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PBP is inscribed on both sides with a long Elamite text. Some scholars cite PBP as" Ururu"," after the personal name, written u-ru-ru, that appears at least eight times in the text. After the discoveries of the Persepolis Treasury and Fortification Wall administrative tablets, the documentation of Elamite language in Persepolis is no more surprising. Yet, PBP stands out
Encyclopaedia of Indian Temple Architecture: North India, Period of Early Maturity, c. AD 700–900. Volume II, Part 2; in two volumes. Edited by Michael W. Meister and MA Dhaky. American Institute of Indian Studies. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1991. Text: xx, 467 pp., 18 maps, 217 figures. Plates: viii, 971 b/w plates. $125.00.