Gadāī 'Alī,—a Turki soldier in Ak-
bar's army, 170.
Gadāī Brahmadās,—a Brahman mu-
sician who rose high in favor with
Akbar and received the title first
of Kab Rāī and then of Rājah
Bīrbar, 164 [see page v]. See Kab
Rāī and Bīrbar.
Gadāī, Shaikh. See under Shaikh
Gadāī Kambōh, son of Jamāl
Kambo-ī.
Gaḍha,—the chief city of Gaḍha-
Katangah, 65, 78 and n 2, 87, 89.
Also called Gaṛha.
Gaḍha-Katangah, country of, 65, 76,
78 and n 2, 86, 230. Also called
Gaṛha-Katangah. See also under
Gondwānah.
Gaḍha Muktēsar or Maktēsar, town
of, 158, 224.
Gajpatī, Rājah,—a zamīndār of Ḥājī-
pūr and Patna, 182 n 3. Also called
Gujpatī and Kachītī, which see.
Ganges, the, 17, 27, 38, 76, 84, 85, 97,
100 n 3, 103, 154, 157, 158, 179, 185,
187, 220, 222, 224, 235, 290, 304,
424.
Gangōh, town of, 70.
Ganj Shakar,—a Muḥammadan saint,
260.
Gantūr or Kator,—district of, 304
n 1.
Garden of Kalānor, in Lahore, 1.
Gaṛha. See under Gaḍha.
Gaṛha Katangah. See under Gaḍha
Katangah.
Garhī, town and fortress of,—in
Bihār, 186, 232, 235, 290, 292.
Garmsīr, the,—country of, 113, 402
and n 6, 416.
Garra, the,—one of the five rivers
of the Panjāb, 304 n 5.
Gasht,—a dependency of the district
of Patna, 298.
Gaur, district and town of,—ancient-
ly called Lak'hnautī, 195, 213, 220,
232, 289, See also under Gour.
Gauriya Bahādur,—a Zamīndār of
Bengal, 333 n 6.
Genesis, Book of, 234 n 1.
George, or Jarkas,—a Rūmī servant
of the Imperial Court, 342 n 3.
Gesū Bakāwal Begī, Mīr, Governor of
Narnoul and then of the fortress
of Bakkar, under Akbar, 58, 138,
189.
G'hakkars, the,—a Hindū tribe, 52
and n 3, 53.
Ghamgīn,—surname of Mīrzā Abu-l-
Qāsim, an Officer of the Army, 196
n 1.
Ghanazfar [Ghazanfar?] Beg,—un-
cle of Ḥusain Khān, the nephew
and son-in-law of Mahdī Qāsim
Khān, 129.
Ghanī Khān, son of Mun'im Khān,
the Khān-Khānān,—at one time
Governor of Kābul, 52, 54.
Ghaus, signification of the term, 200
and n 1. See also under Ghous.
Ghausu-s-saqafain, Shaikh 'Abdu-l-
Qādir Jīlānī, 418.
Ghazal,—signification of the word,
37 n 3.
Ghazālī, Mulā,—a poet of Mashhid
[Mashhad?], 94.
Ghazanfar Beg. See under Ghanaz-
far Beg.
Ghāzī Khān,—title of Qāzī Nizām
Badakhshī, 186, 218. See also under
Ghāzī Khān Badakhshī.
Ghāzī Khān, Prince of the Chakks,
the well-known tribe and the
dominant one in Kashmīr, 3.
Ghāzī Khān Badakhshī, Commander
of a Thousand, 233, 247, 249, 275,
278, 283, 328, 351. Same as Qāzī
Nizām and Qāzī Khān, which see;
see also under Ghāzī Khān.
Ghāzī Khān Sūr,—one of the Amīrs
of Sulṭān Sikandar, the last of the
Afghān rulers of Dihli, 11, 65 n 3.
Ghāzī Khān Sūr,—an Amīr of the
time of Humāyūn, 65 n 3.
Ghāzī Khān Tabrīzi, Shāh,—one of
the Amīrs of Akbar, 233.
Ghāzī Khān Tannūrī, one of the great
Amīrs of 'Adalī, the Afghān
emperor of India, 65 and n 3.
Ghāzīpūr, town of, 84, 104, 179, 412.
Ghaznī. See under Ghaznīn.
Ghaznīn, town of, 5 n 4, 358.
Ghaznīn Khān,—the Governor of
Jālōr, 356.
Ghazzālī, Imām,—a celebrated theo-
logical writer, 267.
Ghiyāsu-d-dīn, Mīr. See under Ghi-
yāsu-d-dīn Naqīb Khān.
