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Shahrbānū (or Shehr Bano) (; "Lady of the Land") was allegedly one of the wives of Husayn ibn Ali, the third Imam and grandson of the Islamic prophet , as well as the mother of his successor, Ali ibn Husayn.Michael Curtis, Religion and Politics in the Middle East (1982), p. 132 She was reportedly a princess, a daughter of , the last of .Mehrdad Kia, The Persian Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia, Vol. I (2016), p. 6 Shahrbanu has also been referred to with several other names by different writers, such as: Shaharbānawayh,(1)Roudat al-Wa'zin, vol. 1, p. 237. (2) 'Uyyun al-Mu'jizat, p. 31.(3) Ghayat al-Ikhtisar, p. 155. Shāhzanān,Al-Shiblanji, Nur al-Abbsar, p. 126. Shāhjahān, Jahānshāh, Salāma,(1) 'Usul al-Kafi, vol. 1, p. 466. (2) Siyar 'Alam al-Nubala', vol, 14, p. 237 (3) Kalifa Khayyat, al-Tabaqat, p. 238.(4) Al-Nisaburi, al-Asami wa al-Kuna. Salāfa,(1) Al-Dhahabi, Tarikh al-Islam, vol. 2, p. 46.(2)Al-Imama fi al-Islam, p. 116. (3) Ansab al-Ashraf, p. 102. (4) AlBustani, Da'irat al-Ma'arif, vol. 9, p. 355.(5) Nur al-Abbsar, p. 136. (6) Al-Kamil, vol. 2, p. 464. Ghazāla,(1)Safwat al-Safwa, vol. 2, p. 25. (2) Shadharat al-Dhahab, vol. 1, p. 104.(3) Sir al-Si;sila al-'Alawiya, p. 31. (4) Nihayat al-Irab, vol. 21 p. 324. (5) Kulasat al-Dhahab al-Masbuk, p. 8. and Sādira.Al-Ithaf bi Hub al-Ashraf, p. 49.

Islamic legends state that Shahrbanu was captured during the Muslim conquest of Persia. When presented before the Arab nobility and offered a choice in husband, she requested to be given in marriage to Husayn. The majority of Shia sources state that Shahrbanu subsequently died shortly after giving birth to her son Ali(1) Al-Mas'udi, Ithabat al-Wasiya, p. 143. Imam Zayn 'al-Abidin, p. 18Baqir Sharif al-Qarashi. The life of Imam Zayn al-Abideen a.s. p20-21 and was buried in the Jannat al-Baqi, alongside other members of Muhammad's family. Some traditions however, indicate to the Bibi Shahr Banu Shrine in Rey being her resting place.

Shahrbanu is viewed as a saintly figure by the denominations and is especially revered in , her importance being partly tied to the link she provides between pre-Islamic Persia and modern Shi'ism. However, her historicity is uncertain. Islamic writers, such as , Ya'qubi and al-Kulayni, began alluding to Shahrbanu and her imperial Persian background from the 9th century onward. However, the earliest sources make no mention of the mother of Ali ibn Husayn, nor do they ascribe him with maternal royal ancestry. The first references were from Ibn Sa'd and , also in the 9th century, who instead describe her as being a slave from . This leads the Encyclopædia Iranica to consider that Shahrbanu was "undeniably legendary".


Family background
Islamic histories regarding Shahrbanu generally state that she was a daughter of , the last of . However, other identifications for her parentage have also been given. Muhammad ibn Ahmad Naysaburi cites a tradition that she was the daughter of Yazdegerd's father Prince Shahriyar, son of . Ibn Shahr Ashub relates that her father was the nushijan, a Persian ruler whose identity has not yet been further clarified. These are minority views however, with the belief of her being the daughter of Yazdegerd being the most prevalent.

Accounts are silent regarding Shahrbanu's mother. Yazdegerd is recorded to have had several wives and concubines, with and making specific references to a marriage he had made to a woman in . However, Zameer Naqvi believes Shahrbanu's mother to have been a named Mah Talat or Maha Talat. She may have been a member of the Buddhist , with who the Sassanid emperors had maintained good relations. The present city of , where her marriage to Yazdegerd supposedly took place, may have been named after her.

