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Settlement of Shah Zaynab Khanum, Jan Jan, and others with Aqa Muhammad, 1787
Settlement of Shah Zaynab Khanum, daughter of Muhammad ‘Ali, Jan Jan, known as Umm Kulsum (the younger sister of Aqa Rajab ‘Ali), Muhammad Baqir (son of Muhammad ‘Ali), Aqa ‘Ali, and Aqa Abu al-Hasan Fazuh-ji, with Aqa Muhammad, son of Aqa Muhammad ‘Ali from the same village [Khvurasgan?], exchanging a piece of land in [illegible] Arbabiyah for two tumans.
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Sale agreement between Fatimah Sultan Baygum and Sayyid Abu al-Hasan, 1835
Agreement between Sayyid Abu al-Hasan, son of Haj Mir Abu al-Fath, and Fatimah Sultan Baygum, selling two connected stores located at the Bazaar-i Murgh in Isfahan for six tumans and five thousand dinars.
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Settlement between Khanum Buzurg and her brother, 1901
Settlement between Khanum Buzurg, daughter of the late Haj Habib, and her brother, Muhammad Husayn, transferring the ownership of her inherited share of four contiguous houses located in their father's abandoned garden, in exchange for eighty tumans.
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Three settlements of Haj Habib Allah, 1882, 1883, and 1884
The first document, dated 1882, is a copy of the settlement between Haj Habib Allah, son of the late Haj Mirza ʻAbd Allah, and his sister, Mahi Khanum, transferring the ownership of Mahi Khanum's belongings, including silverware, furniture and goods, land and housing, clothes and fabric, etc. in exchange for a pair of gold bracelets, a knife, and fourteen shahis. The second settlement, dated 1883, is between Haj Habib Allah and his two underaged sons, Muhammad Husayn and Murtaza Quli, transferring the ownership of what he inherited from his sister, Mahi Khanum, in exchange for a knife and...
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Settlement between Sahib Sultan's mother and Ghulam Riza, 1909
Settlement between the mother of Sahib Sultan, daughter of the late Darvish Qanbar, and Ghulam Riza, son of the late Darvish Husayn, exchanging her mahr and her debts from her husband for seven tumans. Haj Sayyid Riza, legal representative of Sahib Sultan's mother, was fully informed of this settlement.
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Settlement of Rubabah, Balqays, and Qadir with Muhammad Husayn and Muhammad Quli, 1900
Rubabah, Balqays, and Qadir, daughters of Haj Habib, have transferred their shares of the houses inherited from their father, one-eighth of each house per sister, to their brothers, Muhammad Husayn and Muhammad Quli, in exchange for three Ottoman liras; each sister receives one lira.
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Settlement of Mirza Muhammad and Mirza ʻAbd al-A’immah with Mirza Muhammad Hasan, 1911
Settlement of Mirza Muhammad, son of Haj Mirza Yahya, and Aqa Mirza ʻAbd al-A’immah, son of Mirza ʻAli Naqi Mulla Bashi, with Haj Mirza Muhammad Hasan, known as Darmiyani, son of Haj Sayyid Muhammad Baqir Darmiyani, exchanging a fruit shop located at Bid Abad Bazar for two hundred and sixty-seven tumans. They also settled fifty mans [unit of weight] of white wheat from Isfahan for ten misqals [unit of weight] of crystal candy and one hundred dinars. These settlements were based on the will of Hajiyah Baygum, daughter of Mirza Fath Allah Khan and wife of Haj Mirza Muhsin.
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Settlement of Abu Turab and Fathʻali with Haj ʻAli Riza, 1813
Settlement of Abu Turab and Fathʻali, two sons of Fazl Allah, with Haj ʻAli Riza, son of ʻAbd al-Riza from Shiraz, exchanging an herbal shop in Shiraz, which they inherited from their mother, who was daughter of Muhammad Taqi [or Naqi], for twelve tumans. The sons of Fazl Allah then settled the detriment of the above settlement with Haj ʻAli Riza for five thousand dinars.
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Settlement between Fatimah Nisa’ and ʻAli Akbar, 1823
Settlement between Fatimah Nisa’, daughter of the late Mirza Baba, niece of Muhammad Riza Karkaraq from Isfahan, and ʻAli Akbar, son of Muhammad Husayn the merchant from Isfahan, exchanging some land in Jay in Isfahan for one hundred dinars and one hundred mans [unit of weight] of wheat.
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Deposition of Haj Ghulam Riza's children, 1907
Deposition of ʻAli Riza, Muhammad Husayn, Mashhadi Husayn, and Khanum Nawbar, the children of Haj Ghulam Riza Baqqal [the grocer] from Shiraz, about the ownership of a grocery store, a wood and grain trading shop, and two [illegible] shops worth one hundred and ninety-five tumans. All the properties mentioned are the mahr of Zivar Sultan, daughter of the late Karbalayi Mahdi and wife of the late Haj Ghulam Riza. The sons of Haj Ghulam Riza settled all of the mentioned shops with their mother for one man [unit of weight] of Nurah hard sugar and one hundred dinars. Khanum Nawbar should also...
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