Kab Rāī, or Prince of Poets, title of
Gadāī Brahmadās, or Rājah Bīrbar,
164 and n 4. See under Gadāī
Brahmadās and Bīrbar.
Ka'bah,—the square stone building
in the Masjidu-l-Ḥarām, at Makkah,
40 and n 2, 41, 113, 216, 344, 417.
Ka'bah-i-Murādāt, or sanctum of de-
sires, 266.
Kabi Rājah. See under Kab Rāī.
Kābul, 5 and nn 4 and 7, 12, 34, 38,
52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 61, 71, 72,
89, 90 and n 1, 91, 92, 103, 217 and
n 3, 290, 301, 302, 303, 305, 307,
309, 320, 348, 355, 356, 357, 358,
359, 360, 361, 364, 366, 367, 370,
381, 382, 383, 388, 392 [see page
xiii], 408, 409.
Kābulees, the. See the next.
Kābulīs, the, 61, 409.
Kach'h, province of, 355, 399.
Kachī horses, 371.
Kachītī, district of, 292 and n 1, 293.
See, however, the next.
Kachītī, Rājah,—a zamīndār of Ḥājī-
pūr and Patna, 182 and n 3. Also
called Gajpatī and Gujpatī, which
see.
Kāfirs, the,—or infidels, a name of
reproach given by Muḥammadans
to the Non-Muslims, 46 n 2.
Kāfūr, 288.
Kahārs, signification of the word, 111
and n 2.
Kaiānians, the,—an old Persian dy-
nasty, 268 and n 2.
Kaiqabād,—an ancient king of Īrān,
164.
Kaiqabād, son of Mīrzā Muḥammad
Ḥakīm, son of Humāyūn, son of
Bābar, 359.
Kāīsīn,—a tract of country belonging
to the province of Mālwah, 78 n 2.
Kajak Khān Khwājah,—one of the
generals of Akbar, 197 n 1.
Kajh-koṭ, Manzil of,—called also the
Sarāī of Koṭ K'hachwah, 301 and
n 3.
Kākar 'Alī Khān,—one of the Amīrs
of Akbar, 82, 157, 424.
Kākarūn, fort of, 105.
Kalān Bēg, Khwājah, 37. See also
the next.
Kalan Bēg Naqshbandī, Khwājah,
grandson of Khwājah Aḥrār,—a
devotee and religious teacher, 366
[see page xii].
Kalandar, signification of the term,
162 and n 2, 187.
Kalānor, a dependency of Lahore, 1
and n 3, 301.
Kalānor, garden of,—where Akbar
ascended the throne, 1 and n 2.
Kālinjar, fortress of, 124, 369.
Kalkal-g'hātī,—name of a place, 199.
Kallā Pahār,—a distinguished Afghān
general, 274.
Kālpī, district and town of, 6, 44, 97,
113, 119, 165 [see page v], 289
[see page x].
Kalyān Mal, Rāī,—Rājah of Bīkānīr,
137.
Kalyān Rāī Baqqāl,—an inhabitant
of Cambay, 249.
Kamāl Biyābānī, Shaikh,—an impos-
tor of Akbar's reign who claimed
to work miracles, 309, 378 [see
page xiii].
Kamāl Khān, son of Shaikh Mangan
of Badāūn, 139.
Kamāl Khān, the G'hakkar,—one of
the Amīrs of the Panjāb and
governor of the country of the
Ghakkars, 3, 13 and n 3, 52, 72,
93, 109.
Kamālāī Çadr,—an Officer of the
Imperial Court, 421.
Kamālāī Shīrāzī,—servant of Shāh
Fatḥ Ullāh Shīrāzī, the Çadr-in-
chief of Hindūstān, 354 and n 3.
Kamāon, mountains of, 364. See also
the next.
Kamāūn,—a Hindū State in the
Sawālik hills, 377. See also the
above.
Kambhāyat [Cambay], 167 and n 3.
See also under Cambay.
Kambo. See under Shahbāz Khān
Shahru-Ilāh Kambo.
Kāmī, nom de plume of Mīr 'Alā-
u-d-doulah Qazwīnī, author of a
Biography of the Poets, 108 n 2.
