L.

Lach'hman, brother of Rām Chand
[Rāmā], Rājah of Oudh, 347.
Ladah Suhnah,—a town about 18
cosses from Dihli, 386 n 1.
Lāhōr, 1 and n 2, 3, 4, 10, 11, 12, 13, 68,
72, 88, 89, 91, 92, 93, 95, 103, 137,
158, 159, 160, 161, 164, 166, 174,
218, 220 [see page viii], 222,
226, 232, 273, 276, 285, 300, 301,
304, 306, 320, 321, 328, 329, 356,
359, 364, 366, 367, 369, 370, 373,
376, 377, 379, 383, 384, 387, 389,
391, 394, 396, 397, 403, 407, 408
and n 2 412.
Lāhore. See the above.
Lahrah, lord of Āgra, 59.
Lailu-l-qadr, the 27th night of the
month of Ramzān, 44 n 2.
Lak'hnau. See under Lak'hnou.
Lak'hnauti,—the ancient name of the
city of Gaur, 289.
Lak'hnou, 14, 18, 27, 37, 76, 128, 129,
130, 139, 148 n 3, 156, 167 n 1, 182,
189 [see page vi], 250 n 2, 261 n 1,
272 n 1, 292 n 1, 304 n 1, 305 n 4,
340 n 2, 341 n 2, 343 n 2, 348 n 9,
354 n 2, 358, 359, 367 nn 1 and 2,
368 n 2, 373 n 1, 374 [see page
xiii], 388 n 1, 396.
Lakhnow. See the above.
Lak'nou. See under Lak'hnou.
La'l Khān of Badakhshān,—one of
the Amīrs of the imperial army, 6.
Lāl, Qāzī,—one of the wits of Akbar's
reign, 65.
Lāmahs, the,—a class of devotees in
Thibet, 335.
Lane's Modern Egyptians, 35 n 4.
Lankā, island of, 347.
Lashkar Khān, Mīr Bakhshī,—one of
the Amīrs and generals of Akbar,
82, 83, 84, 173, 174, 181, 196, 198.
Also called 'Askar Khān, Astar
Khān and Sher Khān.
Lashkarī, son of Sulṭān Ādam, the
G'hakkar, 52.
Laṭīf Khwājah Mīr Shikār,—one of
the officers of the Imperial Court,
303, 317.
Lawāih, the,—name of a theological
work, 265.
Lee's Translation of the Travels of
Ibn Batuta, 90 n 3.
Leigh Hunt, 401 n 4.
Lexicon Persico-Latinum, Vuller's,
311 n 4.
Lisān-i-ghaib, a term applied by Jāmī
to Ḥāfiz of Shīrāz, 423.
Little Tibet, 388.
Lives of the Persian Poets, Ouseley's,
423.
Lodhiyānah, town of. See under
Ludhiyānah.
Lodī, Amīru-l-Umarā, 177 [see page v],
178, 184.
London, 32 n 5, 35 n 4.
Lonkaran, Rāī, Governor of Sāmbhar,
259. See also under Loun Karan
Rājah.
Louḥ-i-maḥfūz, the,—signification of
the term, 24 and n 4.
Loun Karan, Rājah, Commandant of
Sāmbhar, 236, 237. See also under
Lonkaran Rāī.
Lūdhiyānah, town of, 38, 159, 358.
Lūdiyānah, town of. See the above.

M.

Macan's edition of the Shāhnāmah,
317 n 1.
Ma'çūm Khān,—foster-brother of
Mīrzā Muḥammad Ḥakīm, son of
Humāyūn, 273, 274. See also under
Ma'çūm Kokah and Ma'çūm Kābulī.
Ma'çūm Khān Farankhūdī, Governor
of Jaunpūr,—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar, 284, 285, 290, 291, 295, 297,
298, 299 and n 3, 300 n 1, 307. See
also under Muḥammad Ma'çūm
Khān Farankhūdī and Muḥammad
Ma'çūm Jaunpūrī.
Ma'çūm Khān, son of Mu'īnu-d-dīn
Aḥmad Khān Farankhūdī, 284. See
the above.
