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- s0041977x00099080 accessDate "2015-09-23".
- s0041977x00099080 accessdate "2014-06-16".
- s0041977x00099080 author1 "Mary Boyce".
- s0041977x00099080 date "1967".
- s0041977x00099080 doi "10.1017/S0041977X00099080".
- s0041977x00099080 doi "10.1017/s0041977x00099080".
- s0041977x00099080 first "Mary".
- s0041977x00099080 first1 "Mary".
- s0041977x00099080 isCitedBy Anahita.
- s0041977x00099080 isCitedBy Karyan,_Fars.
- s0041977x00099080 isCitedBy Shahrbanu.
- s0041977x00099080 issue "1".
- s0041977x00099080 issue "Fiftieth Anniversary Volume".
- s0041977x00099080 issue "No. 1, Fiftieth Anniversary Volume".
- s0041977x00099080 journal "Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies".
- s0041977x00099080 journal "Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London".
- s0041977x00099080 last "Boyce".
- s0041977x00099080 last1 "Boyce".
- s0041977x00099080 location "London".
- s0041977x00099080 page "41".
- s0041977x00099080 pages "30–44".
- s0041977x00099080 publisher "Cambridge University Press on behalf of School of Oriental and African Studies".
- s0041977x00099080 publisher "JSTOR Org".
- s0041977x00099080 publisher "University of London".
- s0041977x00099080 quote "In the Harm district of Fars, not so very far from Yazd, Edward Strack came across a naive legend which is a rough inversion of the Zoroastrian one; see his Six months in Persia, I, London, 1882, 119. According to this, at the time of the Arab invasions, a certain Zoroastrian, Shah Karan, was besieged at Karyun by 12,000 Arabs; and sallying out of the fort while they were at their prayers , he slew them all. There were 40 virgins in the camp, who prayed to Allah for deliverance from him. The earth duly opened and swallowed 37 of them. The remaining three fled, pursued by him and his men. One turned to the mountains to the north and was nearly captured, when a cave opened in the mountain-side and she ran in and disappeared. 'The cave is called The Ghar Bibi, or Lady's Cave, to this day, and is well known to have no end.' Another of the maidens also disappeared into the mountain-side 'and water has trickled from the cleft ever since'. The third is said to have died of exhaustion on the mountains to the south. ' Her shrine, called that of the Bibi darmanda, or Tired-out Lady, is a famous place of prayer for childless wives.'".
- s0041977x00099080 title "Bibi Shahrbanu and the Lady of Pars".
- s0041977x00099080 title "Bībī Shahrbānū and the Lady of Pārs".
- s0041977x00099080 url "http://www.jstor.org/stable/611813".
- s0041977x00099080 volume "30".
- s0041977x00099080 year "1968".