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  2. The Fan of Patience (Pakistani fairy tale) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fan_of_Patience...

    The Fan of Patience (Urdu: Sabr ka pankha) is a Pakistani fairy tale from Punjab, published by Pakistani author Shafi Aqeel and translated into English by writer Ahmad Bashir. It tells the story of a princess who summons into her room a prince named Sobur (Arabic: "Patience"), or variations thereof, by the use of a magical fan. [1]

  3. Pakistani folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistani_folklore

    Sindhi folklore (Sindhi: لوڪ ادب) is composed of folk traditions which have developed in Sindh over many centuries.Sindh thus possesses a wealth of folklore, including such well-known components as the traditional Watayo Faqir tales, the legend of Moriro, the epic tale of Dodo Chanesar and material relating to the hero Marui, imbuing it with its own distinctive local colour or flavour in ...

  4. Saiful Maluk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saiful_Maluk

    Saiful Maluk. The Story of Prince Saiful Maluk (Arabic: قِصَّة سَيْف الْمُلُوْك وَبَدِيْع الْجَمَال, romanized: Qiṣat Saif al-Mulūk wa Badīʿ al-Jamāl) is an Arabic fable, a story of love between a prince and a fairy. It is considered a later addition to the One Thousand and One Nights collection of ...

  5. The Ruby Prince (Punjabi folktale) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ruby_Prince_(Punjabi...

    The Ruby Prince (Punjabi folktale) The Ruby Prince is a South Asian folktale, first published in the late 19th century by author Flora Annie Steel. The tale is a local form of the cycle of the Animal as Bridegroom or The Search for the Lost Husband, in that a woman marries a man of supernatural origin, loses him and must regain him.

  6. The Tale of the Four Dervishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tale_of_the_Four_Dervishes

    ' The Story of Four Dervishes '), known as Bāgh-o Bahār (باغ و بہار, lit. ' Garden and Spring ') in Urdu, is a collection of allegorical stories by Amir Khusro written in Persian in the early 13th century. While legend says that Amir Khusro was the author, the tales were written long after his death.

  7. Lake Saiful Muluk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Saiful_Muluk

    The Lake Saiful Muluk is named after a legendary prince. A fairy tale called Saiful Muluk, later on turnt into poem form by the Sufi poet Mian Muhammad Bakhsh. [7] [8] It tells the story of the Egyptian Prince Saiful Malook who fell in love with a fairy princess named Princess Badri-ul-Jamala at the lake. [9] [10]

  8. Rumpelstiltskin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumpelstiltskin

    English Fairy Tales. " Rumpelstiltskin " (/ ˌrʌmpəlˈstɪltskɪn / RUMP-əl-STILT-skin; [1] German: Rumpelstilzchen pronounced [ʁʊmpl̩ʃtiːltsçn̩]) is a German fairy tale [2] collected by the Brothers Grimm in the 1812 edition of Children's and Household Tales. [2] The story is about an imp who spins straw into gold in exchange for a ...

  9. Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali_Baba_and_the_Forty_Thieves

    The tale was added to the story collection One Thousand and One Nights by one of its European translators, Antoine Galland, who called his volumes Les Mille et Une Nuits (1704–1717). Galland was an 18th-century French Orientalist who heard it in oral form from a Syrian Maronite story-teller called Hanna Diyab , who came from Aleppo in modern ...