In addition to Shahrbanu, the historian provides the names of four other children of Yazdegerd III; two sons, namely and , and two daughters, Adrag and Mardawand. While it was historically recorded that her brothers had escaped to the of , Islamic traditions state that Shahrbanu's sisters were captured alongside her. One allegedly married Abdullah, son of the , and became the mother of his son Salim, while another married Muhammad, son of the , and became the mother of his son Qasim.Shaykh Muhammad Mahdi Shams al-Din, The Authenticity of Shi'ism, Shi'ite Heritage: Essays on Classical and Modern Traditions (2001), p. 49 [1] Further alleged siblings have also been attributed to Shahrbanu, including Ghayanbanu, who was her full sister, Izdundad, who married the Jewish exilarch ,Peter Crawford, The War of the Three Gods: Romans, Persians and the Rise of Islam (2013), p. 207 [2] and Mihrbanu, who married Chandragupta, the Indian king of .Carla Bellamy, The Powerful Ephemeral: Everyday Healing in an Ambiguously Islamic Place (2011), p. 209 [3]


Capture and marriage
Accounts of Shahrbanu's capture generally state that she was taken during the Muslim conquest of Khorasan, either by Abdallah ibn Amir or Hurayth ibn Jabir.Moshe Gil, The Babylonian encounter and the Exilarchic House in the light of Cairo Geniza documents and parallel Arab sources, Judaeo Arabic Studies, (2013), p. 162 [4] The princess (possibly alongside her sisters) was subsequently brought as a slave to , where she was presented to the , who al-Kulayni identifies as being Umar ibn al-Khattab. A reported by as-Saffar al-Qummi in the Shi'ite hadith work Basa'ir ad-Darajat gives the following account of Shahrbanu's arrival at Umar's court:
(2011). 9780857719652, I.B.Tauris. .

There is disagreement between various accounts regarding the details of the story. In al-Kulayni's , it was Umar's decision for Shahrbanu to choose her own husband, as opposed to Ali's. Keikavus' includes the involvement of Salman the Persian. The Uyun Akhbar al-Ridha by reports that the caliph in question was not actually Umar, but his successor, . In relation to this, historian states that al-Qummi's account ignores that the conquest of Khorasan took place during the latter's reign, as well as the fact that Shahrbanu's supposed son, Ali, was not born until over a decade after Umar's death.


Death
The earliest sources regarding Sharbanu make no mention of her ultimate fate, instead primarily focusing on the events of her capture and marriage. Later accounts added further details to the story, with multiple variations emerging regarding her death. Literary traditions state that she died upon giving birth to her son, Ali ibn Husayn in 659 CE. She was allegedly buried in the Jannat al-Baqī in , her grave being beside that of her brother-in-law Hasan ibn Ali.

Another account narrates that Shahrbanu lived to see the Battle of Karbala in 680 CE. Having witnessed the massacre of her family during the battle, the princess drowned herself in the to avoid the humiliation of captivity by the Umayyads.

A third version, as with the previous account, states that Shahbanu was alive during Karbala, but includes a miraculous aspect to the story. It states that prior to his death, Husayn gave Shahrbanu his horse and bid her to escape back to her homeland in Persia. She was closely pursued by soldiers and as she approached the mountains surrounding Rey, she tried to call out to in desperation. However, in her exhaustion she misspoke and rather than saying "Yallahu!" (Oh God!), she said "Ya kuh!" (Oh mountain!). The mountain then miraculously opened and she rode into it, leaving behind only a piece of her veil which had gotten caught as the chasm closed behind her. This became an object of veneration, with the area becoming a shrine as well as a popular pilgrimage site.

believed that the latter story was a 10th-century invention, considering it to be probable that the shrine was previously dedicated to the goddess . She states that as Zoroastrianism and the worship of Anahid became less predominant in the region, a link was probably formed between the site and Shahrbanu in order for the veneration of the Persian princess to take its place. It is also notable that the word "Banu" (Lady) is strongly associated with Anahid, making it likely that "Shahrbanu" (Lady of the land) was the title originally used to dedicate the old shrine.