Kāmrān Mīrzā, son of Bābar and
brother of Humāyūn, 5 n 1, 54,
148, 158 n 1, 256.
Kāmrū, country of, 166 and n 5.
More generally called Kāmrūp,
which also see.
Kāmrūp, country of,—in Assam, 166
n 5, 192. See the above.
Kangār or Kangar,—the zamīndār of
the province of Kach'h, 399.
Kāngaṛh, town of, 402.
Kangṛah.—or
Kāngṛah, fort of,—in the district of
Nagarkot, 159, 165.
Kanjak Khwājah,—one of the gene-
rals of Akbar, 197 and n 1.
Kanouj, town of, 27 and n 1, 76. Also
written Qannouj and Canouj, which
see.
Kānt,—a place in the Northern
mountains of India, 130, 140, 142.
See also the next.
Kānt-u-Golah, parganna of,—the
Jāgīr of Ḥusain Khān, Mahdī
Qāsim Khānī, 154, 156, 163, 182,
188, 222. See also under Golah
and Kānt.
Kanūr Phillour,—a place in the con-
fines of the parganna of Dik'hdār,
in the Panjāb, 35 and n 1.
Kanyākubja,—the ancient name of
Kanouj, 27 n 1. See also under
Qannouj.
Kaṛah, district and town of, 44, 74,
76, 79, 94, 97, 103, 104 [see page
iii], 297, 298, 312. The name is
also written Karrah.
Karahkatangah, district of, 351.
Karākar Pass, the, 361.
Karam-ullāh, brother of Shahbāz
Khān Shahr-ullāh Kambo of Lāhor,
—one of the Amīrs of Akbar, 303.
Karāūlī, town of, 187.
Karbalā,—a place in 'Irāq, famous
for the murder of al-Ḥusain, the
son of 'Alī, 11 and n 4, 217 and n 1.
Kaṛhī, town of, 304. See the next.
Karī, village or town of,—in the dis-
trict of Gujrāt, 169, 338, 340, 384.
See the above.
Karrah, district and parganna of, 94,
312. See also under Kaṛah.
Karwī, the,—a river, 18.
Kashbandī,—signification of the word,
194 n 3.
Kāshghar, country of, 2.
Kashmīr, 3, 52, 127, 128, 139, 266,
276, 360, 363, 364, 365, 376, 377,
380, 381 and n 2, 386, 388, 392,
394 and n 4, 395 and n 3, 396, 397,
398, 407, 409, 415.
Kashmīrīs, the, 394.
Katak, town of, 426. See the next.
Katak-Banāras,—a town in the
centre of Orissa, commonly known
as Cuttack, 166, 194, 196, 198 and
n 5, 199, 301, 426.
Katak-u-Banāras, 166. See the above.
Katangah, a place near Gaḍha Ka-
tangah, 78 n 2.
Katanpūr, a dependency of Jhārkand,
78 n 2.
Kathā Sarit Sāgara, the,—a book,
415 n 2.
Kāthī,—the name of a tribe inhabit-
ing Kāthīwār, 371 n 2.
Kāthīwār,—a tract of country, 337,
338, 371 n 2. Also written Kātī-
wār.
Kātīs, the, 371 and n 2. See under
the Kāthī tribe.
Kātīwār, country of, 371. See also
under Kāthīwār.
Katlū Khān, Governor of Jagannāth,
on the part of Dāūd, son of Sulai-
mān Kararānī, ruler of Bengal,
177.
Kator,—a mountain district of Kā-
firs, to the north of Hindūstān, 304
and n 1.
Katrīl, Pass of,—in the mountains of
Kashmīr, 364.
Kazul-bāsh,—a novel by Fraser, 206
n 2. See under the Qizilbāshīs.
Kerbela. See under Karbalā.
Khabīsah, 320,—read Khabītah Ba-
hādur, see p. 425.
Khabītah Bahādur,—a servant of
Ma'çūm Khān Kābulī, the foster-
brother of Mīrzā Muḥammad
Ḥakīm, 320, 425.
Khadāwand Khān. See under Khu-
dāwand Khān.
Khadījah, daughter of Khowailed
[Khuwailid], and first wife of
Muḥammad, 59 n 4.