Ma'çūm Kābūlī. See under Muḥam-
mad Ma'çūm Kābūlī.
Ma'çūm Kokah, of Kābul, 90. Same
as Ma'çūm Khān, the foster-brother
of Mīrzā Ḥakīm, and Ma'çūm
Kābulī, which also see.
Madad-i-ma'āsh, signification of the
term, 23 and n 4, 49, 209, 261, 282,
379, 389.
Madār, Shāh,—a Muḥammadan saint
whose shrine is at Makanpūr in
Qannouj, 140.
Madāran, town of,—in Jahānābād, in
the Hūglī district, 195, 196 and
n 2.
Mādhav Singh,—one of the officers
of the imperial army, 239. See
the next.
Mādhū Singh, son of Rājah Bhag-
vant Dās and brother of Mān
Singh, the Hindū general of
Akbar, 147 n 1, 239, 366.
Madhukar, Rājah,—zamīndār of
Uṇḍchah (the Oorcha of our maps),
391.
Madīnah, the burial-place of the
prophet Muḥammad, in Arabia, 32,
73, 222, 246, 423.
Madrasah-e Bēgum, the,—in Dihlī,
[60.
Mādū Singh, brother of Mān Singh,
366. See under Mādhū Singh.
Māh Chochak Bēgum. See the next.
Māh Jūjak Begum, mother of Mīrzā
Muḥammad Ḥakīm, son of Hu-
māyūn, the Emperor of India, 54,
55, 56, 57, 61 and n 3, 64, 72 n 3.
The name is also written Chochak.
Mahābhārata, the, 265, 329, 330, 346,
413.
Mahadeo, temple of,—in Sthaneç-
wara (T'hānēsar), 94 n 4.
Mahādev,—the chief of the Hindū
gods, 94 n 4, 265. See also under
Mahdeva.
Maḥall-i-Bengālī,—name of a palace
in Āgrah, 74.
Māham Ankah. See under Māhum
Ankah.
Mahāmā,—one of the chief gods of
the Hindūs, 265.
Mahānadī, the,—a river of Orissa,
on which Cuttack stands, 199 and
n 1, 333 n 4.
Mahā-pātra Bād-farosh,—a Hindū
musician and one of Akbar's
courtiers, 77 and n 3.
Mahdeva,—another name of Śiva,
the Hindū god, 204 and n 2. See
also under Mahādev.
Mahdī, the. See the next.
Mahdī, Imām,—the forerunner of
the Messiah, according to the Mos-
lims, 201 and n 4, 295, 323.
Mahdī Khān. See under Mahdī
Qāsim Khān.
Mahdī Qāsim Khān,—one of the
great Amīrs of Akbar, 9, 11, 33,
35, 72, 83, 86, 87, 128, 129, 154 and
n 3, 300.
Māhim Ankah. See under Māhum
Ankah.
Mahindra, the,—a river, 344. See
also the next.
Mahindrī, the,—a river, 146. See
also the above.
Maḥmūd, the Emperor,—famous as
Sulṭān Maḥmūd, the Ghaznawī, 223
n 2.
Maḥmūd Bārha, Sayyid,—one of the
great Amīrs and generals, 11, 52,
144, 146, 169.
Maḥmūd of Basakhwān, a heretical
writer of the time of Taimūr, 254,
295.
Maḥmūd Bokhārī, Shaikh,—one of
the Court officers of Akbar, 145.
Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn, Sulṭān, 223 n 2.
Maḥmūd of Gujrāt, Sulṭān, 67, 105,
138, 145, 173.
Maḥmūd Khān, son of the sister of
Tarson Khān,—an officer of the
Imperial Court, 241 and n 2 [see
page viii].
Maḥmūd Khān Bārha. See under
Maḥmūd Bārha.
Maḥmūd, Sulṭān, Governor of Bakkar,
93, 138, 179, 189, 423. At p. 138
he is called Muḥammad.
Maḥmūd, Sulṭān, nephew of Pīr
Muḥammad Khān, 129 [see p. iv].
