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Marriage contract of Khayrat al-Nisa’ and Muhammad Rahim, 1919
Marriage contract of Khayrat al-Nisa’, the daughter of Karbalayi Isma‘il Nawjah Mihri, and Muhammad Rahim, the son of Karbalayi ‘Ali Duzdili. The mahr is fifty-five tumans and a set of bedding, worth five tumans, which amounts to a total of sixty tumans and remains the groom's debt.
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Receipt for Haji Khan's belongings, 1916
Habib Allah Khan [probably Haji Khan's brother] gives some of the belongings of the late Haji Khan [probably Iskandar Khan], including bedding and kitchenware, which were kept by Hajiyah Baygum Khanum [probably Iskandar Khan's wife], to Nusrat Khan.
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Dowry registry of Shams al-Taj Khanum, 1915
The dowry registry of Shams al-Taj Khanum, the daughter of Amin al-Mamalik, including a Qur’an handwritten by Mirza ‘Ali, a small mirror, bedding, clothing, and household furnishings that have been sent to the house of the groom, Mirza Javad Khan Munshi Huzur, the son of Sayyid Mirza Isma‘il Khan Mani‘ al-Saltanah. Sayyid Mir Jabbar Aqa, Mir Muhammad ‘Ali Aqa, Mir Jalil, Mir al-Hukama’, and Mirza Yusuf Aqa have been witnesses.
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Marriage contract of Taj Baygum and Ustad Abu al-Fath, 1909
Marriage contract of Taj Baygum, the daughter of Husayn‘ali, and Ustad Abu al-Fath, the son of Ustad Ujaq Quli from Dabuzarq. The mahr is fourteen tumans, of which a set of bedding and a samovar, worth six tumans, has been paid. The remaining eight tumans remain the groom's debt. A note on the margin reads, "Every year the husband should provide a certain amount of flour and cooked meat as well as clothing for the wife."
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List of belongings of the late Haji Iskandar Khan, 1915
List of belongings of the late Haji Iskandar Khan Sarhang (colonel), which according to Habib Allah Khan's statement, were kept by ‘Amid Lashkar and after Haji Iskandar Khan's death were divided amongst his inheritors, including Haji Khanum, Haji Mir Aqa, and Habib Allah Khan
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Settlement of Javahir Khanum and her son, 1914
Settlement between Javahir Khanum, daughter of Mirza Mahdi, and her son, Aqa Mir Aqa (son of Bala Aqa), over her properties including her share of a garden, houses, a stable as well as dishes, household furnishings, carpets, and bedding in exchange for five thousand dinars and a scarf worth four thousand dinars