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Dispute between Bibi's inheritors and Mirza Abu al-Qasim, 1873
On May 16, 1870, Bibi [?] Khanum, the daughter of Muhammad Isma‘il from Shiraz and the wife of Sayyid Husayn the merchant from Shiraz, sold the houses located in the Sar-i Bagh neighborhood for three hundred and sixteen tumans to Mirza Abu al-Qasim, the son of Mirza Nur al-Din the merchant known as Hindi [from India]. After Bibi [?] Khanum's death, there was a dispute between her children -- Mah Baygum, [illegible], Gawhar Shad Baygum, Sayyid Mirza, Sayyid ‘Ali, and Mirza Aqa Dawlah [?] -- and Mirza Abu al-Qasim regarding the conditions of the mentioned sale document. According to the...
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Halimah Khanum's debt, 1870
Twelve tumans of [illegible] the merchant, who is a citizen of the United Kingdom, was lent to Halimah Khanum, the mother of Navvab Riza Quli Mirza, and it is required that she pay this back whenever asked.
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Burglary of a British woman's belongings, 1939
Report of the burglary of a British woman's belongings on the road from Baghdad to Kirmanshah; the thirty-two tumans estimated damage has been given to Haji ‘Abd al-Rahim, the British embassy's attorney
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Dispute between ‘Abd Allah Mukri and Izaq Bayg's wife, 1899
Petition by ‘Abd Allah Mukri to Mushir al-Mulk in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs regarding his request for the return of the property he had transferred to the British wife of Izaq Bayg. She initially agreed in exchange for receiving the money, but later declined and has since sold the property. Mushir al-Mulk writes to Mustashar al-Mulk requesting an investigation into the delinquency in regards to ‘Abd Allah Mukri's case and the consulate backing of Izaq Bayg's wife.