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Deposition about two settlements, 1921
Khanum Suha, daughter of the late Sadr al-Atibba’, confirms that from now on, she has no rights to two settlements, one worth five hundred tumans and another worth one hundred and ninety tumans
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Deposition about recording a marriage, 1910
Sayyid Ahmad A‘mi [the blind] from Kazirun, son of Mirza Kuchak from Kazirun, testifies about his presence at the marriage ceremony between the late Hajiyah Zivar Sultan, daughter of Haji Muhammad Hasan the merchant, and Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin, son of Haji Muhammad Hasan, in August of 1904. The mahr was one hundred tumans and a volume of the Qur’an. Shaykh Lutf Allah, son of Haj Shaykh ‘Ali Muhammad, was the other witness to the marriage present at the Imam's courthouse.
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Testimony regarding Khanum Iran's debt
Testimony about the debt of Khanum Iran, daughter of Haji ‘Abd al-Rahman, to Haji Muhammad Hasan in the amount of six hundred tumans for women's clothing and gold jewelry; several women and men have signed the testimony
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Deposition about debt, 1900
Karbalayi Abu al-Qasim Nahhas [the copper seller], son of Karbalayi Zayn al-‘Abidin Nahhas, confirms that he owes two hundred tumans to his wife Bibi Ruqiyah, daughter of Karbalayi Muhammad Riza ‘Attar [the herbalist], which he will pay back in five years. He also puts one-third of a house in the Sarbagh neighborhood of Shiraz as a security deposit until he pays his debt completely.
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Nasr Allah's deposition, 1926
Nasr Allah states that he usurped a room that belonged to him and his sister, and that he will pay his debt in three settlements to Saham al-Shari‘ah (probably his sister's lawyer).
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Testimony of the daughter of the late Ra’is ‘Ali Zari‘ regarding her father's properties
Testimony of the daughter of the late Ra’is ‘Ali Zari‘ [the farmer], wife of Haji ‘Abd al-Husayn, regarding her father's properties, including his house, house furnishings, and at least two thousand tumans, that the other inheritors have kept because she was underage at the time of her father's death. Eleven people have signed the testimony, and have testified that Ra’is ‘Ali was a wealthy man and his daughter was an infant when he passed away.
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Deposition and settlement about husband's debt, 1913
Ruqiyah Sultan (permanent wife of Mirza ‘Abd al-Karim Khan Kaliskah-chi [the coachman] and daughter of the late Haji Muhammad Husayn, confirms that the document, about her husband's debt of five hundred tumans to her, is lost. Then she settles the debt with her husband for one tuman and one charik [unit of weight] of wheat.
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Petition to get back possessions, 1917
Petition by Aqa Buzurg Kharraz [the shoe seller], son of Karbalayi Mahmud Kharraz, to Hujjat al-Islam Aqa Sayyid ‘Ali, requesting to call the witnesses to testify that Aqa Buzurg's wife (daughter of Haji Mirza Baba) possessed his belongings listed in the document, which she denies. On the margin, names of the witness women are listed as: Khanum ‘Ismat (wife of Mirza Muhammad Baqir), Rubab Sultan (daughter of Muhammad Ibrahim from Shiraz), Khanum ‘Azra, and Khanum Hufi (wife of Mirza Muhammad Ja‘far Khan). Hujjat al-Islam's response is on the margin as well.
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Deposition about shares of inheritance and a will
Draft by Mashhadi Lutf‘ali and Mashhadi Ghulam ‘Ali, sons of the late Mashhadi Ghulam Riza, confirming their shares of their father's inheritance; additionally, Mashhadi Lutf‘ali confirms that his permanent wife, Khanum Safi, is the executor of his will and the guardian of his underage children, and if he dies before pilgrimages to Mecca and the shrines in Iraq, his wife, with his brother's supervision, should take his body to burry in Vadi al-Salam in Najaf.