Khaibar Pass, the, 357, 362, 366.
Khairābād, town of, 129, 228.
Khairpūrah,—a place built by Akbar
outside the town of Āgrah, for
feeding poor Musalmāns, 334 [see
page xii].
Khairu-l-bayān, the,—a work written
by Roshanāī, the founder of an
heretical sect, in which he sets
forth his tenets, 360.
Khāldī Khān Jabbārī, son of Majnūn
Khān Qāqshāl, 332. See also un-
der Jabbārī and Khālidī Khān.
K'halgāṇw, town of, 244 n 2. See
also the next.
K'halgāon, town of,—in Bengāl, 244
and n 2, 245.
Khāliçah-lands,—lands held imme-
diately from the Crown, 193.
Khālid Khān,—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar, 86.
Khālidī Khān,—one of the great
Amīrs of Bengāl, 288, 289. See
also under Khāldī Khān Jabbārī.
Khalīfahs, the,—successors of the
prophet Muḥammad, 318.
Khān-i-'Ālam,—one of the generals
of Akbar, 182, 183, 197, 198.
Khān-i-'Ālam, title of Mīrzā 'Azīz
Kokah, 207 n 2. Perhaps for Khān-
i-'Ālam we should read Khān-i.
A'zam here.
Khān-i-A'zam, another name of
A'zam Khān, Mīrzā 'Azīz Kokah,
152 and n 1, 167, 168, 169, 171, 172,
173, 188, 189, 218, 293, 332, 354,
358, 373, 399, 400, 401. See also
under the A'zam Khān and Mīrzā
Kokah, son of Akgah Khān.
Khān Bāqī Khān,—one of the ser-
vants of Akbar, 95.
Khān Jahān, application of the title,
33 and n 1.
Khān Jahān, title of Ḥusain Qulī
Khān, son of Walī Bēg, Zu-l-Qadr,
one of the great Amīrs of Akbar,
33, 111, 168, 188, 220, 222 [see
page viii], 232, 235 and n 5, 244,
245, 275, 362. See also under
Ḥusain Qulī Khān.
Khān Jahān, commandant of Orissa,
—one of the Amīrs of Dāūd
Kararānī, the Afghān ruler of
Bengāl, 198.
Khān Jalān, 260. Perhaps we should
read Khān Jahān. See the Khān
Jahān, Ḥusain Qulī Khān.
Khān Kalān, a surname of Mīr Mu-
ḥammad Khān Atkah, the brother
of Atkah Khān,—one of the great
Amīrs of Akbar, 52, 53, 72, 89,
94, 109 and n 4, 139, 143, 144, 171,
173. See also under Mīr Muḥam-
mad Khān Atkah.
Khān Khānān, application of the
title, 33 n 1, 34 n 1, 38.
Khān Khānān, the,—Muḥammad
Bairām Khān Turkomān, prime-
minister of Akbar, 7 and n 3, 8, 9,
12, 13, 19, 20, 21, 22, 25, 26, 28,
29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38,
39, 40, 41, 42. See also under
Bairām Khān and Muḥammad
Bairām Khān.
Khān Khānān, the,—Mun'im Khān,
38, 51, 52, 54, 76, 80, 81, 83, 84,
85, 92, 93, 96, 104, 139, 177, 179,
181, 182, 184, 185, 186, 187, 195,
196, 197, 198 and n 2, 199, 200,
221, 222, 309, 325, 355, 356, 358,
371, 372, 373, 375, 379, 384, 386,
392, 399, 402, 403, 416. See also
under Mun'im Khān.
Khān Khānān, title of Mīrzā Khān,
one of the Amīrs of Gujrāt, and
son of Bairām Khān, the Khān
Khānān, 346, 370.
Khān Khānān,—one of the generals
of Dāūd Kararānī, the Afghān, ruler
of Bengāl, 235.
Khān Zamān, title of 'Alī Qulī Khān,
Uzbek, son of Ḥaidar Sulṭān
Uzbek-i-Shaibānī, 5, 6, 7, 8, 12, 13,
14, 15, 16, 17, 18 and n 2, 27 and
n 3, 29, 44 and n 4, 53, 75, 76 and
n 2, 77, 78, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84 and
n 1, 85, 86, 87, 89, 94, 95 n 2, 96,
97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103 and
n 1, 104, 179, 183, 359. See also
under 'Alī Qulī Khān Uzbek.