Ghiyāsu-d-dīn 'Alī Qazwīnī, Mīrzā,
173. See Ghiyāsu-d-dīn Naqīb
Khān.
Ghiyāsu-d-dīn Mançūr of Shīrāz, Mīr,
—a Doctor of Law and Theology,
325.
Ghiyāsu-d-dīn Naqīb Khān, son of
Mīr 'Abdu-l-Latīf, a Sayfī-Sayyid
of Qazwīn, 24. See Ghiyāsu-d-dīn
'Alī Qazwīnī.
Ghiyāspūr,—a town on the banks of
the Ganges, 185.
Ghiyār, signification of the word, 227
and n 5.
G'horāg'hāt, town of, 194, 195.
Ghorband,—a town on the banks of
the river Ghorband, 90.
Ghorband, the,—a river to the North
of Kābul, 61, 90 and n 1.
G'hrāwalī,—a place one farsang dis-
tant from Āgra, 69.
Gīlān,—a province and a town in
Persia, on the Caspian Sea, 214,
254 and n 2, 273, 276.
Gladwin's Dissertations, &c., 381 n 3.
Glossary, Wilson's, 371 n 2.
Gobind Chand, Rājah,—Governor of
the fortress of Talwārah, 38.
Gog [Yājūj],—tribes of, 189, 424.
Gogandah, district of,—in Rājpūtānā,
144, 239 n 6, 249. Also called Ko-
kandah, which see.
Gokaltāsh,—signification of the word,
49 n 4.
Golah,—a place in the Northern
mountains of India, 130, 140, 142.
See also under Kānt-u-Golah.
Golkandah, State of, 390.
Gonds, the,—a tribe of Hindūs, 78
[n 2.
Gondwānah,—a country of Hindūstān
inhabited by the tribe of Gonds,
78 n 2. Also called Gaṛha-Katan-
gah or Gaḍha-Katangah, which see.
Gorāk'hpūr, town of, 105.
Gosālah Banārasī,—or
Gosālah Khān, of Banāras,—a Shaikh-
zādah and disciple of Akbar's re-
ligion, 418, 419, 420.
Gour, district and town of,—in Ben-
gal, 12 and n 4, 184, 187. See also
under Gaur.
Gowadī, the,—an affluent of the
Ganges, 179 and n 2. Often called
the Gumtī, or Gumatī, which also
see.
Gualyār. See under Gwālyār.
Gūjar Khān Kararānī, Ruknu-d-
Daulah,—General of Dā'ūd Kara-
rānī, ruler of Bengal, 184, 185, 197,
198.
Gujpatī,—a Zamīndār of the neigh-
bourhood of Ḥājīpūr and Patnah,
244 and n 4. Also called Gajpati
and Kachītī.
Gujrāt, 4, 22, 26, 28, 33, 34, 40, 48,
62, 66, 67, 105, 110, 143, 144, 145,
146 and n 1, 147, 149, 151 n 2, 153,
162, 167, 173, 174, 189, 195, 202,
205, 206, 215, 216, 218 and n 1, 222
251, 256, 260, 268, 282, 285, 321,
322, 328, 332 [see page xii], 337,
344, 346, 353, 355, 356, 358, 365,
366, 368, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374,
376, 377, 380, 384, 401.
Gujratees, the. See the next.
Gujrātīs, the, 168, 171, 342.
Gulbadan Bēgum, daughter of Bābar,
the Emperor of Hindustān, 7, 216,
320, 332.
Gul Guz, Pahlawān,—the keeper of
Shāh Abu-l-Ma'ālī of Kāshgar in
his imprisonment, 4.
Gulrūkh Bēgum, daughter of Kam-
rān Mirzā, son of Bābar, and wife
of Ibrāhīm Ḥusain. Mīrzā, son of
Sulṭān Muḥammad Mīrzā, 148, 158
n 1, 256.
Gumatī, the,—or
Gūmtī, the,—an affluent of the Gan-
ges, 82 n 4, 179 n 2. Also called the
Gowadī, which see.
Gowālpāra or Gwālpārah,—a depen-
dency of Bengāl, 195 n 2.
Gurs [Kurus], the,—a great tribe of
Hindūs in ancient times, 94 n 6.
See also under the Kurus.
Guzērāt. See under Gujrāt.
Guzrāt. See under Gujrāt.
Gwālpāra or Gwālpārah,—a depen-
dency of Bengāl, 195 n 2.
Gwālyār, [Gwalior], fort of, 24, 25
and n 2, 29, 68, 71, 74, 122, 165,
195 and n 2, 238, 239, 250, 285,
391.