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Settlement of Haji Nasr Allah Tajir and Shaykh Ghulam Riza with Mashhadi Mahdi, 1920
Settlement of Haji Nasr Allah Tajir [the merchant], on behalf of his permanent wife (daughter of the late Haji Ghulam Husayn Razzaz [the rice dealer]), and Shaykh Ghulam Riza, son of the late Muhammad Kazim Tajir Qannadi [baker of sweets], on behalf of his sister (wife of Haji Abu al-Qasim ‘Alaqah-band [the silk dealer]) and his other sister (wife of Mulla Zayn al-‘Abidin), with Mashhadi Mahdi, son of the late Mashhadi ‘Ali Zari‘ [the farmer], for four years, over the arable lands located on the outskirts of the Baghshah Gate of Shiraz, for fifty tumans and twenty mans [unit of weight] of...
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Settlement over agricultural lands, 1898
Settlement of the daughters of the late Haji Muhammad Hasan (known as Salih of Shiraz) and the children of the late Bibi Khanum Mah (another daughter of Haji Muhammad Hasan) and the late Muhammad Kazim Qannad [the baker] from Shiraz with Haji ‘Ali Akbar Tajir [the merchant], son of the late Abu Talib Tajir Namazi, over the specific agricultural lands located outside of Shiraz for forty-five tumans, one hundred mans [unit of weight] of onion, and twenty-five mans of pickled eggplant for each year
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Letter to Mirza Hasan Khan
Addressed to Mirza Hasan Khan, about the drought, high prices, taxes, and asking about the lands in Isfand, telling about Rustam’s education and his extravagance, requesting some kashkilu and orange blossom water, and asking about persimmons the author had sent
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Letter from Ghulam Husayn ‘Amiri to Qamar al-Muluk ‘Amiri
Letter from Ghulam Husayn ‘Amiri to his wife, Qamar al-Muluk ‘Amiri, about his plan to see her and their daughters, telling her about Shirin's death, giving instructions for Ni‘mat Allah to repair the wall and take care of the garden in Sar Asiyab, getting some hay, cabbage, eggplant, cucumber, and zucchini, asking for good pomegranate from Sar Asiyab, and selling the wheat in the stable storage
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Report by Mahdi
Reports the looting of several farms by the people of Sulat al-Saltanah, and the escape of the peasants. The author asks Khanum Jayran (Sulat al-Saltanah's sister), who sent someone to visit the farms, to determine how much to compensate. But, she can not afford the compensation.