Khānah,—a building in the sacred
precincts of Mecca, 246 and n 5.
Khāndesh, province of, 46 and n 4,
274.
Khāni Kalān. See under Khān
Kalān.
Khanjar Beg,—a relation of Tardī
Beg Khān, Commandant of Dihli, 7.
Khanjari Turk, 'Alī Murād Uzbek,
247, 387. See also under 'Alī
Murād.
Khānū, meaning of the word, 405
and n 3.
Khānpūr, village of, 185, 247 [see
page ix], 398.
Khānzādah,—brother of Shāh Abu-l-
Ma'ālī, 56.
K'haramanda, district of, 8.
Khārwāhā, the,—a sort of sailors
used to the river, 178.
Khaṭīb, Khwājah,—of Bokhārā, one
of the Court officers, 278.
K'hatoulī,—name of a place, 153.
Khāvind. See under Khāwind.
Khawāf, a district and town in Khu-
rāsān, 290 n 1.
Khāwand Maḥmūd, Khwājah,—of
Ajmīr, father of Sulṭān Khwājah,
the Çadr, 246 and n 3.
Khāwind, Khwājah, son of Khwā-
jah Yaḥā [Yaḥyā?], son of Khwā-
jah Aḥrār, the Saint of Ajmīr, 57.
Khidmat-rāī,—title of the chief of
the Khidmatiyyah, 301 n 2.
Khidmatiyyah,—foot-guards on duty
in the environs of the palace, 301
n 2.
Khirad-afzā, the,—name of a book,
265, 274 n 2, 389, 426. See also
under Nāmah-e-Khirad-afzā.
Khizar Khān, 10. See under Khizr
Khān Khwājah.
Khizr Khān Hazārah,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 5 and n 6.
Khizr Khān Khwājah,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar and husband of
Gulbadan Bēgum, the Emperor's
aunt, 7, 10.
Khizr Khān Sarwānī,—killed for
blaspheming the Prophet, 262.
Khizrābād Sādhorah,—name of a
place, 261.
Khorasān, 190. See also under Khu-
[rāsān.
Khowailed [Khuwailid], father of
Khadījah, the first wife of Muḥam-
mad, 59 n 4.
Khudāwand of the Dak'hin,—a
heretic married to the sister of
Shaikh Abu-l-Fazl 'Allāmī, 384.
Khudāwand Khān,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, in the Dak'hin,
354, 372.
Khudāwand Khān, Wazīr of Gujrāt,
147, 150.
Khurāsān, 22, 35 n 3, 64 n 5, 87 n 2,
290 n 1. See also under Khorasān.
Khurd-Kābul,—a place at seven cosses
from Kābul, 302.
Khurram Bēgum, known as Walī
Ni'mat Bēgum,—wife of Mīrzā
Sulaimān, Governor of Badakhshān
who was sixth in descent from
Taimūr, 61 n 6.
Khushḥāl Bēg, Mīrzā,—one of the
Qūrchīs of the palace, 13, 101.
Khūshkhabar Khān,—a state-mes-
senger, 91, 92, 94.
Khusrau, Mīr, a great poet of Dihlī,
101 and n 6, 102. See also under
Khusrū.
Khusrau, Sulṭān, son of the Prince
Sulṭān Salīm, son of Akbar, 368.
Khusrou, an ancient King of Irān,
85, 108.
Khusrou, Amīr,—the Poet of Dihlī,
38. See also under Khusrū and
Khusrau.
Khusrou, Mīr. See under Khusrū
and Khusrau, the Poet.
Khusrū, Amīr, son of Amīr Seifud-
din, the Tātar,—the Prince of Sūfī,
poets, 38 and n 4, 63, 64 n 2, 411.
See also under Khusrau, the Poet
of Dihlī.
Khutbah, signification of the term,
1 and n 3, 18 and n 4.
Khuwailid. See under Khowailed.
