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Note, 1917
Draft of a note about paying a debt and settling an account in the presence of a few people
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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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Complaint, 1910
A complaint regarding Husayn's intercourse with Qurban's wife
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Beating wives, 1909
Akbar Qazzaq (cossack), who returned from the battle in Tabriz, beats his wives everyday
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Woman's murder, 1911
The body of the daughter of Haji Mulla Bashi from Taliqan was found by police. Her husband, Aqa Mirza Ibrahim from Taliqan, is arrested for her murder. He had been suspicious of his wife's relationship with his nephew, Hamid Allah, and asked her father to settle the mahr and agree to divorce. The second piece of news from a few days later is about Hamid Allah's arrest.
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About Muzaffar Nizam’s will, 1922
‘Asim al-Saltanah claimed that the late Muzaffar Nizam appointed him to execute his will, which includes paying for performing prayers and fasts on behalf of Fatimah Khanum for twenty years, and also giving one kharvar [unit of weight] wheat to the late Muzaffar Nizam's nanny every year
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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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News related to the arrest of a Bakhtiyari man, 1911
News related to a Bakhtiyari man, published in issues 53 to 56 of Iran-i naw: A Bakhtiyari man, called Amir, was arrested for kidnapping a woman. He was released after it became clear that the woman was his mut‘a wife. The Trade Association of bazaar representatives visited the Cabinet and discussed the issue of the Bakhtiyari man and another incident near a pistachio garden. Sardar As‘ad confirms the man’s innocence, and refutes the pistachio garden incident altogether.