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Settlement between Nisa’ Khanum and Mirza ‘Ali Muhammad, 1854
Settlement between Nisa’ Khanum, daughter of Amir Khan Bayg, and Mirza ‘Ali Muhammad Munshi over some properties in Mihranrud, in exchange for three tumans and two thousand five hundred dinars
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Copy of settlement between Zivar Khanum and her father, 1914
Copy of a settlement between Zivar Khanum and her father, Muhammad Khan Hishmat Nizam Karkari, transferring the ownership of a part of her inheritance, one-third of Balavar village, one of villages of Khuy, in exchange for five hundred tumans.
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Sale agreement of ‘Ali on behalf of himself and his siblings, 1854
Sale agreement of ‘Ali, son of Muhammad Riza Bayg, on behalf of himself and his sisters, Nisa’ and Narjis Khatun, and his brothers, Karbalayi Muhammad and Pasha, with Mirza ‘Ali Muhammad Munshi over some properties in Mihranrud, in exchange for two tumans and six thousand and two shahis, with the condition that if any of the siblings refrains from signing the contract, ‘Ali should pay ten tumans to Mirza ‘Ali Muhammad Munshi
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Petition of Karbalayi Musayyab and Karbalayi Yusuf
Petition of Karbalayi Musayyab and Karbalayi Yusuf, addressed to a woman, regarding the master's order to collect aid from the peasants to give to the poor and the way the sheriff and village chief have been sabotaging the process
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Petition to Nuzhat al-Dawlah
Petition by ‘Abd Allah Qazzaq (cossack), resident of Sifidan village, to Nuzhat al-Dawlah regarding the cheating and bribery by Hasan Sultan over the grain. At the end, he requests a thirty-tuman loan from Nuzhat al-Dawlah.
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Testimony of people from Gavgan, 1917
Testimony of some people from Gavgan, confirming that Mashhadi Husayn left nothing behind for his daughters and that his sons, Mashhadi Habib and Ni‘mat Allah, were responsible for their two sisters. After fifteen years, they have collected fifteen tumans for their sister Sakinah Khatun's dowry. They testify that none of the inheritors of Mashhadi Husayn should have any future claims.
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Regarding the affair of Khanum Taj and Sayyid Karim, 1925
In a letter to Hujjat al-Islam Mirza Sadiq Aqa, the writer describes how Sayyid Karim has faked the divorce of Khanum Taj, daughter of Riza Khan Shuja‘ Lashkar and wife of Mirza Habib Allah Muntakhib Daftar, and they have fled from Amirabad village to Tabriz. After Mirza Habib Allah's complaint, Sayyid Karim bribed two Mullas and forced Mirza Habib Allah to divorce his wife in exchange for two villages, owned by Khanum Taj. Subsequently, it becomes clear that the two villages had already been sold to someone else and that Khanum Taj was four months pregnant prior to the divorce. Mirza Habib...