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Legal documents related to Zaynab Khanum
Includes: 1- Zaynab Banu, the daughter of Karbalayi Isma‘il, gives power of attorney for selling a property in Hismadin [Hisam al-Din?] in the village of Harzand-i ‘Atiq to her son, Amir Bayg (1882); 2- Zaynab Khanum has transferred her share of the Hismadin property, which she inherited from her father, to Mulla ‘Abd al-Karim in exchange for three thousand rials (1882); 3- Zaynab Khanum, the daughter of Karbalayi Isma‘il, and ‘Ali Bayg, the son of Shaykh Muhammad, sell their share of water from ‘Uryandibi [Ayrandibi] spring and a property to Karbalayi Bakhsh‘ali and Hasanquli, the sons of...
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Legal documents related to Zahra Khanum
1- Zahra Khanum, the daughter of Karbalayi Ibrahim, sells the usage of water from a qanat to ‘Ali Akbar, the son of Husayn, and Khalil, the son of Zayn al-‘Abidin, in exchange for nine tumans (1892) 2- Khalil, on behalf of Zahra Khanum (daughter of Karbalayi Ibrahim), and Husayn (son of Jabbar), on behalf of Parizad (daughter of ‘Abd Allah), buy a building, including the storage, the stable, the house, a bull, and two cows, for thirteen tumans, from Baqir, who represents himself and Sadiq (1895).
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54Images
Booklet of documents
Documents related to women are the following: seq. 23: "I, Haj ʻAli Asghar Bayg, officer at the royal post service, have received all the jewelry of my deceased wife, Nabat Khanum, which was left with the wife of Haji Vakil al-Dawlah for safekeeping, plus three documents that were not listed. December 29, 1886"; seq. 27: a few years ago, the deceased Nabat Khanum from Tehran, the wife of the deceased ʻAli Asghar Bayg, officer at the royal post service, had left 1000 tumans with Haji Aqa Muhammad Hasan Vakil al-Dawlah, representative of the government of the United Kingdom, who claims on the...
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23Images
Documents related to the conflict between the villages of Kahal and Alanjiq in Azarbayjan, 1869-1941
Documents related to the conflict between two villages of Kahal and Alanjiq in Azarbayjan, arising from disputes over land boundaries and the right to water. The conflict that proceeded over years is judged by the elders of the villages, government officials, landlords, and agreements are signed and sealed by the opposing parties. However, protests, petitions, transgressions of the borders and abuses of water rights. These become subjects of some of the reports and documents listed in this item.