Dāgh-u-mahall,—custom and rule of,
193, 209, 288, 289, 406.
Dahmīrī, district and town of, 2, 10,
165.
Dāīr, village of, 174.
Dākhilīs, 194.
Dak'hin, the, 167, 169, 174, 216, 253,
256, 257, 260, 276, 286, 322, 323,
325, 327, 332, 334, 354, 358, 372,
373, 384, 389, 402, 416, 424. See
also under the Dakkan.
Dak'hinīs, the, 372, 373.
Dakkan, the, 60, 68, 78 n 2, 87, 148,
152. See also under the Dak'hin.
Dak'kin, the. See under Dak'hin and
Dakkan.
Damascus, 287.
Damashq Khwājah, son of Mīr Cho-
bān, the Wazīr of Sulṭān Abū Sa'īd
Moghūl, 60.
Damtūr, name of a halting-place, 382.
Dandūqah, town of, 173.
Dāniyāl, Prince, son of the Emperor
Akbar, 143, 144, 297, 299, 352, 391
n 2, 397, 403.
Dāniyāl, Shaikh,—a holy man of
Ajmīr, 143, 144.
Darah,—town of, 236, 239.
Darbār Khān,—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar, 80, 81.
Darçana,—signification of the word,
405 n 1.
Darīnkasārī,—name of a place, 195
and n 3. See Dinkasārī.
Daroghah-e-farāshkhānah,—a Court
office, 297.
Darsan,—explanation of the word, 405
n 1.
Darsanniyah, the,—name of certain
disciples of Akbar's religion, 405
and n 1.
Dāru-l-Jullāl [Dāru-l-Jalāl?],—name
of the first Heaven, 73 n 3.
Dāru-l-Qarār,—name of the seventh
Heaven, 74 n.
Dāru-s-Sulām [Dāru-s-Salām?],—
name of the second Heaven, 73
n 3.
Daryā Khān Ābdār,—an officer of
Akbar's Court, 291.
Daryāpūr,—a town on the bank of
the Ganges, 185, 424.
Dastān-i-Sām,—father of Rustam,
the famous hero, 79 and n 3. More
generally called Zāl.
Dā'ūd, son of Sulaimān Kararānī or
Kirarānī, the Afghān, ruler of
Bengal, 167, 177, 178, 180, 183, 184,
185, 186, 187, 188, 194, 195, 196,
197, 198, 199, 200, 220, 232, 235,
244, 245.
Dā'ūd Qādirī Jahnī-wāl, Shaikh,—one
of the greatest Saints of Hind,
159.
Daulat,—a servant of Muzaffar, son
of Sulṭān Maḥmūd Gujrātī, 344.
Daulat Khān,—a servant of the
Emperor Akbar. See under Khwā-
jah Daulat.
Daulat Khān,—a ghulām of Sa'īd
Khān of Multān, 162.
Daulat Khān, son of Amīn Khān
Ghorī,—Governor of Jūnāgaṛh or
Chūnāgaṛh, 384, 392.
Daulat Khān Afghān Lodī,—a ser-
vant of Mīrzā Khān, the Khān
Khānān, 343, 379.
Daulat, Khwājah. See under Khwā-
jah Daulat.
Daulat Nāzir Ghaif Shadīd, Khwājah,
—a servant in the Court of Akbar,
149, 232, 251.
Daulat Nāzīr, Khwājah. See the
above.
David of Scripture, 160, 349.
Deb Chand, Rājah of Manjholī or
Manjholah,—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar, 215, 257.
Debī,—name of a brahman inter-
preter of the Mahābhārata, 265.
De Courteille's Dictionnaire Turk-
oriental, 48 n 4, 74 n 5, 93 n 3, 197 n 2.
Defrémery, C., 46 n 3, 48 n 4, 426.
Dehlī. See under Dihlī.
Dekkan, the. See under the Dakkan.
Demosthenes, 302 n 1.
Deo Dās,—a soldier in the army of
Jaimall, the Rājpūt, 46.
Derwīsh Muḥammad Uzbek,—a ser-
vant of the Imperial Court, 34.
Descriptive Catalogne, Morely's, 397
n 2.
De Sacy, 308 n 3, 413 n 4.
Deuteronomy, the Book of, 47 n 4.
Dhar,—a territory in the province of
Mālwah, 68 n 3.
Dharmpūrah,—a place outside Āgra
for feeding poor Hindūs, 334.
D'Herbelot, Bibliothèque Orientale,
253 n 1, 266 n 1, 401 n 4.
Dholqah,—town of, 338.
Dībalpūr or Dībālpūr, district and
town of, 4, 250, 251, 252. See un-
der Dīpālpūr.
Dictionnaire Turk-oriental, De Cour-
teille, 48 n 4, 74 n 5, 197 n 2.
Dihlī, 1, 5, 6 and nn 2 and 5, 7, 9, 10,
13, 14, 15, 19, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 38
and n 4, 39, 59, 60 and n 5, 87, 92,
94 n 4, 95, 101 and n 6, 103, 109,
110, 124, 127, 135, 144, 147, 151,
154, 155, 157, 158, 185, 187, 188,
212, 259, 261, 284, 300, 305, 306,
358, 374, 386 and n 1, 397, 418, 424.
Dik'hdār,—a parganna in the vicinity
of Jālandhar, 34 and n 5.
Dilfarīb,—a poem written by Sayyid
Shāhī, 114.
Dinkasāri,—name of a place, 195 n 3.
See Darīnkasārī.
Dīpālpūr,—town of, 34. See under
Dībalpūr.
Dissertations, Gladwin's, 381 n 3.
Disuha,—town of, 10.
Dīū, Port of, 401.
Dīvān. See under Dīwān.
Dīwān-i-Ḥāfiz, the, 22 n 5, 24 and n 3,
423.
Dīwān-i-Kul,—the officer who had
under his orders the twelve Dīwāns
of the Çūbahs, 290 and n 2, 296,
298.
Dīwān-i-Sa'ādat,—office of the clerks
of district Çadrs, 22 n 4.
Dīwānah. See under Tīr Khān Dīwā-
nah.
Dīwānkhānah of Lāhor, the, 384.
Doāb, the,—between the Satlaj and
the Biyah, 52, 142, 223, 304 and
nn 5 and 7, 346.
Doāb of Baree,—between the Ravee
and the Garra, in the Panjāb, 304
n 5.
Doāb of Jetch,—between the Jelum
and the Chenāb, in the Panjāb, 304
n 5.
Doāb of Rachna,—between the Che-
nāb and the Ravee, in the Panjāb,
304 n 5.
Doāb of Sind-Sagar,—between the
Indus and the Jelum, in the Pan-
jāb, 304 n 5. See also under the
Sind-Sagar.
Dodā, son of Rāi Surjan,—the Gover-
nor of Chītor, 111.
Domnī, town of,—one of the depen-
dencies of Bhojpūr, 182 n 1.
Don Quixote, 307 n 1.
Dost Muḥammad, son of Tātār Khān
known as Tātārcheh, governor of
Dihlī, 144.
Doulat. See under Daulat.
Dryden, 20 n 2.
Dūāb, the. See under the Doāb.
Duaspah,—one of the divisions of
Aḥadī troopers, 194 and n 2.
Dūlaka,—or
Dūlaqah, town of—in Gujrāt, 173,
256.
Dungarpūr, town of, 249.
Durgāwatī, Rānī,—ruler of the dis-
trict of Gaḍha-Katangah, 65.
Duzānu,—signification of the word,
254.
Dwārkā, town of,—the capital of
Sūrat, 371.