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Letter
Probably from ‘Amid Lashkar's mother; addressed "Esteemed sister"; sends her condolences for Haji Khan's death, reassures her that ‘Amid Lashkar will be at her service, asks her to consider Zahra Sultan, Ruqiyah Sultan, Habib Allah Khan, and ‘Abd Allah Khan as her own children, and sends greetings on behalf of Ma‘sumah Sultan Khanum.
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Letter from Muntasir Lashkar to ‘Amid Lashkar
Addressed to ‘Amid Lashkar; about collecting taxes, promissory notes, Baba Khan's salary, and sending money to ‘Amid Lashkar; sends greetings to Validah Maqami [a woman who is like a mother]; another page discusses sending lamb for the household's meat consumption, delivery of grain, oil, cheese, kashk [whey or dried yogurt], and chicken, and some financial issues; the last page bears Muntasir Lashkar's seal and is about writing the order to receive ‘Ali Bayg Nayib's promissory notes and asks ‘Amid Lashkar to deliver the enclosed letters to their addressees.
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List of telegrams from ‘Abd al-Husayn Mirza Farmanfarma from December 1911 - January 1912
Including the arrival of Nasir al-Dawlah's son, staying with him until they get to Zanjan, and sending him to Tehran from there; his concern about Najm al-Saltanah's well-being; receiving ‘Abbas Mirza's telegram, staying in Amir Afshar's house, and leaving for Zanjan; arriving in Zanjan, the telegraph office in Zanjan being destroyed by bandits, and an order to send a new telegraph machine immediately
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Petition of the shopkeepers of Miyanaj
A group of shopkeepers in Miyanaj [Miyanah] write to a cleric about an Armenian named Sarkiz, the liquor seller, who has purchased a building in the center of Miyanaj. People gather there to drink at night, they get drunk and behave dishonorably. Despite the signers' complaints against him, the government of Miyanaj has done nothing and has deferred the issue to the government of Tabriz.
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Regarding ‘Alikhan's daughter-in-law
Correspondence regarding the turmoil in Azarbayjan, including the attack on the Chihriq citadel in which ‘Ali Khan was able to flee along with his wife and children while his daughter-in-law, Muhammad Aqa's wife, was captured by Nasir al-Dawlah, the commander of the national army; the attempt to free her and leaving her with Shaykh al-Islam; ‘Ali Khan's stay in Ottoman lands; and a narration of the story of the cossacks who captured women, and beheaded and cut their hair to present them as men and then receive a reward
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Sale of inherited property, 1926
Sale document between inheritors of the late Muhammad Ibn Amin and Mirza Baqir, son of Haj Iskandar, over part of their father's inheritance; inheritors include Muhammad Ibn Amin's children, ‘Ali Akbar, ‘Ali Asghar, Zubaydah Khanum, and the writer as the guardian of the underage children, including Husayn, Haydar, Rubabah, and Kubra
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Settlement among Haj Iskandar's inheritors, 1925
Settlement amongst the inheritors of Haj Iskandar from Miyanah, including Mirza Baqir, Aqa Mahdi, and his sister (Qamar Khanum) to resolve their disputes over the inheritance
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Settlement among children of Buyuk Khan Mirpanjah Afshar, 1923
Settlement of some properties between ‘Abd al-‘Ali Khan Amir Mukarram, the son of Buyuk Khan Mirpanjah Afshar from Sa’in Qal‘ah, and his brothers, Ibrahim Khan and Mahdi Khan. This followed another settlement between his sisters, Kafiyah, Kawkab, and Jamilah and their three brothers. The settlement included the properties they inherited from their father, with the following exceptions: their father's debt to Akbar Khan Salar Mukarram, the property in Takht-i Sulayman, and his cash belongings--these properties were exchanged for some other properties as well as five thousand tumans.
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