and his two children along with their household furnishing to his home. A few days later, Mirza Baqir's wife passed away and his children were sent to Hutkan on a pack animal. One of them stopped drinking milk and died eight days later. He is asking for justice.
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Mirza ‘Isa Khan's list of expenses, 1884
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Regarding ‘Ali's claim and Sahib Jan's condition, 1918
‘Ali claims that Husayn Jan, son of the late Mashhadi Zaynal, owes him twenty tumans. Sahib Jan, daughter of the late Nazar ‘Ali Khan and Husayn Jan’s mother, pledges to pay this amount within four months, with the condition that ‘Ali swears in front of Aqa Sayyid Muhammad Baqir in order to receive the money.