Imamzadeh Halima and Hakima Khatun in Shahrekord dates back to Qajar dynasty and was registered as a national monument in 2000. The main building is made up of brick and there are two graves inside its Zarih along with a date carved on a wooden log that shows 1872. Halima and Hakima Khatun were Ibrahim al-Mujab’s daughters, the seventh Shiite Imam, Musa al-Kadhim. In 13th century, a building was stablished over the two graves and was destroyed during the Persian Constitutional Revolution and the current tomb was erected instead. Imamzadeh Halima and Hakima Khatun tomb includes a stone made pishtaq (Persian term for a portal projecting from the facade of a building) and columns, Portal, Vestibule and the main tomb. The portal is decorated with Seven-Color-Tiles from Qajar era, and above that, there is an inscription ornamented with verses, the lion and the sun on tiles along with the date of construction. There also are some verses on the Vestibule in praise of both, besides, the main tomb features a porch with stone pillars.