H.

Habārī, son of Majnūn Khān Qāq-
shāl,—one of the Amīrs of Akbar,
424. Elsewhere called Jabārī, or
Jabbāri, which also see.
Ḥabīb 'Alī Khān,—one of the fol-
lowers of Muḥammad Bairām Khān,
the Khān Khānān, 25, 26.
Ḥabīb, Qāzī,—a zealous Sunnī of
Kashmīr, 128.
Ḥabīb-ullāh, Hājī,—an officer of the
Court of Akbar, 299, 302.
Ḥabsh, Mīr,—or
Ḥabshī, Mīr,—a Shī'ah Doctor of
Law, 201, 262.
Hādī, al-, or the Guide, 259, 266.
Hādī Sadr, Mīr,—a trusty friend of
'Alī Qulī Khān Uzbek, the Khān
Zamān, 83.
Ḥadīs, the Traditions of the Prophet,
207 and n 1.
Ḥāfiz, of Shīrāz,—the famous Per-
sian poet, 22 n 5, 24 n 3, 40, 423,
425.
Ḥāfiz Muḥammad Amīn,—a preacher
of Qandahār and one of the seven
Imāms, or private Chaplains, of
Akbar, 250, 251, 259, 277.
Ḥāfiz Sulṭān Rakhnah of Herāt,—
Governor of Sarhind, 393.
Ḥāfiz Tashkandī,—a disciple of Ra-
shīd Mulā 'Içāmu-d-dīn Asfarāyanī,
190.
Ḥaidar Khān. See under Ḥaidar Mu-
ḥammad Khān.
Ḥaidar, Mīr,—a riddle writer, 248,
273.
Ḥaidar Muḥammad Khān Ākhtah-
bēgī,—Governor of Kābul, 6, 54.
Ḥaidar Qāsim Kōhbar,—Lieutenant
of Mīrzā Muḥammad Ḥakīm, son of
Humāyūn, 57.
Ḥaidar Sulṭān Uzbek-i-Shaibānī,
father of 'Alī Qulī Khān Uzbek,
the Khān Zamān, 84 n 1.
Ḥairatī of Samarqand,—a poet, 210,
280.
Ḥaiwatu-l-Ḥaiwān, [Ḥayātu-l-Ḥaya-
wān], the,—name of a book, 207.
Ḥājī Bēgum,—daughter of the bro-
ther of Humāyūn's mother, 308 and
n 1.
Ḥājī Bhīkan Basāwarī, 25.
Ḥājī Ḥabīb-ullāh. See under Ḥabīb-
ullāh.
Ḥājī Khān,—a Ghulām of 'Adalī, the
Emperor of India, 25 n 3. See the
next.
Ḥājī Khān Alwarī, 6, 26, 40. See
the above.
Ḥājī Mīrzā Bēg Kābulī,—author of
an account of Little Tibet, 388.
Ḥājī Muḥammad,—an Aḥadī soldier
of Akbar, 303.
Ḥājī Muḥammad Khān Sīstānī. See
under Muḥammad Khān Sīstānī.
Ḥājīpūr, town and district of, 58 and
n 1, 177, 178, 182, 183, 184, 232,
244, 274, 290, 293, 297, 320, 345,
350, 375, 412.
Ḥajj, the great Pilgrimage to Mecca,
40 n 2.
Ḥajjī, more commonly spelt Ḥājī.
See under the latter word.
Ḥajr [Ḥajar?]-ul-aswad, the Black
Stone
, of the Ka'bah, at Mecca, 40
n 2.
Ḥakīm Abu-l-Fatḥ. See under Abu-l-
Fatḥ of Gīlān, the Çadr of the
Metropolis of Hind.
Ḥakīm Ḥasan. See under Ḥasan of
Gīlān.
Ḥakīm Humām. See under Humām
of Gīlān.
Ḥakīm Humāyūn. See under Hu-
māyūn of Gīlān.
Ḥakīm Nūru-d-dīn Qarārī. See un-
der Nūru-d-dīn of Gīlān.
Ḥakīm Sanāī,—a famous Persian
poet, 123 n 1.
Ḥakīm Sūr Afghān,—one of the
leaders of Rānā Kīkā's army, 236
[see page viii], 239 and n 2.
