I.

'Ibādat-Khānah, the,—a building
constructed by Akbar in Fatḥpūr,
a suburb of Āgra, 200, 203, 204,
215, 219, 262, 294.
Ibn Abī Lailā,—a Mujtahid or Doctor
of the Law, 211.
Ibn Adham,—a Muḥammadan Saint,
401 and n 4.
Ibn 'Arabī, Shaikh,—a celebrated
Theological Doctor, 265, 286.
Ibn Batuta, Lee's Translation of the
Travels of, 90 n 3.
Ibn Mūsā Rizā, the eighth of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 35
and n 3.
Ibn Sīna, [Avecenna], 382 n 3.
Ibrāhīm Chishtī, Shaikh,—of Fatḥ-
pūr-Sīkrī, one of the Amīrs of
Akbar, 236, 237, 300 [see page xi],
320, 352, 387.
Ibrāhīm Ḥusain Aḥadī, Khwājah, 408
Ibrāhīm Ḥusain Mīrzā, son of Sulṭān
Muḥammad Mīrzā,—a descendant
on his father's side from Taimūr,
the Fortunate, 87 and n 1, 93, 145,
146, 147, 148, 151, 153, 154, 156 and
n 1, 161-164, 166, 256.
Ibrāhīm Khān, son of Rājah 'Alī
Khān, of Burhānpūr, 354.
Ibrāhīm Khān Uzbek, uncle of the
Khān Zamān, 'Alī Qulī Khān Shai-
banī, 44, 75, 76 and n 1, 81, 82, 83.
Ibrāhīm, Mīrzā, 153. See under
Ibrāhīm Ḥusain Mīrzā.
Ibrāhīm, Mīrzā, son of Mīrzā Sulai-
mān, Governor of Badakhshān, 5
and n 3, 217.
Ibrāhīm Sarhindī. See under Ibrā-
hīm Sirhindī.
Ibrāhīm Sīkrī Wāl, Shaikh,—one of
the governors of Akbar, 185.
Ibrāhīm Sirhindī, Ḥājī,—one of the
'Ulamā of the Court and for some
time Çadr of Gujrāt, 175, 190, 191,
205, 212, 213, 214, 216, 285, 286,
322, 328.
Ibrāhīm Sūr, 345.
Içfahān, town of, 128. See also under
Ispahān.
Idaṛ, town of, 144, 167, 173, 249, 251.
Iḥrām, signification of the term, 41
and n 1, 121 and n 2.
Ijmā', signification of the term, 267
n 1.
Ikhlāç, name of a Sūra in the Qur'ān,
23 and n 6.
Ikhtiyāru-l-Mulk, the Abyssinian,—
one of the Amīrs of Gujrāt, 145,
152, 167, 168, 169, 171, 172.
Ikhtiyāru-l-Mulk Gujrātī, 167. See
the above.
Ilāhābād. See under Illāhābād.
Ilāhdād of Amrohah, Mullā,—Çadr
of the Doab of Sindsagar, in the
Panjāb, 284, 304, 346, 355, 358.
Ilāhdād Nabawī of Sulṭānpūr, Mullā,
—Çadr of the Doab of Jetch, in
the Panjāb, 304.
Ilāhī era of Akbar, the, 175 n 1, 384
n 4, 397 n 4.
Ilāhīs, the,—name of a sect of
Shaikhs, who called themselves
‘Disciples,’ 308.
Ilhābās, town of, 124. See under
Illāhābās.
Ilichpūr, town of, 373.
Illāhābād [Allahabad], 179, 344, 345,
346, 351. See also under Alāhābād.
Illāhābās (the modern Allahabad),
179. See also the above.
Iltimās Qāzī Fatḥpūrī, a learned Doc-
tor of Akbar's time, 309.
Ilyās Khān, the Afghān,—Governor
of Karah, 297.
'Imādu-d-dīn, the krorī,—an atten-
dant of Quṭbu-d-dīn Muḥam-
mad Khān Atgah, 341 [see page
xii].
Imām Rizā. See under Rizā.
Imām-i-'ādil, or Just Ruler,—his
authority on points of law, 278,
279.
'Imrān, name of the father of the
Virgin Mary according to the
Qur'ān, 59 n 4.
