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Deposition of Rubabah, Kulsum, and Halimah Khatun, 1918
Deposition of Rubabah Khanum, Kulsum Khanum, and Halimah Khatun Khanum, daughters of the late Mashhadi Isma‘il Sandali-saz (chair-maker), regarding receiving their share of paternal and maternal inheritance from their brother, Aqa Mahmud, including household furnishings, copperware, dishes, clothing, and the shop's assets, with the exception of two pieces of land. They have settled their share with him in exchange for some nabat (crystal sugar). The two pieces of land remains shared by the siblings and its income will be divided among them.
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Fatimah Baygum's power of attorney to Mirza ‘Abd al-‘Ali, 1837
Fatimah Baygum, the daughter of Haji Mirza Muhammad Husayn, gives power of attorney to Mirza ‘Abd al-‘Ali concerning the rental and sale of two shops in the Suq-i Kabir of Isfahan, a cookery and a book-binding shop between the grocery and medicinal herb shops in the Masjid-i Qadim [Old Mosque] neighborhood.
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Letter, 1915
About receiving the addressee's letter and items, some complaints, a request for a wool outfit, ‘Amid Lashkar's visits to Haji Mirza ‘Alinaqi, and sending extra money to the house
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List of ‘Ali Akbar 's assets
List of the late ‘Ali Akbar's belongings drafted by Haji ‘Ali the retailer, including his shop's goods, what he is owed, his debts, and what is related to Khums [one-fifth], compensations, and his wife's mahr.
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Petition by Mir Kazim the grocer
Mir Kazim the grocer writes to Hujjat al-Islam to tell him that he had to sell his sugar cube shop to provide for his family, that he has lost all his capital, and while he has opened a grocery shop, he is still unable to afford the cost of living, despite having sold his household furnishings, and even his wife's clothing, three years ago. He has been so desperate that has even pondered killing himself and his family. He requests assistance.
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Settlement of Shaykh Ghaffar's inheritance, 1918
Settlement of the late Mashhadi Ghaffar ‘Attar (herbalist)’s son, Aqa Abu al-Qasim, and wife, Fatimah Khanum, on behalf of herself and their underage daughter (Sadiqah Khanum), with Karbalayi Riza, Mashhadi Ghaffar's brother, over the herbal shop and its revenue in exchange for four hundred fifty-two tumans
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Will and settlement of Mirza Ibrahim with his wife and children, 1877
Mirza Ibrahim the merchant, the son of Haj Mir Husayn, transfers all of his belongings, including his house, garden, the shops in Sarab, and the bath, to his three sons, Karbalayi Mir Aqa, Aqa Mir Baqir, and Aqa Mir Abu al-Qasim in exchange for a pair of leather shoes worth five thousand dinars and one man [unit of weight] of wheat, provided that he benefits from the income of the above properties while he is alive and that after his death, his sons pay one hundred tumans to his two daughters (fifty tumans each), Saltanat Khanum and Sitarah Khanum, and spend one hundred tumans on [Mirza...