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Settlement between Mah Sultan Baygum and Haj Mirza Ibrahim Sarraf, 1880
Settlement of Mah Sultan Baygum, wife of Mashhadi Lutfʻali, one of the sons of the late Ustad Mirza [illegible] and the late Khadijah Baygum daughter of Mirza Sayyid ʻAli Shirazi, with Haj Mirza Ibrahim Sarraf, son of Mirza Javad Mubashir, over one house in the Ishaq Bayk neighborhood and half of another house for fifteen tumans. Haj Mirza Ibrahim Sarraf settled the mentioned half of a house with his sister, Fakhri Jan Baygum, on November 8, 1880 for fifteen tumans.
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Settlement between Khanum Buzurg and her brother, 1901
Settlement between Khanum Buzurg, daughter of the late Haj Habib, and her brother, Muhammad Husayn, transferring the ownership of her inherited share of four contiguous houses located in their father's abandoned garden, in exchange for eighty tumans.
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Settlement of Rubabah, Balqays, and Qadir with Muhammad Husayn and Muhammad Quli, 1900
Rubabah, Balqays, and Qadir, daughters of Haj Habib, have transferred their shares of the houses inherited from their father, one-eighth of each house per sister, to their brothers, Muhammad Husayn and Muhammad Quli, in exchange for three Ottoman liras; each sister receives one lira.
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Dividing properties of Karbalayi Zayn al-ʻAbidin among his inheritors, 1838
Dividing the properties of the late Karbalayi Zayn al-ʻAbidin from Kumachal of Lahijan, including his land, farms, and buildings, among his inheritors, as follows: ʻAli Jinab receives two-elevenths of farm land in Kumachal, Shaykh Muhammad Mahdi and his sisters, Halimah and Sarah, receive four-elevenths of their father's land, Mulla Mahmud and his sister, Hajarah Khanum, receive three-elevenths of their father's land, and Karbalayi Mirza Baqir receives two-elevenths of the land. The details of their shares are described in the document.
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Settlement between Zaynab and Zayn al-‘Abidin, 1811
Settlement between Zaynab, daughter of Isma‘il from Khvurasgan Jay, and Zayn al-‘Abidin, son of Muhammad Baqir from the same village, exchanging her inherited properties, including a residential building in the same village, located in the Yar ‘Ali neighborhood, known as Aqa Isma‘il's House, and a stable and all its belongings for one hundred dinars and fifty units of wheat in shahi weight. On the margin: "Zaynab agreed to buy the stable, some springs, and the shares of other co-owners and give them to Zayn al-‘Abidin without asking for anything in return."
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Settlement between Baygum Agha and her brother Sayyid Muhammad Husayn, 1917
Settlement between Baygum Agha, daughter of Sayyid Muhammad Riza, and her brother Sayyid Muhammad Husayn, son of Sayyid Muhammad Riza, exchanging a quarter of a residential building inherited from her father, located at Bagh Takht in Isfahan's Chaharbagh, for eighty tumans.
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Settlement of Haj Nazar ‘Ali Abadi's inheritors, 1741
The houses, garden, and specific residential properties mentioned on the back of this document belonged to the late Haj Nazar ‘Ali [Haydar Abadi] and were divided between his children, his grandchildren, and his wives. A disagreement over a house in which Haj Sa‘id was living as he was repairing it arose among the inheritors. With the mediation of a few elders, the inheritors eventually came to an agreement.
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Deposition of Haj Ghulam Riza's children, 1907
Deposition of ʻAli Riza, Muhammad Husayn, Mashhadi Husayn, and Khanum Nawbar, the children of Haj Ghulam Riza Baqqal [the grocer] from Shiraz, about the ownership of a grocery store, a wood and grain trading shop, and two [illegible] shops worth one hundred and ninety-five tumans. All the properties mentioned are the mahr of Zivar Sultan, daughter of the late Karbalayi Mahdi and wife of the late Haj Ghulam Riza. The sons of Haj Ghulam Riza settled all of the mentioned shops with their mother for one man [unit of weight] of Nurah hard sugar and one hundred dinars. Khanum Nawbar should also...
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Dividing Muhammad ʻAli's inheritance
Document dividing the inheritance of Muhammad ʻAli, son of ʻAbd Allah [illegible], between his wife and his underaged and adult children, including his debts and the mahr he owes to his wife.
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Letter to Haj Mirza Muhammad Sahib Mushki, 1896
A letter to Haj Mirza Muhammad Sahib Mushki, a merchant from Isfahan, about the shares of inheritance and what has already been taken by [his] mother, late brother, and late sister, a list of all the properties and their values, and the unfairness toward the writer’s two children.