Maḥmūdābād, town of,—one of the
dwelling places of Sulṭān Maḥmūd
of Gujrāt, 153, 173, 373.
Maḥmūdī, Mullā,—one of the servants
of Mīrzā Khān, son of Bairām Khān
Khān Khānān, 343.
Mahomet. See under Muḥammad the
Prophet.
Mahu, town of, 84 n 5.
Māhum Ankah or Anagah, nurse of
Akbar, 29 and n 7, 30, 31, 49 and
nn 4 and 5, 50, 64.
Māhum Atkah or Atgah. See the
above, especially p. 49 n 4.
Majnūn Khān Qāqshāl,—one of the
Amīrs and generals of Akbar, 44,
76, 77, 94, 97, 98, 124, 185, 194,
195.
Makanpūr, one of the dependencies
of Qannouj, 140.
Makhdūmu-l-mulk, Mullā 'Abd-ullāh
Sulṭānpūrī,—one of the great Amīrs
of Akbar, 13 n 2, 39, 85, 86, 154,
158, 201, 205, 206, 213, 262, 270,
275, 278, 281, 285, 321.
Makkah, 4, 22, 30, 32 and n 1, 33, 39,
40 n 2, 41 n 2, 56, 57, 58, 60, 73, 87,
113, 120 n 1, 128, 190, 206, 215, 216
nn 1 and 4, 217 and n 1, 222, 241
n 2, 246, 258, 268 n 1, 275, 283, 293,
295, 309, 321, 323, 327, 344, 350,
401 and n 4, 412, 423.
Māldeo, Rāja of Jodhpūr and Mārwār,
34, 137, 189
Mālik, Imām,—founder of one of the
four sects of Sunnī Muslims, 211,
212.
Malik 'Alī, brother of Qāzī 'Alī,
Kotwāl of Lāhor, 300.
Malik Sānī Kābulī, the Vazīr Khān,
vazīr of Mīrzā Muḥammad Ḥakīm,
son of Humāyūn, ruler of Kābul,
300.
Malik-ush-Sharq, Gujrātī,—one of the
Amīrs of Gujrāt, 145, 146.
Malik-ush-Sharq,—tax-collector of
T'hānēsar, 223.
Mālikīs, the, 212.
Mālwa or Mālwah, 29 and n 2, 32 and
n 2, 42 and n 5, 46, 48, 65, 68 n 3,
69, 76, 78 n 2, 87 and n 3, 93, 101,
105, 110, 151, 153, 186, 249, 250,
251, 253, 285, 293, 308, 334, 341,
344, 358, 372, 873, 384, 386, 391,
401 [see page xiii], 402.
Ma'mūrābād,—on the banks of the
river Mahindra, 342, 344.
Mançūr Khān, 96. Read Ḥusain
Khān (Mahdī Qāsim Khānī), see
p. iii.
Mançūr, Shaikh, son-in-law of Shaikh
Ibrāhīm Chishtī of Fatḥpūr Sīkrī,
237.
Mançūrah, or
Mançūriyyah,—name of several
cities, 70.
Mandalgaṛh, or Māndal Gaṛh,—town
of, 105, 236, 242. Called also
Wazīrpūr Mandalgaṛh.
Mandū,—a town in Mālwah, 47, 66,
68 and n 3, 110.
Mangalūs, country of, 196 n 4.
Mangalūsī elephants,—famous for
their great size and their white
colour, 196 and n 4.
Mangan of Badāūn, Shaikh, 139.
Mānikpūr, district and town of, 76,
78, 89, 94, 96, 97 and n 4, 103.
Manizha, daughter of Afrāsiāb, an-
cient king of Tūrān, 47 n 4.
Manjholī, country of, 257.
Mankarwāl, village of,—a depend-
ency of Pairag, iii, 100.
Mānkūt, fortress of,—in the moun-
tains of Sawālik, 11.
Manohar, Mīrzā. See the next.
Manohar, Rāī, son of Rāī Lonkaran,
Governor of Sāmbhar,—a Poet,
with the title of Tusanī, 259. Called
for some time Mīrzā Manohar.
