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Letter to Shiraz court about inheritance
Written by Riza Quli Khan (member of the treasury) to Sayyid Husayn A‘lam al-Huda (member of the Shiraz court system) regarding the inheritors of the late Muhammad Baqir and Muhammad Hasan Mu‘ayyiri (known as Zarrabi family) to find out whether the inheritors have considered the share of Mah Sultan, daughter of the late Muhammad Baqir, who lives in Tehran
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Dividing the inheritance of Mirza Nasr Allah, 1921
Dividing the inheritance of Mirza Nasr Allah, including the upstairs room of the shop, the hallway, and half of the mudroom; the properties were divided into five shares for the following inheritors: Mirza Muhsin, Mirza Hidayat, and the mother of Ustad Muhammad Rahim (she gets one share).
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Power of attorney to receive inheritance, 1918
Power of attorney given by the daughter of the late Sadr al-Atibba’ to Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin, known as Saham al-Shari‘ah, in order to get her share of her deceased father's inheritance, along with the ownership of three stores, and her share of a house that her brother, Mirza ‘Ali Asghar Khan, has falsely occupied. On the margin, the claim has been rejected.
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Power of attorney to get inheritance, 1911
Power of attorney given by Bibi Sughra Sultan, daughter of the late Karbalayi Muhammad Kazim from Shiraz, to Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin in order to get her the inheritance of her underage son, Mirza ‘Abd al-Karim, from his late father, Haji Muhammad ‘Alaqah-band (silk dealer)
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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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Hajiyah Zivar Sultan and Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali's debts to each other, 1904 to 1906
Hajiyah Zivar Sultan's debt to Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali, known as Aqa Guli ‘Alaqah-band [the silk maker], which includes home expeditures worth two thousand dinars per tuman, living expenses worth one thousand dinars per tuman, several cash payments, and more living expenses worth three thousand dinars per tuman; Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali's debt to Hajiyah Zivar Sultan includes silk-making expenses, one thousand and five hundred dinars per month for rent for Mashhadi Muhammad Taqi ‘Alaqah-band's store, one thousand dinars per month for rent for Haji Mahmud ‘Alaqah-band's store, six thousand...
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Power of attorney to execute a will, 1925
Power of attorney given by Haji ‘Ali Riza Baqqal [the grocer] to his wife (daughter of the late Haji ‘Abbas Baqqal) and his oldest son, Karbalayi Muhammad, in order to execute his will and divide his possessions
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Power of attorney to get inheritance and mahr, 1919
Power of attorney given by Khanum Batul, daughter of the late Darvish Khan and wife of the late ‘Aziz Khan, to Mirza Zayn al-‘Abidin Saham al-Shari‘ah in order to get her rights from Sultan Khanum, mother of ‘Aziz Khan, including her mahr and her inheritance (one-eighth of ‘Aziz Khan's possessions), along with the past due rent and current rent of the house, some stores, and a store located in Darvazah Sa‘di
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Haji Abu al-Qasim's invoices for children's expenses, 1905
List of what Haji Abu al-Qasim ‘Alaqah-band [the silk maker] has given to Khanum Batul for children's expenses
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Settlement between Qamar Sultan and Mashhadi Haji Muhammad, 1886
Settlement between Qamar Sultan, wife of Muhammad Hasan ‘Alaqah-band [the silk maker] from Shiraz, and Mashhadi Haji Muhammad ‘Alaqah-band from Shiraz, son of Haji Muhammad Karim (Qamar Sultan's father), over Qamar Sultan's mahr, including a Qurʼan worth one tuman, fifty tumans, seven misqals [unit of weight] of gold, one charik [unit of weight] raw green silk, one-third of a house located in Sarbagh neighborhood of Shiraz, for fifty tumans, one man [unit of weight] of Russian hard white sugar, and two thousand tumans as the cost of detriments. Dated September 20, 1886