J.

Jabalpūr, 65 n 5.
Jabārī, or
Jabbārī, son of Majnūn Khān Qāqshāl,
—one of the Amīrs of Akbar, 291,
424. See also under Habārī.
Jacob of Scripture, 262 n 3, 353 n 3.
Ja'far Bēg, the Āçaf Khān Bakhshī,
—one of the Court officers of
Akbar, and nephew of Mīrzā Ghi-
yāsu-d-dīn 'Alī Qazwīnī, the Āçaf
Khān Sānī, 393, 409 n 4. See also
under Mīrzā Ja'far and Āçaf Khān
Sālis.
Ja'far Çādiq, the sixth of the twelve
Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 36 n 2, 108
and n 1.
Ja'far Khān, son of Qazāq Khān,—
one of the Amīrs of the Panjāb,
165.
Ja'far, Mīrzā, 322, 328. Same as
Ja'far Bēg, which see. See also
under Āçaf Khān Sālis.
Ja'far Sādiq, Imām. See under Ja'far
Çādiq.
Ja'fir. See under Ja'far.
Jafrdān, 295.
Jaganāth,—a Court officer of Akbar
and a Zamīndār of Mālwah, 249.
Jaganāt'h, the Hindū god, 166.
Jagannāth, town of, 177.
Jāgīr lands,—definition of, 23 n 4.
Jahānābād,—a parganna of the Hūglī
district, 196 n 2.
Jahāngīr,—title assumed by Prince
Salīm, son of Akbar, on his acces-
sion to the throne of Delhi, 320
n 2, 390 nn 1 and 2.
Jahjar Khān, or Jahjār Khān, the
Ḥabshī [Abyssinian], one of the
Amīrs of Gujrāt, 110, 145, 151, 168.
At p. 145 this name appeared as
Jajhār Khān
Jahnī, town of, 159.
Jai Chand, Rājah, Commandant of
the fortress of Nagarkot, under
Akbar, 164, 166.
Jaimal of Chītōr, 239. Same as the
next, which see.
Jaimal Rāī,—one of the Rāīs of Rānā
Udai Sing and governor of the
fortress of Chīṭor, 105, 107, 239.
See also the next.
Jaimall Rājpūt, 46. Same as Jaimal
Rāī, which see.
Jaipūr or Ambēr, a Rājpūt State, 45.
n 8, 242 n 2.
Jaisalmīr, town of. See under Jasal-
[mīr.
Jajhār Khān,—one of the Amīrs of
Gujrāt. See under Jahjar Khān
the Ḥabshī.
Jakmāl,—brother of the Rānā of
Sārohī, 337.
Jalāīr, name of a Chaghtāī tribe, 44
n 5.
Jalāl Khān Qūrchī or Qurchī,—one of
the Amīrs and privy counsellors of
Akbar, 189, 204, 345.
Jalāl Multānī, Qāzī. See under Jalālu-
d-dīn of Multān.
Jalāl Mutawakkil, Mīr Sayyid,—a
religious leader, 114, 121.
Jalāl of T'hānēsar, Shaikh,—one of
the Muḥammadan Saints of Hind,
322.
Jalālābād, town of, 55 and n 3, 72, 90,
302, 303, 304. Known of old by
the name of Jusāī.
Jalālah, son of Roshanāī, a Hindūstānī
soldier who made himself a religious
teacher and set up an heretical
sect, 360, 368 n 1, 363, 401.
Jalālah Roshanāī or Roushanāī. See
the above.
Jalālah Tārīkī, 368. Same as the
above, the word Tārīkī or ‘man of
darkness,’ being used for Roshanāī
or ‘bright.’
Jalālī era, the, 260
Jalālu-d-dīn Muḥammad Akbar Pād-
shāh, 1, 382. See under Akbar.
Jalālu-d-dīn of Multān, Maulānā,
Qāzī-l-Quzāt of the empire of Hind,
104, 213, 215, 278, 323.
Jalālu-d-dīn Sūr, the Afghān, ruler of
G'horāg'hāt, 195.
Jālandhar, town of, 5, 10, 13, 34 and
n 5, 38 n 3.
Jalēsah, parganna of, 155 and n 1.
Jalesar, town of, 155 n 1, 308.
Jallāl-ābād. See under Jalālābād.
Jallālah, the Roshanāī, 401. See
under Jalālah.
Jālōr, town of, 57 n 4, 58, 340, 342,
356.
Jālwar, town of, 56, 372. See the
above.
Jām, the,—the Hindū ruler of Sūrat
and Jūnāgaṛh, 355, 370, 371, 384,
385, 392, 400. This Jām was called
Satr Sāl or Satarsāl.
Jām Satr Sāl. See the above.
Jamāl Bakhtyār, Shaikh,—one of the
Court officers of Akbar, 294, 297,
298, 308, 358.
Jamāl Kambo-i, father of Shaikh
Gadā-ī Kamboh, a poet of Dihlī,
who became Çadr of the empire,
22.
Jamāl Khān, a Ghulām of 'Adalī, the
Emperor of India, 26 and n 3, 27,
39, 62.
Jamāl Khān Qurchī,—one of the
Court officers of Akbar, 175. See
also Jalāl Khān Qurchī, of which
this is probably a mis-print.
Jamāl Khān, son of Shaikh Mangan
of Badāūn, 139.
Jamāl, Pahlawān,—police-magistrate
of Āgra, 118.
Jamāl, Qāzī, a Hindū poet of Siva-
kanpūr, 119.
