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Letter
Letter of greeting addressed to my dear Khanum
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1Images
Letter of Yar Ahmad about taxes
Yar Ahman mentions payments of taxes and giving extra time to Baji Khanum for paying her taxes.
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Letter regarding tax payments
Letter regarding tax payments including one hundred and fifty-six tumans related to Khanum Shahzadah, wife of the late Haji Aqa
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Letter
Letter regarding a dispute involving the writer, the daughter of Aqa Husayn (the servant), and Aqa Navvab. The writer talks about his difficulties, including taxes and peasants and mentions that he did not have a chance to visit Aqa Navvab. At the end he denies the claims that he had beaten the daughter of Aqa Husayn.
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2Images
Letter
Letter of greeting addressed to my dear Khanum
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1Images
Letter to ʻAbd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma
Letter to ʻAbd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma which includes writing about the Kakavand clan and the author's meeting with the wife of Karam Allah Khan from the Kakavand clan and her complaint about them.
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2Images
Telegram from Hajiyah Malakah Khanum to ‘Abd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma, 1904
After the greeting, Hajiyah Malakah Khanum, cousin of ‘Abd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma, talks about Aqa Sayydi Hasan Khan, the tenant of her three villages, who went to Tehran to receive and deliver an order. She asks her cousin to order the Lieutenant Governor of Burujird to leave her tenant and the peasants of these three villages alone and allow them to live the way they are now.
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Eight landowners to ‘Abd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma
Letter from eight landowners (from Charamlah) to ‘Abd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma. The letter includes a report about peasants of Charamlah buying sheep, the problems of this transaction for the peasants, the possibility of their migration to Kurdistan, and having twenty women sent among the peasants to stop them from migrating.
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Requesting help from ‘Abd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma
The author asks for ‘Abd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma’s intervention in support of eight Kalhor families who are holding a sit-in at Hamadan’s Imamzadah. They are protesting Ghulam Husayn Khan Ishik Aqasi’s attempt for their forced migration despite the promises made to them during Amir Nizam’s period.
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Telegram from Safar ‘Ali, 1904
The author fled from his creditors for six months; Habib Allah Khan, the son of Nasr Allah Khan, kept the author's bride during this period. There was also a delay in paying the author's monthly salary, and he requests the addressee order Sarim al-Mamalik to fulfill his right and pay the total amount of the delayed salary.
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- ‘Abd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma(6)
- Ibrahim Khan Sa‘d al-Dawlah(3)
- Bibi Sahib Sultan(2)
- ʻAbd al-Hamid Mirza Nasir al-Dawlah(1)
- Muzaffar al-Din Shah Qajar(1)
- Mukarram al-Saltanah (daughter of Mukhtar al-Saltanah)(1)
- Ghulamriza Khan Inanlu (Asif al-Dawlah)(1)
- Fatimah Sultan Anis al-Dawlah(1)
- Fatimah Khanum ʻIzzat al-Dawlah (daughter of Muzaffar al-Din Shah)(1)
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