Khwājagī Muḥammad Çāliḥ of Hirāt,
grandson of Khwājah 'Abdullāh
Marwārīd, the Wazīr,—one of the
Çadrs of Akbar, 48, 340.
Khwājagī Muḥammad Ḥusain,—
brother of Muḥammad Qāsīm Khān
Mīr baḥr, and one of the Amīrs of
Mīrzā Muḥammad Ḥakīm, son of
Humāyūn, 303.
Khwājah 'Abd-ullāh Marwārīd, of
Hirāt,—the Wazīr, 48.
Khwājah 'Abdu-l-Majīd of Harāt, the
Āçaf Khān,—Governor of Dihlī,
38, 62. See also under Āçaf Khān.
Khwājah Aḥrār, of Ajmīr,—a Mu-
ḥammadan Saint, 57. See also
under Aḥrār.
Khwājah Ajmīrī, another name of
Khwājah Mu'īnu-d-dīn Chishtī, the
Saint of Ajmīr, 111 and n 5, 258,
280, 414. See also under Mu'īnu-
d-dīn Chishtī Sigizī.
Khwājah Amīnā, [afterwards Khwā-
jah Jahān], the Wazīr, 20, 31 and
n 1, 111, 189, 232. Same as Amīnu-
d-dīn Maḥmūd. See also under
Khwājah Jahān.
Khwājah Amīnu-d-dīn Maḥmūd of
Harāt, 20 n 3. See the above.
Khwājah 'Arab,—one of the Amīrs
of Akbar and the Khān Jahān's
pay-master, 361, 362.
Khwājah Bahāu-d-dīn Naqshbandī,—
a Muḥammadan Saint, 72 n 4.
Khwājah Daulat,—afterwards called
Daulat Khān,—a servant of the
Emperor, 100.
Khwājah Ḥasan, 302. See under the
next.
Khwājah Ḥasan Naqshbandī, son of
Khwājah Bahāu-d-dīn Naqshbandī.
See under Ḥasan Naqshbandī.
Khwājah Ḥusain Marwī. See under
Ḥusain Marwī.
Khwājah Ismā'īl, grandson of Shaikh
Islām Chishtī, 358.
Khwājah Jahān, title of Khwājah
Amīnā, 20, 52, 80, 81, 84, 85, 97,
111, 146, 189. See also under
Khwājah Amīnā.
Khwājah Kalān Bēg,—an attendant
of the Court, 37.
Khwājah Khaṭīb, of Bokhārā,—a
Court attendant, 278.
Khwājah Khāwind, son of Khwājah
Yaḥā [Yaḥyā?], son of Khwājah
Āḥrār, the Saint of Ajmīr, 57.
Khwājah Maqçūd 'Alī,—a servant of
Akbar's mother, 49 n 4.
Khwājah Moulānā of Shīrāz, the
heretic of Jafrdān, 295.
Khwājah Mu'azzam, maternal uncle
of Akbar, 71.
Khwājah Muḥammad Rafī' Badakh-
shī,—one of the generals of Akbar,
236. See also under Khwājah
Rafī' Badakhshī.
Khwājah Muḥammad Yaḥyā, Naqsh-
bandī,—one of the descendants of
Khwājah Aḥrār of Ajmīr, 225, 275.
Khwājah Mu'īnu-d-dīn Chishtī. See
under Mu'īnu-d-dīn Chishtī.
Khwājah Mu'īnu-d-dīn, son of Khwā-
jah Khāwind,—one of the des-
cendants of Khwājah Aḥrār of
Ajmīr, 57.
Khwājah Muzaffar 'Alī Dīwānah, 34.
We should probably read Turbati
for Dīwānah. See the following
name.
Khwājah Muzaffar 'Alī Turbatī, i e.,
of the tribe of Turbat in Khurā-
sān, 64. See under Muzaffar Khān
'Alī Turbatī.
Khwājah Naqshbandī, 72. See un-
der Khwājah Bahāu-d-dīn.
Khwājah Rafī' Badakhshī,—one of
the generals of Akbar, 385. See
also under Khwājah Muḥammad
Rafī' Badakhshī.
Khwājah Shāh Mançūr. See under
Shāh Mançūr.