India, 5 nn 7 and 8, 6 n 1, 22, 24, 27
n 1, 28, 54 n 2, 65 n 1, 90 n 3, 95 n 3,
102, 108 n 2, 113, 207, 224, 240 n 3,
242 n 4, 261, 266, 282, 307 n 1, 336,
352, 398, 402 n 6, 410, 413, 414,
419, 421 and n 3. See also under
Hind and Hindūstān.
India, Elphinstone's, 22 n 4.
Indian Antiquaries, Princep's, 367 n 3.
Indus, the, 90 n 5, 207, 217, 218, 299,
301, 302, 304 n 5, 350, 351, 362,
379 [see page xiii].
Insān-i-Kāmil, or the Perfect Man,—
an expression applied to Akbar, 266.
Inst. ling. pers., Vuller's, 405 n 3.
Īrān,—Persia as called by the Per-
sians, 24 n 2, 298.
'Irāq, 11 n 4, 24, 102, 189 n 2, 190,
222, 231 n 2, 248, 253, 313, 315, 327,
407.
'Irāqī horses, 230 [see page viii].
Irshād-i-Qāzī,—name of a book, 294.
'Īsā [Jesus], 191 and n 1.
'Īsā, river of, 333. See under Nahr-
u-'Īsā.
'Īsā Khān, the Zamīndār of Oṛisā,
292, 333 and n 3, 417.
'Īsā Khān Niyāzī, generally known
as Shujā'at,—one of the great
Amīrs of the Afghāns, 181.
'Īsā Tarkhān, Mīrzā, ruler of Tattah,
138.
Isaiah, Book of, 311 n 4.
Isḥāq Kākawī, Shaikh,—a holy and
God-fearing sage, 304.
Iskandar Bēg,—a relative of Ḥusain
Qūlī Khān, 56 and n 2, 58 and n 4.
Iskandar Khān, the Uzbek,—one of
the great Amīrs of Akbar, 6, 8, 75,
76, 80, 81, 82, 84, 85, 94, 104, 138,
139. See also under Sikandar.
Iskandarpūr, town of, 187.
Islām Chishtī, Shaikh. See under
Chishtī, Shaikhu-l-Islām.
Islām Shāh, Sūr,—of the Afghān
dynasty of Dihlī, 25 n 1. Various-
ly called Aslīm, Islīm and Salīm
Shāh, which see.
Islem Chishtī, Shaikh. See under
Chishtī, Shaikhu-l-Islām.
Islīm Shāh, Sūr,—of the Afghān
dynasty of Dihlī, 15, 77, 176, 274
294 Variously called Aslīm, Is-
lām and Salīm Shāh, which see.
Ismā'īl 'Aṭā-ī Mu'ammā-ī, Mullā.—
disciple of Shaikh Muḥammad
Ghous, 62.
Ismā'īl Çafawī,—Fonnder of the
Çafawī dynasty in Persia, 402.
Ismā'īl Khān Ābdār, surnamed Khān
Khānān,—one of the Amīrs of
Dāūd, son of Sulaimān Karārānī,
the Afghān, ruler of Bengāl,
198.
Ismā'īl, Khwājah,—grandson of
Shaikh Islām Chishtī, 358
Ismā'īl Qulī Khān, son of Walī Bēg
Zu'l Qadr,—one of the great Amīrs
of Akbar and brother of Ḥusain
Qulī Khān, 33, 35, 38, 56, 58 and
n 3, 109, 159, 275, 297, 360, 364,
376, 391, 401.
Ismā'īl II, Shāh of Persia, son of
Shāh Ṭahmāsp, 246. See also
under Shāh Ismā'īl II.
Ispahān, City of, 375. See also under
Içfahān.
Israel of Scripture, 262 n 3.
Israelites, the, 206.
Istiqbāl, explanation of the term, 339
and n 1.
I'timād Khān, chief eunuch of Aslīm
Shāh Sūr, of the Afghān dynasty of
Dihlī, 63, 64, 68.
I'timād Khān, a Ghulām of Sulṭān
Maḥmūd Gujrātī,—governor of
Gujrāt under Akbar, 145, 173, 205,
251, 258, 320, 332, 337, 338 and n 3,
340, 343.
I'timād Khān, Khwājah Sarāi,—an
officer of Akbar's army, 179.