Jamālu-d-dīn, Mīr,—a traditionalist,
173.
Jamālu-d-dīn, Sayyid, grandson of
Sayyid Maḥmūd Bārhah,—one of
the Court officers of Akbar, 356, 357.
Jamd'har or Jamd'hara, signification
of the word, 144 and n 3.
Jāmī, 35, 180, 423. See also under
Maulānā 'Abdu-r-Raḥmām Jāmī.
Jāmī, Imām Moulawī. See the
above.
Jāmi'-i-Rashīdī, the,—name of an
historical work, 397.
Jāmi'u-l-ḥikāyāt, the,—name of a
book, 329.
Jamīl Bēg, Vazīr Khān,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 290.
Jamna, the. See under the Jumna.
Jamshīd,—one of the ancient Kings
of Īrān, 108, 199.
Jamshīd Muḥammad Akbar, 178.
See under Akbar.
Jān Bāqī Khān,—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar, 94.
Jān Muḥammad Khān Bihbūdī,—a
warrior in Akbar's Army, 290.
Jānī Bēg. Mīrzā, grandson of Muḥam-
mad Bāqī Tarkhān,—Governor of
Tattah, 314, 370, 377, 386, 392, 399.
Jānī, Mīrzā, the Governor of Tattah.
See the above.
Jannat-ashyānī, meaning of the ex-
pression, 308 n 2.
Jannat-āstānī, meaning of the expres-
sion, 308 n 2.
Jannatu-l-'adan [Jannat-'Adn?], the,
—the Garden of Eden, 74 n.
Jannatu-l-Firdūs, the,—the Garden
of Paradise, name of the sixth
heaven, 74 n.
Jannatu-l-Khūld [Khuld], the,—the
Garden of Eternity, name of the
fourth heaven, 74 n.
Jannatu-l-māwā, the—name of the
third heaven, 74 n.
Jannatu-n-Nu'īm [Na'īm], the,—the
Garden of Delights, name of the
fifth heaven, 74 n.
Jārīkārān, village of, 61.
Jarkas, the Rūmī,—Commander of
the fortress of Baroṇch on the
side of Muzaffar, son of Sulṭān
Maḥmūd Gujrātī, 342 and n 3, 344.
Jasalmīr, town of, 138, 355, 392.
Jaunpūr. See under Jounpūr.
Jazyah, or tax on Non-Moslems,
abolished, 284.
Jellum, the. See the Jelum.
Jelum, the,—one of the five rivers of
the Panjāb, 304 n 5, 359 n 2, 398 n 4.
Also called the Behat, which see.
Jeremia, the Jewish Prophet, 198
n 3.
Jesus, 191 n 1, 206, 267 and n 3.
Jetch, Dōāb of, between the Jelum
and the Chenab, in the Panjāb, 304
n 5.
Jhannī, a town in the vicinity of
Lāhor, 408 and n 2.
Jhārkand, a country of Hindūstān,
78 n 2.
Jhīls, the,—a low class of Multān
peasants, 161, 162.
Jhosī (and Piyāg), known as Ilhābās,
the modern Allahabad, 124, 297.
Jhujhar, town of, 33.
Jhusī, town of, 100 n 3.
Jījī Anagah, wife of Shamsu-d-dīn
Muḥammad Atgah Khān,—a nurse
of Akbar, 49 n 4.
Jitūra, town of, 196 n 3.
Job of Scripture, 296 n 1.
Jodhpūr or Marwar, a Rājpūt State,
34, 45 n 8, 144, 153, 181, 189 and
n 1, 275 n 2.
Jogīpūrah,—a place outside Āgrah
for feeding jogīs, 334.
Jogī-s, the,—or Hindū devotees, 95,
369.
John, Epistle of St.—, 237 n 3.
Jonah, Book of, 222 n 1.
Jones, Sir W., 47 n 4.
Josā, the,—a river, 289. See also
the Jūsah.
Joseph, the Patriarch, 124, 353.
Joshua, Book of, 75 n 1.
Joudhpūr. See under Jodhpūr.
Joudpūr. See under Jodhpūr.
Jouhar, explanation of the word, 107.
Jounāgaṛh. See under Jūnāgaṛh.
Jounpūr, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 27 and
n 3, 44, 54, 76, 77, 79, 80, 82 n 4,
84, 85, 86, 89, 94, 96, 103, 104, 138,
139, 177, 179, 180, 185, 245, 273,
284, 285, 290, 297, 298, 309, 384,
386.
Jousā, town of, 181.
Jūjak Bēgum. See under Māh Jūjak
Bëgum.
Jumlatu-l-mulk, or manager-in-gen-
eral,—an official title, 409 n 2.
Jumlatu-l-mulk, title of Muzaffar
Khān 'Alī Turbatī, one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 174.
Jumna, the, 6, 29, 75, 114, 119, 128,
135, 154, 179, 285.
Jūnāgaṛh,—the capital of Sūrat, 150,
152, 256, 355, 384, 392, 400 and n 2,
401. See also under Chūnāgaṛh.
Junaid, a Muḥammadan Saint, 209.
Junaid, uncle's son of Dāūd, son of
Sulaimān Karārānī, the Afghān,
ruler of Bengal, 195, 245.
Jupiter, 87 n 1.
Jūsah, the,—a river, 104. See also
the Josā.
Jusāī, the old name of Jalālābād, 55
n 3.
Juvenal, 20 n 2.