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Settlements regarding the markets near Baghmishah gate, 1894 to 1916
Settlement of Shahzadah Khavar Khanum, the daughter of Yazdan Bakhsh Mirza, and Haji Husayn Khan about parts of a market known as Bazarchah-i Kalantar near the Baghmishah gate, in exchange for fifty tumans (February 20, 1894); settlement of Mu‘tamad al-Sultan Ghulam‘alikhan (the son of Fath‘alikhan Baghmishah), representing his wife, Khavar Khanum the daughter of Yazdan Bakhsh Mirza and Haji Muhammad Husayn Khan about parts of a market near Baghmishah gate in exchange for two hundred and ten tumans (August 1, 1896); settlement between Malik Sultan Khanum, the wife of Aqa Mirza Sharif, and...
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Hajiyah Zivar Sultan and Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali's debts to each other, 1904 to 1906
Hajiyah Zivar Sultan's debt to Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali, known as Aqa Guli ‘Alaqah-band [the silk maker], which includes home expeditures worth two thousand dinars per tuman, living expenses worth one thousand dinars per tuman, several cash payments, and more living expenses worth three thousand dinars per tuman; Karbalayi Muhammad ‘Ali's debt to Hajiyah Zivar Sultan includes silk-making expenses, one thousand and five hundred dinars per month for rent for Mashhadi Muhammad Taqi ‘Alaqah-band's store, one thousand dinars per month for rent for Haji Mahmud ‘Alaqah-band's store, six thousand...
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Invoices for expenses and rents, 1905 and 1906
List of the expenses that Haji Abu al-Qasim ‘Alaqah-band [the silk maker] has incurred for the underaged children of the late Haji Muhammad Tajir [the merchant] and a list of what Haji Abu al-Qasim ‘Alaqah-band has received in return from the rental of different stores belonging to the late Haji Muhammad Tajir.
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Haji Abu al-Qasim's invoices for children's expenses, 1905
List of what Haji Abu al-Qasim ‘Alaqah-band [the silk maker] has given to Khanum Batul for children's expenses
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Kulliyat of Tajmah Khanum
Tajmah Khanum wrote this book, composed of three parts. The first part consists of nearly 120 verses. The first poem is a sonnet written by the poet when she was 16 and the last one was written to praise Riza Shah. The second part is more than 20 letters and notes, which are mostly administrative and legal. Other letters were addressed to women who where contemporaries of Tajmah Khanum. The third part of this book is a selection of poems by Persian poets from Rudaki to the Qajar period.