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1Images
Letter to Nusrat Allah Kalantari
Includes greetings, and family and political news
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2Images
Group portrait
From left: Nibtun [Niptun] Kalantari, Nasir ‘Amiri, and Uranus Kalantari; on verso, ‘Ishrat Kalantari has written a note to her brother
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1Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1944
Includes greetings, talks about receiving Azar's letter via Sayyid Husayn, travel plans, nice weather in Bam, sending a money order, sending donkey saddles from Rafsanjan, inquires about the status of their home and share of a garden in Sar Asiyab, and requests sending newspapers
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2Images
Letter from Qamar al-Muluk Isfandiyari
Probably to her son, Muhammad ‘Amiri; about his trip, news of the family, including Nusrat Allah’s children being sent to a school in Isfahan except Mihran and Mihrdad, who will be staying in Kirman, Niptun’s marriage ceremony in Tehran, her own blurred vision, Mirza Muhammad Khan's collection of pistachios in Abariq, and discusses her pilgrimage
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2Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1950
Includes greetings and talks about his travels, the weather, sending the car to bring the family to Abariq, finding a young horse for the children, sending compote, and requests newspapers and magazines to be sent to him, and to oversee the gardeners
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3Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1947
Includes greetings, talks about work related issues and his travel plans, and requests his newspapers be sent to Bam; along with the envelope
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3Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1944
Includes greetings and talks about his travel plans, the bad weather, planting the trees, and asks for letters and newspapers, and delivering his letters
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3Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1953
Includes greetings, talks about his travels, sending firewood and wheat to Kirman, buying a young horse for Ghulamhusayn, expresses his concern about Gulnaz's illness, and asks for his letters and newspapers
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4Images
Letter from Muhammad ‘Amiri to his wife, Azarmidukht, 1945
Includes greetings and talks about his travel plans, sending charcoal and rice from Bam, and requests ink, letters, and newspapers