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Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1954
Includes greetings, expresses appreciation of Azar's work at home, and discusses his travel plans, a get together with friends, ordering items from the US, getting passports for himself, Azar, Fatimah, and Faridah, the children's admission to school and its fees, sending fruits and vegetables, and some food items for Gulnaz
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1Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1950
Includes greetings and talks about his travels, water irrigation, sending pomegranates, requests a pair of shoes, and inquires about the children's school, Azar's well-being, and the doctor's opinion about her illness
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25Images
Qurutab-i badinjan
This treatise is social criticism written in the form of a comical story that is set in the month of Khurdad of the year 1289 AH in Tehran. The manuscript was rewritten on the 4th of Safar in 1348 AH by Mirza Sulayman Shaqaqi at the request of its first writer ʻImad al-Saltanah.
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40Images
Qurutab-i badinjan
This treatise is social criticism written in the form of a comical story that is set in the month of Khurdad of the year 1289 AH in Tehran.
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27Images
Banu-yi Ashraf's accounting booklet, 1934
Banu-yi Ashraf's accounting booklet, recording different expenditures, such as: lease of pastures, mills, and agricultural equipments, the sale of agricultural products, receipt of payments related to financial claims, tax installments, expenses regarding endowments, rent of properties, and household expenditures in Ashraf (Bihshahr).
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101Images
Kulliyat of Tajmah Khanum
Tajmah Khanum wrote this book, composed of three parts. The first part consists of nearly 120 verses. The first poem is a sonnet written by the poet when she was 16 and the last one was written to praise Riza Shah. The second part is more than 20 letters and notes, which are mostly administrative and legal. Other letters were addressed to women who where contemporaries of Tajmah Khanum. The third part of this book is a selection of poems by Persian poets from Rudaki to the Qajar period.
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- Muhammad ‘Amiri (son of Qamar al-Muluk ‘Amiri and Ghulam Husayn ‘Amiri)(2)
- Ghulamhusayn ‘Amiri (son of Azarmidukht Pizishk-niya and Muhammad ‘Amiri)(2)
- Fatimah ‘Amiri (daughter of Azarmidukht Pizishk-niya and Muhammad ‘Amiri)(2)
- Faridah ‘Amiri(2)
- Azarmidukht Pizishk-niya(2)
- ‘Ishrat al-Muluk ‘Amiri(1)
- ‘Ali Kalantari (Salar Muzaffar)(1)
- Tajmah (Afaq al-Dawlah)(1)
- Simin Dukht Pizishk-niya(1)
- Sakinah Khanum Banu-yi Ashraf(1)
- Rafʻat al-Muluk(1)
- Niptun Kalantari(1)
- Nasir al-Din Shah Qajar(1)
- Mirza Sulayman Shaqaqi(1)
- Mir Sayyid Hasan Amin al-Shariʻah Sabzivari(1)
- Husayn Quli Mirza Salur (ʻImad al-Saltanah)(1)
- Gulnaz ‘Amiri(1)
- Fath Allah Khan Arfaʻ al-Saltanah(1)
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- Zanjan (Khamsah)(3)
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- ʻArabistan (Khuzistan)(2)
- Varamin(2)
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- Natanz(2)
- Malayir(2)
- Kirman(2)
- Karbala’(2)
- Iraq(2)
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- United States(1)
- Sirjan (Kirman)(1)
- Sari(1)
- Rasht(1)
- Nigar (Kirman)(1)
- Khalkhal(1)
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