Khwājah Shamsu-d-dīn. See under
Shamsu-d-dīn Khāfī.
Khwājah Sulṭān 'Alī Wazīr Khān,—
an officer of Tardī Bēg Khān, the
commandant of Dihlī, 5, 7.
Khwājah Yaḥā [Yaḥyā?], son of
Khwājah Aḥrār of Ajmīr, 57.
Khwārizm, country of. 253.
Kījak Khān Khwājah,—an officer of
the Imperial Army, 197 n 1.
Kīkā, Rānā, also called Pratāb or
Partāb, ruler of Gogandah and
Kumalmair or Kokanda and Kom-
balmīr, 144, 233, 235, 236, 237,
246 n 7, 249 n 1, 251, 275 and n 1.
Kīmiya,—signification of the word,
334 n 4.
Kishn, or Krishna,—one of the chief
Gods of the Hindūs, 265. See
also under Krishna.
Kitābu-n-nawāqis, the,—a work by
Mīrzā Makhdūm in blame of the
Shī'ah, 327 [see page xi].
Kīt'hal, town of, 274.
Kitto's Court of Persia, 1 n 3.
Kizr Aqā,—the wakīl of Mīrzā Khān,
son of Bairām Khān Khānān, 342.
Kodrah. See under Bahādur Kodrah.
Koh-pārah,—name of a female ele-
phant, 84.
Koka,—signification of the word,
49 n 4.
Kokaltāsh,—signification of the word,
49 n 4.
Kokanda or Kokandah, district of,
—in Rājpūtānā, 233, 235, 236, 239
and n 6, 240, 241, 242, 246, 247,
248. Also called Gogandah, which
see.
Kombalmīr, district of,—near Ūdai-
pūr in Rājpūtānā, 233 and n 1. At p.
144 the word is written Kumalmair.
See also the next.
Koṇbhalmīr, a fortress on the fron-
tiers of Ūdaipūr and Joudpūr,
275 and n 2. See the above.
Koorchees, the. See under the
Qurchīs.
Korah, of Scripture, 341 n 1. Called
Qārūn in Arabic.
Kotah Balāyah, fort of, 105.
Kotal-sanjad-darra,—a geographical
name, 91.
Koṭ K'hachwah, Sarāī of, 301 n 3,
Called also the Manzil of Kajhkoṭ.
Kotlah, fortress of, 165 [see page v].
Krishna, the Hindū God, 336. See
also under Kishn.
Krorī, an officer in charge of a piece
of land producing one Kror of
tankas, 192, 369.
Krorīs, the,—revenue officers, 192,
194, 207 and n 5, 406. See the
above.
Kūchak Khān,—or
Kūchak Muḥammad Khān, brother of
Ḥusain Khān, Mahdī Qāsim Khānī,
and one of the Amīrs of Akbar,
182.
Kūfah, town of,—in 'Irāq, 328.
Kūlyān, kingdom of, 371.
Kūm, a town in Persia, where the
Shī'ah make pilgrimages, 217 n 1.
Kūmākchī, or
Kūmakī, meaning of the word, 48 n 4.
Kumalmair, district of, 144. See
under Kombalmīr.
Kumāūn Mount, the, 154.
Kundal,—a town in the district of
Sūrat, at 15 cosses from Chūnagar,
370.
Kūrdah, 333 n 6. See under Bahādur
Kūrdah.
Kūr Farah. See under Bahādur Kūr
Farah.
Kurk'het, lake of, 94 and n 5. Called
Kurukshetra in Sanscrit.
Kūrnish, the,—homage paid to em-
perors, 397.
Kūrsī [Kursī?],—name of the eighth
or Crystalline Heaven, 74 n.
Kursĩ verse, the,—or Āyatu-l-Kursī,
in al-Qur'ān, 201, 331.
Kurukshetra, name of the lake
Kurk'hēt in Sanskrit, 94 n 5.
Kurus, the,—a great tribe of Hindūs
in ancient times, 94 and n 6, 329,
330.
Kushmāl, mountains of, 38.
Kuwa, district of,—in the neighbour-
hood of the River Satlaj, 9. Pro-
bably we should read Ropar, which
see.