Ḥakīmu-l-Mulk Shamsu-d-dīn of
Gīlān,—a Doctor of philosophy
and medicine and a Courtier, 254
and n 2, 270, 276, 283, 293, 300.
Hamadānī, Qāzī. See under 'Abdu-l-
Jabbār Hamadānī.
Hamām, Ḥakīm, 383, 388. See under
Ḥakīm Humām of Gīlān.
Ḥāmid Budāonī, grandfather of our
author, 259.
Ḥāmid Bukhārī, Sayyid,—one of the
great Amīrs of the Sulṭāns of Guj-
rāt, 145, 167, 364, 366.
Ḥāmid Gīlānī Qādirī, Shaikh,—a
devotee, 418.
Hamlet, Shakespere's, 164 n 1.
Ham-Māshīaḥ ben Dāvīd, the false
Christ of the Jews, 189 n 2.
Hamzabān, governor of the fort of
Sūrat, in Gujrāt, 147, 149.
Ḥamzah, Amīr,—an uncle of Mu-
ḥammad, called Asad-ullāh “Lion
of God” for his valour, 329, 347
and n 4.
Ḥamzahnāmah, the,—a book in which
the exploits of Ḥamzah, uncle of
Muḥammad, are celebrated, 347 n 4.
Ḥanafīs, the,—one of the four sects
of Sunnī Muslims, 212, 337.
Hāndiyah, town of, 48 and n 3. The
Hindia of the maps. See also
under Hindia.
Hānsī, town of, 260 [see page ix].
Hansū, brother-in-law of Bāyazīd,
son of Sulaimān Kararānī, ruler of
Bengāl, 177.
Harāt, town of, 20 n 3, 38, 48. See
also under Herāt.
Harāwal, town of, 67.
Harī, another name for the city of
Harāt, 375 and n 2.
Harpūr, town of, 195 n 4.
Hārūnu-r-rashīd, the 'Abbāside Kha-
līfah, 288 n 1.
Ḥasam [Ḥasan?] Khān Turkamān,—
governor of the fort of Chunhār,
62.
Ḥasan, an infant son of the Emperor
Akbar, 68.
Ḥasan, son of 'Alī, son of Abi Ṭālib,
the second of the twelve Imāms of
the Shī'ahs, 11 n 4, 36 n 2.
Ḥasan 'Askarī, the eleventh of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 36 n 2
Ḥasan Bēg—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar, 245.
Ḥasan Bēg,—brother of Muḥammad
Ḥusain Khān, the relation of
Mahdī Qāsim Khān, 11.
Ḥasan of Gīlān, Ḥakīm,—a physician
of the Court, 359, 418.
Ḥasan Khān, brother of Fatḥ Khān
Afghān Tibatī, the governor of
Rohtās, 79.
Ḥasan Khān, brother of Shihāb
Khān [Shihābu-d-dīn Aḥmad
Khān], governor of Dihlī, 55, 91.
Ḥasan Khān Bachgotī,—an Afghān
Chief, 18.
Ḥasan Khān Khāzanchī, or the
Treasurer,—an officer of the Court,
77 and n 2.
Ḥasan Khān Panī,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 361.
Ḥasan, Khwājah, 302. See under the
next
Ḥasan Naqshbandī, Khwājah, son of
Khwājah Bahāu-d-dīn Naqshbandī,
72, 89, 90, 91, 302. He married
the sister of Mīrzā Muḥammad
Ḥakīm, son of Humāyūn, and be-
came his absolute Prime-minister
in Kābul.
Ḥasan [Ḥusain?] Qulī Khān, the
Khān Jahān, 188. See under Ḥusain
Qulī Khān, son of Walī Bēg.
Hāshim Bārhah, Sayyid. See under
Hāshim, son of Maḥmūd Bārhah.
Hāshim Fīrozabādī, Sayyid,—a re-
ligious teacher, 294.
Hāshim Khān, brother of Shihābu-d-
dīn Aḥmad Khān, the Governor of
Dihlī and one of the great Amīrs
of Akbar, 181.
Hāshim Khān Nīshapūrī, of Jhosī and
Piyāj, 297.
