Nadir shah presented lands in Absheron peninsula, including Sabunchu, Keshly and Zabrat to Ashur khan according to these merits.
Nabat khanim possessed multi-million capital consisting of oil fields and apartment houses and was famed as philanthropist.
She donated the great amount of money for construction of water conduit Shollar, and also participated in financing of hospitals in Sabunchu, where poor and orphans were treated at her expense.
Nabat khanim participated in financing of a construction of the biggest mosque of Baku-Taza Pir, for which the well-known architect Zivar bay Ahmadbayov was invited.
Nabat khanim invited Haji Zeynalabdin Taghiyev for layer of the first stone to foundation of the mosque, who put the last stone at the end of the construction,[6] but Nabat khanim couldn't live until the end of the construction and after her death her son Haji Abbasgulu Rzayev was engaged in this work.
In 1904, a mansion was built in Gogol street by Iosif Vikentyevich Goslavskiy's project, which Teymur bey presented to his son as a wedding gift.
After his death, his wife fulfilling the deceased's will, sent his body accompanied by forty pilgrims to Karbala-the sacred for Muslim-Shias city.
He returned to Baku with his brother's advice during the NEP period, where he was arrested and exiled to Karaganda, where he was shot in 1937.
He was released only thanks to Nariman Narimanov, who was a distant relative of his brother Bala bey’s wife, Ismet khanim.
[18][19] Sara Ashurbeyli was born in 1906 in Baku in a magnificent mansion designed by architect Iosif Goslavsky, into the family of oil industrialist and philanthropist Bala bey Ashurbeyov.
She received her early education in Turkey at a French college and later graduated from the Faculty of Oriental Studies at Azerbaijan State University.
She began her career at the History Museum of Azerbaijan, contributing to projects related to the depiction of various national minorities.
In 1985, he graduated from the Azerbaijan Institute of Oil and Chemistry and, in 1988, founded and headed the Cooperative Coordination-Production Union "Sosium."
From 2000 to 2011, he served as the general director of the "Almaz" Scientific-Production Association, leading the development of the S-300, S-400, and S-500 anti-aircraft missile systems.
In 2013, Ashurbeyli founded the Aerospace International Research Center in Vienna and became the editor-in-chief of the "Room Space Journal."
A doctor of technical sciences, Ashurbeyli is the author of more than 100 scientific works and has been awarded various orders and medals.
Main entrances of the house were adorned with paintings, in which participated well-known artist of Baku on Bala bey's invitation.
Various buildings located on the estate were arranged along an elongated area and distributed across upper and lower terraces.
The central alley began at the main gates, traversed the entire property, and ended with stairs leading to the lower terrace.