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Suspected of killing wife, 1911
Public prosecutor's request regarding the trial of A[qa] Shaykh Ibrahim from Taliqan
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Zayn al-‘Abidin Khan's conviction, 1911
Zayn al-‘Abidin Khan has been ordered to pay one hundred fifty tumans to his wife, Tavus Khanum, as the settllment money
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Muhammad Aqa's debt to Muchul Khanum, 1911
Mahmud Aqa has been sentenced to pay two hundred tumans to Muchul Khanum for his debt to her husband.
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Rubabah Sultan's alimony, 1909
‘Ali Akbar Aqa Qajar is ordered to pay seventy-one tumans, for the alimony of Rubabah Sultan, to her mother, Sakinah Khanum
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Murder of mother by the father, 1910
The adult children of Haji Mahdi, who murdered his wife, waive their rights to all claims against him.
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Murder of three-year-old daughter, 1911
A man, who has two wives, kills his own daughter from his first wife, so that he could divorce her mother.
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Claiming mahr and alimony, 1911
Mirza Baha’ al-Din has been ordered to pay an amount to his wife, Qamar Khanum, for her mahr, alimony, and past clothing expenses.
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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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Filicide, 1910
Sadiq, with the help of the sister of his first wife, killed his son from his second wife who had died a while after she was divorced, by throwing him in a well; the sister-in-law confessed and was sentenced to death by being thrown from a high location
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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.