Hāshim, Mīr,—a jagir-holder of Guj-
rāt, 333.
Hāshim Qandahārī,—a Persian poet,
36, 37.
Hāshim, son of Maḥmūd Bārha, Say-
yid,—one of the Amīrs of Akbar,
224 [see page viii], 233, 236, 237
n 4, 342.
Ḥassan. See under Ḥasan.
Ḥātim Sambhalī, Miyān,—a famous
Moulawī, 294.
Ḥātim Ṭāī,—an Arab famous for his
liberality, 67 n 4.
Hatiyah, town of, 65.
Hatiyapūl (Elephant-bridge) gate, in
Āgrah, 112 and n 3. See also the
next.
Hatyāpūl (Elephant-gate), the, 219
and n 2. See the above.
Hawāy,—name of an elephant of
Hēmun Baqqāl, 8.
Ḥayātu-l-Ḥayawān, the,—name of a
book, 207.
Hazār Shu'ā' (the thousand rays),—
name of a poem, 346.
Hazārah,—a tract of country in the
Hindū Kush, 55 and n 1.
Hazārī, a person holding 1,000 bīghahs
of land, 353.
Ḥazrat 'Alī. See under 'Alī, son of
Abi Ṭālib.
Ḥazrati A'lā, title of Sulaimān Kara-
rānī, the Afghān, ruler of Bengāl,
166.
Hēmun Baqqāl,—makes himself mas-
ter of Dihlī with the title of Bik-
ramājīt, but is defeated and killed,
6, 7, 8, 9.
Herāt, town of, 173, 296, 375 n 2,
393. See also under Harāt.
Herklot's Qanoon-e-Islām, 41 n 2.
Herodotus, 26 n 1, 317 n 2.
Heubach, 236 n 1.
Hidāyah (Guidance),—name of a
book on Muḥammadan Law, [208
and n 1.
Ḥijāz,—Arabia petræa, 32 and n 1,
216, 222, 320.
Ḥijāz Khān Badāūnī,—one of the
Afghān Amīrs and Governor of
Sirhind, 37.
Hillel,—of Talmudic fame, 55 n 5,
287 n 2.
Hind, 7, 68, 70, 73, 85 and n 5, 107,
140, 144, 174, 217, 245, 248, 269,
273, 282, 315, 329, 391, 394. See
also under Hindūstān and India.
Hindia or Hindiah,—a town on the
confines of the Dak'hin, 48 n 3, 87,
88, 372, 416, 417.
Hindū Bēg Moghūl,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 25.
Hindūān, town of, 250 n 3.
Hindū-kash mountains, the, 90 and
n 3. See also the next.
Hindu Kush, the, 5 n 6, 55 n 1. See
also the above.
Hindūn, town of, 250 and n 3.
Hindūs, the, 39, 62, 65 n 1, 94, 95,
107, 116, 159, 164, 165, 192, 208,
213, 216, 226, 239 and n 3, 240,
268, 277, 295, 313, 314, 331, 347,
352, 367, 368, 369, 424, 426.
Hindūstān, 6 and n 1, 7, 18, 22, 28,
32, 38 n 4, 40, 45, 49, 54, 56, 75, 78
n 2, 89, 90, 91, 151, 160, 190, 217,
253, 279, 299, 327, 347, 350, 354,
360, 365, 366, 383, 388, 404, 409.
See also under Hind and India.
Hindustānī Dictionary, Shakespeare's,
18 n 1.
Hindustānīs, the,—Native Musal-
māns, 350.
Ḥīrah, town of,—in 'Irāq, 231 n 2.
Hīrānand,—name of an elephant in
the imperial army, 99.
Hīrāpūr, pass of,—in the mountains
of Kashmīr, 396.
Hirāt. See under Harāt and Herāt.
Ḥisār Fīrozah. See under Fīrozah.
History of British India, Mill and
Wilson's, 240 n 3.
Hormūz, country of, 230.
Hoshang Ghōrī, King of Mālwa,
Sulṭān, 65.
Hoshang-ābād, fortress of, 65.
Houdal, town of, 6.
Hughes' Notes on Muḥammadanism,
36 n 2.
Hūglī, district, 196 n 2.
