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Affidavit
Affidavit of the elders from Dumchal, Kumachal, and Kanaf Gurab villages regarding Mashhadi Mulla Baba Dumuchali, father of Haj Ramazan Dumuchali, being the only inheritor of Mulla ‘Ali Akbar, his uncle. Seven people confirmed this statement, and also stated that Mashhadi ‘Ali Khan [illegible] was not Mulla ‘Ali Akbar's inheritor.
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Affidavit, 1846
Affidavit of more than fifty residents of Karvan, Faridan, and other villages regarding the transfer of the ownership of a honey farm in Khvansarak and another farm at Dalan Kuh mountain from Amir Muhsin Sultan ‘Arab to his inheritors, Mirza Muhammad, Muhammad Riza, Muhammad Isma‘il, and their sister.
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Settlement between Gawhar Baygum and her brother, 1928
Settlement between Gawhar Baygum, daughter of Mirza ʻAbd al-Husayn Sabbagh from Khuzan, and her brother, Mirza Ibrahim from Khuzan, over Gawhar Baygum's commitment to pay twenty-five tumans to her brother from their father's inheritance whenever he needs and asks for it.
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Settlement between Rustam and Mashhadi Yusuf, 1883
Settlement between Rustam, with power of attorney transferred from his wife, the daughter of Haj Karam, and Mashhadi Yusuf, her brother (on behalf of her other brother, Muhammad Jaʻfar), over receiving ten tumans for the loss she claims from her mother's and father's inheritance.
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Muhammad Shah's decree about Mulla Ismaʻil's pension, 1840
Copy of [Muhammad Shah's] decree determining that twelve tumans of Isfahan's tax revenue be paid to Mulla Ismaʻil, son of Mulla Abu al-Hasan Barfurush, and his other inheritors for subsistence. Muʻtamad al-Dawlah was assigned to take the pension annually from Isfahan's tax revenue. The Shah's officers were also assigned to cancel the same amount from Mazandaran's tax revenue, because after Mulla Abu al-Hasan's death, Sayyid Husayn Saravi had assumed no inheritors for Mulla Abu al-Hasan, so he revoked the pension of Isfahan and instead added it to Mazandaran's tax revenue for himself.
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Settlement between Haj Habib's inheritors and Parizad, 1895
Settlement of Haj Habib's inheritors, Muhammad Husayn, Qadir Khanum, Khanum Buzurg, Rubabah, and Gawhar (their mother, who is the guardian of her underaged children, Quli Khan and Balqays Khanum), with Parizad, Haj Sayyid ʻAli's mother, over their share of Bazlabad village for seventy-two Ottoman lira.
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Settlement between the inheritors of Haj Husayn Urnadi and Haj Sayf al-Dawlah, 1905
Settlement of the inheritors of the late Haj Husayn Urnadi with Haj Sayf al-Dawlah, exchanging five different properties for five thousand tumans, which was paid in cash. The inheritors include: his oldest son, Muhammad Hasan, his daughters, Karbalayi Javahir, Karbalayi Sahib, Kishvar, Khadijah, Farkhundah, and Rubabah (with their husbands' permission), his permanent wives, Karbalayi Shahr Banu, Karbalayi Mihr Banu, Sahib Sultan, and Shaykh Ziya’ al-Din on behalf of his two underaged children.
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Affidavit, 1895
Affidavit of a few religious scholars confirming the right of Muhammad Husayn, known as Aqa Pasha son of Haj Habib, to receive half of Mahi Khanum's assets, which he did not receive even after filing a case with the government. Four men, named Muhammad son of ʻAli, Amin al-Raʻaya Muhammad al-Musavi, Mirza ʻAli Hakim [the physician], and Malik al-Tujjar, have sealed the affidavit.
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Sale agreement between Darvish Hashim and Darvish Ramazan, 1916
Darvish Hashim, son of the late Darvish Baqir, who is the executor of his brother (the late Darvish Qasim)'s will, on behalf of his underaged niece, settles a share of water from a farm's qanat with Darvish Ramazan, son of the late Darvish Husayn, for four tumans.
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Will of Gawhar Khanum, 1905
The will of Gawhar Khanum, wife of the late Haj Habib. The will specifies that a trustworthy person is paid three hundred tumans to go on Hajj on her behalf, one hundred and forty tumans for someone to perform forty-one years' worth of prayers for her and to fast for forty-one months on her behalf, and sixty tumans for her funeral expenses. Gawhar Khanum advises that her son, Muʻtamad al-Sultan Muhammad Husayn Iqbal-i Divan, should supervise the affairs.