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Divorce settlement of Khatun and Yusuf, 1914
Khatun Khanum, the daughter of ‘Abbas, forgives her mahr, seventeen tumans and five thousand dinars, in order to get a divorce from her husband, Yusuf, the son of Karbalayi Ahmad.
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Marriage contract of Qamar and Shaykh Muhammad Hasan, 1918
Marriage contract of Qamar, the daughter of Mashhadi Muhammad ʻAli the warder, and Shaykh Muhammad Hasan, the son of Mulla Samiʻ, with a mahr of 100 tumans and some gold. The husband gave power of attorney to his wife to divorce herself after forgiving half of her mahr (or all of it, if he cannot afford it) in the fifty years after the marriage if, for six consecutive months, the husband does not pay her four tumans and five thousand [dinars] for monthly household expenses.
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Power of attorney to divorce and get back properties, 1907
Power of attorney given to Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin, son of Haji Muhammad Hasan Tajir [the merchant] from Shiraz, by Haji ‘Ali Tajir Tutun-furush [the tobacco merchant], son of Karbalayi Salim, in order to get his money, property, and home furniture from his wife Khanum [illegible], daughter of ‘Ali ‘Askar Bayg, and triple-divorce her. Dated January 12, 1907
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Power of attorney, 1918
Power of attorney given by wife of the late Haji Muhammad Hadi to Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin in order to get her daughter's divorce from Mashhadi [illegible] and to get her mahr and alimony from him; the attorney fee is forty tumans and it will be paid gradually
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Marriage contract of Qamar Sultan Khanum and Mirza Hasan Khan Mukarram al-Sultan, 1925
Marriage contract of Qamar Sultan Khanum, the daughter of Mirza Muhammad Khan Munshi Bashi, and Mirza Hasan Khan Mukarram al-Sultan, the son of Aqa Muhammad Sadiq Aqa the merchant from Kashan. The mahr is a Qurʼan, a Kashmir shawl, a diamond ring, and eight hundred tumans. Part of the mahr has been paid and the rest remains the groom's debt. The conditions of the marriage contract are the following: for five years, Qamar Sultan Khanum has the right to divorce if her husband is absent for more than a year, or does not pay living expenses. The groom also promises that for fifty years he will...
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Petition of Haji Husayn ‘Ali about his daughter's mahr and alimony, 1915
Petition written by Haji Husayn ‘Ali Saqat-furush [the retailer] to Hujjat al-Islam Ayatollah Muhammad ‘Ali al-Husayni, about the debt of his daughter's husband to him. The debt is eighty tumans of mahr and three years of alimony, which his daughter transferred to him in another settlement. At the end, the receiver of the petition writes that Ibrahim hasn't paid his debt yet, and the wife can get divorce based on Shari‘ah (with the father acting on her behalf).
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Settlement between Sahib Sultan's mother and Ghulam Riza, 1909
Settlement between the mother of Sahib Sultan, daughter of the late Darvish Qanbar, and Ghulam Riza, son of the late Darvish Husayn, exchanging her mahr and her debts from her husband for seven tumans. Haj Sayyid Riza, legal representative of Sahib Sultan's mother, was fully informed of this settlement.
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Haj Sayyid Hadi to ʻAbd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma, 1917 or 1918
Telegraph about Nur al-Din abandoning his wife with debt, requesting payment of the debt and her alimony, or divorcing her
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Giving the power of attorney for divorce and resolving disputes, 1911
Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin should investigate the dispute between Shaykh Muhammad ‘Ali and his wife (daughter of Shaykh Muhammad Riza), and Shaykh Muhammad ‘Ali's sister and her husband (Haj Shaykh ‘Abd al-Husayn), over the ownership of some household furnishings. Additionally, Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin will witness the divorce of Shaykh Muhammad ‘Ali and his wife, and Shaykh Muhammad ‘Ali promises not to go back to his wife after the divorce. Shaykh Muhammad ‘Ali and Shaykh Muhammad Riza's seals are at the end of the document.
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Petition of Haydar Khan's wife to Shuja‘ Al-Dawlah, 1914
Petition by the wife of Haydar Khan (from Sarab) to Shuja‘ Al-Dawlah, who complains that her husband left her to live in Sarab seven years ago, one year after their marriage. He neither comes back nor pays her alimony. She mentions her previous complaints were to no avail and urges Shuja‘ Al-Dawlah to order Haydar Khan to take her to Sarab or pay her alimony or divorce her. On the margin, Shuja‘ Al-Dawlah has ordered Isma‘il Khan Amir Tuman to rectify her situation.
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- Jamal Radfar(5)
- Iran-i naw -- Women in the city and miscellaneous news(3)
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- D Muhammad ‘Ali Shah