Search
-
1Images
Asiyah Baygum Khanum receives her mahr and share of inheritance, 1921
Asiyah Baygum Khanum (daugter of Aqa Sayyid Ismaʻil Mariyanaji) has received all her mahr recorded in her marriage contract, plus her inheritance share of one eighth of her husband's (the late Karbalayi Khudabakhsh Mariyanaji) properties. She has received this from Haj Aqa Muhammad Razavi (son of Haji Aqa Hasan) Shari‘atmadar (the local religious notable), who was her husband's will executor. She confirms that she has received all that was her due, including her mahr and the one-eighth of Karbalayi Khudabakhsh's properties (from the house, household furnishings, gardens, and the rest).
-
1Images
Sale document and settlement between the daughters of Gawhari Khanum, 1908
Sale document and settlement between the children of Gawhari Khanum: five newly built shops in the backside of Mirza Kazim's Saray, close to Shahzadah Husayn and the Karavansaray gate, belong to the five daughters of Aqa Mirza Ismaʻil Farid al-Dawlah, namely, Batul Khanum, Rubab Khanum, Rabiʻah Khanum, Munavvar Khanum, and Maʻsumah Khanum. Each of the daughters owns part of the shops and also they are owners of a mercery, a grocery, and two stands in Hamadan's Chahar Suq. Because some people claimed the shops on backside of Mirza Kazim's Saray and because two daughters are underage...
-
1Images
Letter requesting confirmation of Mirza ʻAli Khan Mustawfi Bashi's transfer of his properties to his wife, 1896
Letter requesting confirmation of Mirza ʻAli Khan Mustawfi Bashi's transfer of all his belongings and properties to his wife before he had passed away. The writer emphasizes that Mirza ʻAli Khan had included all buildings, animals, and household furnishings in this tranfer; that the rest of his inheritors have no claim on these properties; any such claim on their part is not valid. It requests that the addressee confirm the truth of this statement in case there is need for it; dated September 1896.
-
1Images
Gawhari Khanum's will, 1923
Gawhari Khanum (daughter of Haj Zu al-Riyasatayn) makes her daughter, Batul Khanum, the executor of her will so that after Gawhari Khanum's death Batul Khanum has to sell the three-sixths of the mills in Murad Bak valley, or buy that share, and spend the money for the expenses in the year of Gawhari Khanum's death. Seven hundred tumans of subtenancy should be paid for fifty years of fasts and prayers. Five hundred tumans should be paid for the expenses of carrying the corpse to the holy cities in Iraq. If this was not possible, the corpse should be carried to Qum and be burried next to the...