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Settlement between Zaynab Baygum and Khanum Buzurg, 1916
Settlement between Zaynab Baygum, daughter of the late Haj Muhammad ʻAli and widow of the late Haj ʻAbd Allah, and Khanum Buzurg, daughter of the late Haj Habib, with power of attorney transferred to her brother, Iqbal-i Divan, exchanging a residential building in an orchard located on the west side of Qusali-lar caravansary for four hundred and fifty tumans.
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Settlement of Mirza Mahdi Sultani on behalf of Nahid Ashraf with Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin Gawhari, 1928
Settlement between Mirza Mahdi Sultani, with power of attorney transferred from Nahid Ashraf, daughter of Sultan Muhammad Mirza Sayf al-Dawlah, and Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin Gawhari, son of Haj Lutf Allah, exchanging some property located in the Sarchishmah neighborhood of Tehran that Nahid Ashraf inherited from her father for one thousand two hundred fifty tumans.
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Marriage and divorce contracts of Fatimah Baygum and Muhammad Baqir, 1897
Marriage and divorce contracts of Fatimah Baygum, daughter of Sayyid Ismaʻil Kulah-mal, and Muhammad Baqir, son of Ustad Husayn. The mahr includes twenty-five tumans and fifty shahis, one twenty-fourth of a house in the Shamsabad neighborhood of Isfahan, and a Qurʼan worth one tuman. On June 18, 1905, Fatimah Baygum settled her mahr, except the part of the mentioned property, with her husband for one hundred dinars in order to get a divorce. Then, on August 30, 1905, they remarried and the husband settled the ten tumans he owed to the wife for one hundred dinars and some wheat. The mahr,...
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Marriage contract of Marziyah Baygum and Mir Nasr Abu Talib, 1911
Marriage contract of Marziyah Baygum, daughter of ‘Abd al-Javad the preacher from ّUpper Banuyah, and Mir Nasr Abu Talib, son of Mirza Muhammad ‘Ali. The mahr is ten tumans in cash, ten tumans to buy rose gold, ten tumans to buy clothes, some properties in Banuyah, and five tumans for acquiring a Qurʼan.
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Three settlements of Haj Habib Allah, 1882, 1883, and 1884
The first document, dated 1882, is a copy of the settlement between Haj Habib Allah, son of the late Haj Mirza ʻAbd Allah, and his sister, Mahi Khanum, transferring the ownership of Mahi Khanum's belongings, including silverware, furniture and goods, land and housing, clothes and fabric, etc. in exchange for a pair of gold bracelets, a knife, and fourteen shahis. The second settlement, dated 1883, is between Haj Habib Allah and his two underaged sons, Muhammad Husayn and Murtaza Quli, transferring the ownership of what he inherited from his sister, Mahi Khanum, in exchange for a knife and...