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Rental agreement of women’s bath house, 1921 and 1926
1- Mashhadi ‘Abd al-Husayn, the son of the late Mirza ‘Ali Sarabi, rents part of a small women's bath house in the Haydar Khanah neighborhood of Sarab from Hisam al-Sadat Sarabi for seventy tumans and five thousand dinars, sixteen tumans of which will be paid in installments; repair expenses will be the owner's responsibility and owner's family has the right to free use of the bath (March 20, 1921); 2- Karbalayi ‘Abd al-Husayn Hammami Sarabi rents part of a small women's bath house in Sarab from Aqa Sayyid Karim Aqa, the eldest son of Hisam al-Sadat Sarabi, for thirteen tumans and five...
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Petition of Haydar Khan's wife to Shuja‘ Al-Dawlah, 1914
Petition by the wife of Haydar Khan (from Sarab) to Shuja‘ Al-Dawlah, who complains that her husband left her to live in Sarab seven years ago, one year after their marriage. He neither comes back nor pays her alimony. She mentions her previous complaints were to no avail and urges Shuja‘ Al-Dawlah to order Haydar Khan to take her to Sarab or pay her alimony or divorce her. On the margin, Shuja‘ Al-Dawlah has ordered Isma‘il Khan Amir Tuman to rectify her situation.
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Will and settlement of Mirza Ibrahim with his wife and children, 1877
Mirza Ibrahim the merchant, the son of Haj Mir Husayn, transfers all of his belongings, including his house, garden, the shops in Sarab, and the bath, to his three sons, Karbalayi Mir Aqa, Aqa Mir Baqir, and Aqa Mir Abu al-Qasim in exchange for a pair of leather shoes worth five thousand dinars and one man [unit of weight] of wheat, provided that he benefits from the income of the above properties while he is alive and that after his death, his sons pay one hundred tumans to his two daughters (fifty tumans each), Saltanat Khanum and Sitarah Khanum, and spend one hundred tumans on [Mirza...