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Marriage contract of Khadijah and Kazim from Isfarjan, 1830
Marriage contract of Khadijah, daughter of ʻAli Naqi from Isfarjan, and Kazim from Isfarjan. The mahr includes three tumans, four misqals [unit of weight] of golden jewelry, copperware, a set of local women’s clothes and a set of European women's clothes, chintz bedding from Isfahan, a rug, one colorful kilim, a pair of felt rugs, and for the purchase price of some properties.
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Settlement between Nazi Khanum and her brother ʻAli, 1914
Settlement between Nazi Khanum, daughter of the late Mashhadi Muhammad and wife of Mirza Muhammad from Alvar of Bidabad, and her paternal brother, ʻAli, exchanging fifty mans [unit of weight] of wheat and her claims to the inheritance from her father, mother, and their deceased sister, Husna Jan, for one hundred dinars and ten misqals [unit of weight] of crystal candy from Isfahan. Additionally, it is confirmed that the half-acre of land in the Alvar neighborhood, which is a part of a garden known as the Hindi-ha [Indians] Garden, is Nazi Khanum's inheritance from her mother and belongs to...
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Settlement of Baygum Jan and Baygum with Sayyid Abu al-Qasim, 1852
Settlement between Baygum Jan, wife of Sayyid Javad, and Baygum, wife of Sayyid ‘Ali and daughter of Haj ‘Abd al-Vahhab, and Sayyid Abu al-Qasim, son of Mir Zayn al-‘Abidin Fazuh-ji of Isfahan, exchanging a garden known as Rasti Garden located in the Jurtan Marbin village of Isfahan, twenty-five tumans for the price of the house of Sayyid ‘Ali's wife, and forty-five tumans from another settlement between Sayyid Javad and his wife for two thousand rupees and one hundred units of wheat. The garden was Haj ‘Abd al-Vahhab's and had been transferred to his son and his daughter after his death....
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Letter to Haj Mirza Muhammad Sahib Mushki, 1896
A letter to Haj Mirza Muhammad Sahib Mushki, a merchant from Isfahan, about the shares of inheritance and what has already been taken by [his] mother, late brother, and late sister, a list of all the properties and their values, and the unfairness toward the writer’s two children.