Search
-
1Images
Marriage contract of Sughra and Hashim, 1881
Marriage contract of Sughra, daughter of Asad Allah Runani, and Hashim, son of ‘Ali Rurani, with a mahr of eighteen tumans and one-twelfth of a residential property located in the Masal region.
-
1Images
Marriage contract of Umm Kulsum and Muhammad ʻAli, 1861
Marriage contract of Umm Kulsum, known as Bibi, daughter of the late Muhammad Rahim from Qaynan in Isfahan, and Muhammad ʻAli, son of the late ʻAli Akbar, resident of Shinabad village. The mahr is twenty-two and one-half tumans. Following this contract, the groom settled with the bride over some property for ten tumans of the mahr.
-
1Images
Marriage contract of Sakinah Bagum and Sayyid Hasan, 1886
Marriage contract of Sakinah Bagum, daughter of Haj Mirza Habib Allah, and Sayyid Hasan, son of Sayyid ʻAli. The mahr is one hundred tumans, which remains the groom's debt, and one-third of Dizaj Param village, which the groom's father willingly gives as a part of the mahr.
-
1Images
Marriage contract of Sharaf Nisa’ Khanum and Imam Virdi Bayg, 1719
Marriage contract of Sharaf Nisa’ Khanum, daughter of Mirza Baqir Durmini, and Imam Virdi Bayg, son of Haj Muhammad Hasan Durmini. The mahr is forty tumans. The groom additionally agreed to buy some goldware worth ten tumans for the bride whenever he could afford it. With his father's consent, the groom transferred the ownership of one-sixth of his parents' residential building to the bride as part of the mahr.
-
1Images
Marriage contract of Sughra and Haj ‘Ali, 1879
Marriage contract of Sughra, daughter of Haj Ghulam Riza Runani, and Haj ‘Ali, son of ‘Ali ‘Askar from Runan. The mahr includes eighteen tumans, one-twelfth of a residential building in the Tahunah region of Runan village, and some land. The mahr remains groom's debt. On the margin: "On February 3, 1898, Sughra Khanum settled some of the land with Haj ‘Ali in exchange for ten loads of wheat and some other land."
-
1Images
Marriage contract of Maryam Baygum and ʻAli Muhammad, 1921
Marriage contract of Maryam Baygum, daughter of Muhammad Taqi Bazzaz [the textile seller], and ʻAli Muhammad, son of ʻAbd al-Karim from Habibabad. The mahr is twenty-six tumans and two thousand five hundred dinars. The bride settled with the groom, exchanging two thousand five hundred dinars of her mahr for some land and properties in Habibabad village.
-
1Images
Marriage contract of Fatimah Sultan and Asad Allah, 1909
Marriage contract of Fatimah Sultan, daughter of Mulla Husayn, resident of Runan village, and Asad Allah, son of Ustad ʻAli, resident of the same village. The mahr is twenty-six tumans and two thousand ten shahis, part of a house in the Darb Maydan neighborhood of Runan village, and five misqals [unit of weight] of gold.
-
1Images
Marriage agreement of Hajar and ʻAbd al-Rahim, 1925
Marriage agreement of Hajar, daughter of Mulla Nawruz ʻAli from Khuzan, and ʻAbd al-Rahim, son of the late Karbalayi Muhammad ʻAli from Khuzan. The mahr includes twenty-five tumans, part of a residential building in the Shamsabad neighborhood of Khuzan village, one-half of an acre in [illegible], thirty tumans to buy a property, a pair of gold earrings worth ten tumans, and ten tumans as the bridal gift.
-
1Images
Marriage contract of Sakinah Khatun and Muhammad Husayn, 1852
Marriage contract of Sakinah Khatun known as Khanum Jun, daughter of Ustad Aqa, and Muhammad Husayn, son of Muhammad ‘Ali Sarraf. The mahr is twenty tumans. The groom settled one-twelfth of his residential property located behind the Shah ‘Ali Bath, transferred to him by his mother, in exchange for one hundred dinars and one charik [unit of weight] of wheat with the bride, all of which was subtracted from the mahr. The groom additionally agreed to buy five misqals [unit of weight] of red gold and three mans [unit of weight] of copperware for the bride. The personal seal of the groom's...
-
2Images
Marriage contract of Zahra and Muhammad Husayn, 1831
Marriage contract of Zahra, daughter of Muhammad Husayn, and Muhammad Husayn, son of the late ʻAli Quli Bayg known as Aqa Baba. The mahr is seventy tumans. The bride settled thirty-five tumans of her mahr with the groom in exchange for one-twelfth of a house, located at Baghkaran neighborhood of Isfahan, and fifteen misqals [unit of weight] of gold. In a note on the margin, dated 27 November 1831, the wife has denied transferring her mahr to the late Ghulam Husayn and claims her mahr.
Filter
- D Reset
Genres
Subjects
- Dproperty and property management
Collections
- DMeisam Ahmadi Kafshani