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Bihjat Khanum's claim regarding her mahr and alimony, 1926
Bihjat Khanum, daughter of the late Sayyid Muhammad, gives the power of attorney to Sayyid Sulayman in order to claim alimony and her mahr from her husband Tahmasb Khan, son of the late ‘Ali Mirza. Her husband has not paid any alimony since they married two years ago. Ayatollah Muhammad Ja‘far approves Bihjat Khanum's claims and rules against Tahmasb Khan, the husband.
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Claim against ‘Aziz al-Muluk Amir Ibrahimi, 1943
Aflatun Nafisi, on the letterhead of Kirman's Justice Department, claims that ‘Aziz al-Muluk Amir Ibrahimi has removed and taken away the pool stones, a water pipe, wheel of the well, and forty pieces of glass on the doors from the house they co-owned. He is asking her to bring back the mentioned items.
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Deed regarding Mahrukh Sultan and Mirza Hasan ‘Ali's debt to Karbalayi Mahmud, 1915
Deed certifying that Mirza Hasan ‘Ali, son of the late Mirza Muhammad Husayn from Shiraz, and Mahrukh Sultan, permanent wife of the late Mirza Muhammad Husayn (and daughter of the late Haji Mirza Muhammad Javad from Shiraz), owe fifty tumans to Karbalayi Mahmud Dukhtah-duz [the tailor/dressmaker], son of the late Muhammad Isma‘il from Shiraz. First, they agreed that the debt should be paid in three years, but then they settled it for one hundred dinars and one charik [unit of weight] of hard sugar.
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Dispute over a sale contract, 1915
Dispute between the inheritors of the late ‘Ali Akbar and the children of Maryam Sultan and Mashhadi Abu al-Qasim (Muhammad Isma‘il, Muhammad Ibrahim, Khanum Masha’ Allah, and Khanum Malik) over the sale contract of four-sixths of a house located in Sang Siyah neighborhood for two hundred tumans
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Dividing properties of Karbalayi Zayn al-ʻAbidin among his inheritors, 1838
Dividing the properties of the late Karbalayi Zayn al-ʻAbidin from Kumachal of Lahijan, including his land, farms, and buildings, among his inheritors, as follows: ʻAli Jinab receives two-elevenths of farm land in Kumachal, Shaykh Muhammad Mahdi and his sisters, Halimah and Sarah, receive four-elevenths of their father's land, Mulla Mahmud and his sister, Hajarah Khanum, receive three-elevenths of their father's land, and Karbalayi Mirza Baqir receives two-elevenths of the land. The details of their shares are described in the document.
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Dividing properties of the late Mirza ‘Abd al-Razzaq among his inheritors, 1910
Properties of the late Mirza ‘Abd al-Razzaq are divided among his inheritors, including the shares of Maryam Baygum, ‘Izzat Baygum, and Aqa Sayyid Hasan
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Haji Abu al-Qasim's invoices for children's expenses, 1905
List of what Haji Abu al-Qasim ‘Alaqah-band [the silk maker] has given to Khanum Batul for children's expenses
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Hajiyah Zivar Sultan and Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali's debts to each other, 1904 to 1906
Hajiyah Zivar Sultan's debt to Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali, known as Aqa Guli ‘Alaqah-band [the silk maker], which includes home expeditures worth two thousand dinars per tuman, living expenses worth one thousand dinars per tuman, several cash payments, and more living expenses worth three thousand dinars per tuman; Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali's debt to Hajiyah Zivar Sultan includes silk-making expenses, one thousand and five hundred dinars per month for rent for Mashhadi Muhammad Taqi ‘Alaqah-band's store, one thousand dinars per month for rent for Haji Mahmud ‘Alaqah-band's store, six thousand...
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Invoices from Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali for Bibi Hajiyah Zivar Sultan, 1903 to 1904
Invoices for what Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali, known as Aqa Guli, has collected for what is owed to Bibi Hajiyah Zivar Sultan, wife of the late Haji Muhammad ‘Alaqah-band [the silk maker], from March 30, 1903 to July 18, 1904
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Letter to Haj Mirza Muhammad Sahib Mushki, 1896
A letter to Haj Mirza Muhammad Sahib Mushki, a merchant from Isfahan, about the shares of inheritance and what has already been taken by [his] mother, late brother, and late sister, a list of all the properties and their values, and the unfairness toward the writer’s two children.