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Power of attorney from Baygum Khanum and Mah-liqa Baygum Khanum, 1910
Power of attorney from Baygum Khanum and Mah-liqa Baygum Khanum, the daughters of Haji Sayyid Mahdi (the Shirazi merchant), to Sayyid Abu al-Qasim (the Isfahani merchant) about renting their properties to their cousin, Mirza Jalil.
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Aqa Mirza Sayyid Hasan's power of attorney to his mother, 1860
Aqa Mirza Sayyid Hasan gives power of attorney to his mother, Hajiyah Baygum Kuchak Khanum, for receiving his father's inheritance from Sayyid Muhammad Kazim, son of Mirza Mahmud
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Power of attorney from Khadijah Khanum to her husband, 1916
A document transferring power of attorney from Khadijah Khanum (the daughter of Muhammad Jaʻfar) to her husband, Karbala’i Ismaʻil, for her inherited property in Angurazuj village. Karbala’i Ismaʻil has the right to sell, rent, or farm in the property.
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Power of attorney from Naz Khanum to her father, 1885
A document transferring power of attorney from Naz Khanum to her father, Mirza (the Qazvini farrier) for selling or settling her mother's property in Tiyan village in Dasht-i Qazvin. The property was confiscated by ʻAziz Bayg. The document dates 26 Aug 1885.
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9Images
Documents related to the Siqat al-Islam family, 1932-1941
The documents include the following: a announcement about the recording of the boundaries between the villages of Garus, Kalash, Andabil, Qarah Aghaj, Kahal, Eivand, Alanjiq; two lease documents related properties in Kahal belonging to Muhammad ʻAli Nasir-pur and his mother, Aqazadah Khanum Siqat al-Islam; receipt of payment for the rent of Muhammad ʻAli Nasirpur's properties; Masturah Khanum's, Aqa Zadah Khanum Siqat al-Islami's, and others' powers of attorney to Javad Natiq about the conflict between villages of Kahal's and Alanjiq's on their vicinities' limits.
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23Images
Documents related to the conflict between the villages of Kahal and Alanjiq in Azarbayjan, 1869-1941
Documents related to the conflict between two villages of Kahal and Alanjiq in Azarbayjan, arising from disputes over land boundaries and the right to water. The conflict that proceeded over years is judged by the elders of the villages, government officials, landlords, and agreements are signed and sealed by the opposing parties. However, protests, petitions, transgressions of the borders and abuses of water rights. These become subjects of some of the reports and documents listed in this item.