Humā, a bird of happy omen, 45 and
n 1.
Humām of Gīlān, Ḥakīm, also called
Ḥakīm Humāyūn and Humāyūn
Qulī,—brother of Ḥakīm Abu-l-
Faṭh, 214, 299, 304, 328, 365, 390
[see page xiii], 396, 421. At pp. 383
and 388 this name appeared as
Hamām and at pp. 396 and 421
as Humān.
Humāyūn,—the Emperor of India
and Father of Akbar, 2, 5 and nn 1,
4, 7 and 8, 7 n 5, 54 and nn 2 and 3,
65 n 3, 72 n 3, 95 n 3, 308 n 1.
Humāyūn, Erskine's, 5 nn 4 and 7,
345 n 2.
Humāyūn Farmūlī, son of Shāh
Farmūlī,—called by the title of
Humāyūn Qulī Khān, 291.
Humāyūn, Ḥakīm, 214. See under
Humām of Gīlān.
Humāyūn Qūlī, 214. See under Hu-
mām of Gīlān.
Humāyūn Qūlī Khān, title of Hu-
māyūn Farmūlī, son of Shāh Far-
mūlī, 291.
Ḥusain, an infant son of the Emperor
Akbar, 68.
Ḥusain, son of 'Alī, son of Abi Ṭālib,
the third of the twelve Imāms of
the Shī'ahs, 11 n 4, 36 n 2.
Ḥusain, son of 'Alī, son of Ḥusain,
son of 'Alī, son of Abi Ṭālib, 143.
Ḥusain 'Arab Mālikī, Qāzī,—one of
the Qāzīs of Dihlī, 213.
Ḥusain Bēg Shaikh 'Umrī Badakh-
shī,—collector of the revenues of
Kashmīr, 394 and n 4, 395.
Ḥusain, Ḥājī,—attendant of the
monastery of Shaikh Islām Chishtī,
345.
Ḥusain Jalāīr, Sulṭān, 39.
Ḥusain Khān, governor of Kashmīr,
[128.
Ḥusain Khān, sister's son and son-in-
law of Mahdī Qāsim Khān,—one
of the Amīrs of Akbar, iii, 9, 11,
29, 33, 35, 38, 83, 86, 87, 88, 96,
128, 129, 130, 142, 154, 155, 156,
157, 158, 159, 161, 162, 163, 171,
175, 182, 187, 222, 223, 224, 226
and n 4, 227 n 1, 238. Same as
Muḥammad Ḥusain Khān, which
also see.
Ḥusain Khān, a relative of Shihāb
Khān [Shihābu-d-Dīn Aḥmad
Khān], 34.
Ḥusain Khān, son of Walī Bēg, 38.
See under Ḥusain Qulī Khān.
Ḥusain Khang-sawār, Mīr Sayyid,—
a Muḥammadan saint buried in
Ajmīr, 143.
Ḥusain of Khwārizm, Shaikh,—a
great Theological Doctor, 253.
Ḥusain Maibazī, Mīr Qāzī, 261.
Ḥusain Marwī, Khwājah,—a poet,
124, 127, 136.
Ḥusain Mīrzā, Sulṭān, King of Khurā-
sān, 87 and n 2. See the next.
Ḥusain Mīrzā, Sulṭān, son of Bahrām
Mīrzā, son of Ismā'īl Çafawī, 402.
See the above.
Ḥusain Qazwīnī, Qāzī,—governor of
the State of the Sawālik mountain-
district, on the part of Akbar, 412.
Ḥusain Qulī Khān, the Khān Jahān,
son of Walī Bēg Zu-l-Qadr,—one
of the Amīrs of Akbar, 33, 38, 56,
57, 58 and n 2, 106, 109, 111, 137,
159, 161, 163, 164, 165, 166, 168,
188, 235 n 5.
Ḥusain, Shaikh, grandson of Khwā-
jah Mu'īnu-d-dīn Chishtī of Ajmīr,
309.
Ḥusainī, 'Ārif Çafavī, 68.
Ḥusayn. See under Ḥusain.
Husn Abdāl,—name of a place, 382.
Hydaspes, the,—the river Jellum or
Bahat, 178 n 2, 398 n 4.