Historicity
The historicity of Shahrbanu is highly debatable, with no source available which can truly confirm or deny her existence.D. Pinault, Horse of Karbala: Muslim Devotional Life in India (2016), p. 71 While it was certainly within the influence of Husayn's father, Ali ibn Abi Talib, to have had him married to a captive daughter of ,Salo Wittmayer Baron, A Social and Religious History of the Jews - Volume 1 (1957), p. 270 contemporary sources make no mention of such an event. Early histories regarding the invasion of Persia by authors such as Ibn Abd Rabbih and , often written with great attention to detail, do not establish any relationship between the Sassanid royal family and a wife of Husayn. The same is true for a wide range of sources, such as the judge in his treatise on taxation, the , nor in his epic, the .

The first mentions of the mother of Ali ibn Husayn come two hundred years later from Ibn Sa'd and in the 9th century, who both describe her as a slave from named Gazala or Solafa. They go on to claim that after the death of his father, Ali freed his mother and gave her in marriage to a client of Husayn's named Zuyaid, to whom she bore a son, Abdullah. Ya'qubi, who wrote around the same time as Ibn Qutaybah, was the first to suggest that Ali's mother was an enslaved daughter of Yazdegerd, stating that she was nicknamed Gazala by Husayn. The and the Firaq al-Shi'a, both written around the 10th century, give a similar story, but state that she was originally called either Shahrbanu or Jahanshah and was later renamed Solafa.

There is therefore a consistency between the early sources that the mother of Ali was named Gazala or Solafa, and that she was an eastern slave belonging to Husayn. The dispute only arises regarding her original identity and subsequent fate. however, also writing in the 10th century, records a Shia tradition which combines the two stories. It states that Ali was the son of a daughter of Yazdegerd who died in childbirth. He was subsequently raised by a concubine of Husayn's, who was publicly assumed to be his mother. When Ali later arranged for the concubine to be married, he was mocked due to the belief that he had given his own mother away. This tradition acts to support the earlier accounts whilst also providing an explanation for the contradictions. Based on the various testimonies, surmised that Ali's mother was a Sindhi concubine, who he later freed and arranged to be married. The Shahrbanu story subsequently emerged to explain away the aspects which may have been viewed as unpalatable.

It is also thought that the legend of Shahrbanu was used to provide a link between pre-Islamic Persia and Shi'ism, something which is thought to be an extremely important aspect for the Persian converts of the period. Through Shahrbanu, the Shia Imams would have possessed legitimacy in two forms: through their paternal descent from Ali ibn Abi Talib and , daughter of , and their maternal descent from the ancient Persian kings.Mohammad Ali Amir-Moezzi, Christian Jambet, What is Shi'i Islam?: An Introduction (2018), ch. 2 Later incarnations of the story may have magnified the Persian aspect with this in mind, with increasing emphasis being put on the princess's royalty. Ali ibn Abi Talib plays an important role in this, with he and Shahrbanu conversing in , him insisting on her freedom and nobility of rank as well as predicting the birth of the future Imam. It is also notable that for several centuries, the writers who reported the story had almost exclusively been Persians or Persianized Shias, such as al-Kulayni, and Ibn Shahr Ashub. Subsequently, it appears that Shahrbanu served as a factor in the convergence between the persecuted Shias and the conquered Persians. A similar effort was attempted several centuries later to connect the to the Byzantine emperors and the Apostle Simon, thereby linking the Imams to Shi'ism, , and , though this proved less successful.

Iranian scholar and politician Morteza Motahhari argued against this reasoning, stating that the Shia Imams' potential Sassanid ancestry would not have especially attracted Persians to Shi'ism. Noting that the mother of the is believed to be a daughter of ,Patricia Crone, The Nativist Prophets of Early Islamic Iran: Rural Revolt and Local Zoroastrianism (2012), p. 5 Motahhari added that the Persians had no equivalent inclination towards the Umayyad dynasty. Similarly, the Umayyad general Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad is also not especially esteemed based on his maternal Persian heritage. In addition to this, Motahhari asserted that Shahrbanu is not venerated in Iran above the mothers of the other Imams, who came from a multitude of ethnic backgrounds, such as , who is believed to have been a Roman concubine.


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