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2Images
Sale agreement between Mahdi Mansur and Azarmidukht Pizishk-niya, 1954
Mahdi Mansur, son of ‘Abd Allah, sold a piece of his inherited land to Azarmidukht Pizishk-niya, daughter of ‘Abd al-Latif Khan, for twenty-four thousand three hundred seventy-five rials
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Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1968
Includes greetings, mentions some property-related issues and Azar's travel to Abariq and then together to Rayin
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3Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1962
Includes greetings, mentions his illness, and asks her to send barley flour to feed the cows, his letters, newspapers and news of Kirman; along with the envelope
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3Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1949
Includes greetings and talks about the weather, his travels, dividing the lands in Vakil Abad and bringing a tractor there, and asks for the news from Kirman; along with the envelope
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4Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1950
Includes greetings and talks about his travels, sending dates and citrus fruit to Kirman, sending potatoes to Kirman to be delivered to Vakil Abad, borrowing money from Faraj Allah if needed, asks for a radio battery, and inquires about the price of wheat and barley in Narmashir and Abariq
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326Images
Letters from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1941 to 1975
See related items for each individual letter and its description
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6Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1961
Includes greetings, complains about not getting any letters from the family, and talks about traveling with Fatimah and Faridah in Europe, his return to Tehran along with Fatimah, and other property and work-related matters
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Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to Azarmidukht and Faridah, 1968
Includes greetings and talks about staying with Fatimah and her husband, Ghulamhusayn's decision to go to a college in California, their travel to Los Angeles and San Diego, visiting Mihran in Fresno, their medical exams, his plan to return to New York and then London, some work issues related to their properties, and complains about Gulnaz not answering his letters; at the end, he has addressed Faridah in a few lines.