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Transfer of properties from Sayyid Mahmud to Bibi Ruqiyah
A note indicating that the writer [probably Sayyid Mahmud Musavi Ruknabadi] has given his wife, Bibi Ruqiyah, all his household furnishings. He writes that the two carpets that he has brought from Mecca for his wife as souvenirs belong to her, as do all the stable's animals, the trees of Sarshah, the trees behind Sayyid ʻAlaʼ al-Din Musavi's garden, the pistachio trees, and every tree that belongs to the writer.
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Marriage contract of Fatimah Khanum with ʻAli ʻAskar Ruknabadi, 1908
Marriage contract of Fatimah Khanum (daughter of ʻAbd al-Razzaq, the fabric weaver) and ʻAli ʻAskar Ruknabadi (son of ʻAli [?]) on August 9, 1908. The mahr includes three sixths of a house, three sixths of a garden in Ghulam's village in Bagh Bala, and twenty tumans, five tumans of which are to be received directly by the bride and fifteen tumans of which are to be received later. The three sixths of the house are to be settled by the groom's mother and is part of the mahr.
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Will of Sayyid Mahmud Musavi
Will of Sayyid Mahmud Musavi, addressed to his son, Sayyid Husayn Musavi, in which he asks him to take care of the following in case something happens to him in Mecca: Aqa Muhammad Sadiq (one of Sayyid Mahmud's sons) inherits twice as much as his other sons. The all his furniture will belong to Sayyid Mahmud Musavi's wife. The garden's house will be Manuchihr's. They have to spend 1000 tumans for Sayyid Mahmud himself. This will is succeeded by another will, which is different from the first one: in this second will, Sayyid Mahmud writes that his wife will inherit the equivalent of a...