Manoharpūr,—a town in the neigh-
bourhood of Ambīr, in the district
of Multān, 259.—Called after the
name of Rāī Manohar, which see.
Mān, Rājah,—of Gwālyār,—a famous
Hindū chief, 238.
Mān Singh, son of Rājah Bhagawan or
Bhagvān Dās,—the famous Hindū
general of Akbar, 144, 146, 147 n 1,
233, 236, 238, 239 and n 2, 242,
243, 247, 299, 300, 301, 304, 350,
357, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364,
365, 366, 370, 375, 376, 384, 399.
Maqbūl Khān, a Ghulām of Sarkh
Badakhshī, 147.
Maqçūd 'Alī, Khwājah,—a servant.
of Akbar's mother and husband of
Pīchah Jān, one of the three
nurses of Akbar, 49 n 4.
Maqçūd Jauharĩ, Mīrzā Muzaffar
Ḥusain, 260, 274. See under
Muzaffar Ḥusain, son of Ibrāhīm
Ḥusain Mīrza. The name has also
been written Maqçūr Jauharī, see
p. 274.
Maqçūr Jauharī. See the above.
Ma'qil, one of the companions of the
Prophet, 333 n 4.
Maqṭa', signification of the term, 37
n 3.
Marco Polo, 405 n 2.
Martial, 36 n 3.
Marwār,—one of the three great
Rājpūt states, 45 n 8, 137. Also
called Jodhpūr.
Marwī, Khwājah Ḥusain,—a poet,
124, 127, 136.
Mary, daughter of 'Imrān,—name of
the Virgin Mary, according to the
Qur'ān, 59 n 4, 206.
Maryam Makānī,—title of the Queen
Dowager of Humāyūn, the son of
Bābar, 5, 12 and n 9, 30.
Mashhad, town of,—in Persia, 80 n 3,
81 and n 4, 94, 95 n 3, 103 n 2, 110,
217 n 1, 376.
Mashhid. See the above.
Mashkūt [Mishkāt?]-ul-anwār, the,
—name of a book, 205.
Masīḥu-l-dajjāl. al,—the false Christ
of the Muḥammadans, 189 n 2.
Masjidu-l-Ḥarām, the,—the sacred
mosque of Mecca, 40 n 2.
Masnadi 'Ālī,—an Afghān title, 159
n 1.
Masnadi 'Ālī Fattū, a Ghulām of
'Adalī, the emperor of India, 159
See also under Fatū.
Masnad-i-Çād of Dihlī, 418.
Masnavī or Masnawī of Nal-u-Daman,
the,—by Shaikh Faizī, the king of
Poets, 411,
Masnawī,—of Jalālu-d-dīn Rūmī, 421
[n 1.
Mas'ūd Bakk, the Persian Poet, 30
and n 1.
Mas'ūd Beg, 225.
Mas'ūd Ḥusain Mīrzā, son of Muḥam-
mad Sulṭān Mīrzā, son of Wais
Mīrzā, a descendant of the great
Taimūr, 87 n 1, 161, 163 [see
page v.]
Mat'hurā,—a town in the neighbour-
hood of Agra, 59 and n 1, 191. See
also under Mattra.
Maṭla',—signification of the term, 36
n 4.
Mattra,—a town to the N.-W. of
Āgrah, 218 and n 3. See also under
Mat'hurā.
Māwara-n-nahr. See under Trans-
oxiana.
Māzandarān,—a province of Persia,
248.
Mazharī, of Basāwar,—a great friend
of the author, 305 and n 3.
Mecca, town of. See under Makkah.
Medīna, town of. See under Madī-
nah.
Medinah and Meccah, Burton's Pil-
grimage to, 121 n 2, 129 n 4, 134
n 2, 246 n 5.
Medinīpūr,—a town in the Hūglī dis-
trict, 196 and n 2.
Mekka, town of. See under Makkah.
Memoirs of Jahangueir, Price's, 379
n 1.
Memoir book of Neurnberg, of the
Rev. W. H. Lowe, 236 n 1, 240 n 1.
Mēnēlah, fortress of,—in the pro-
vince of Bakkar, 138.
Merchant and Parrot, story of the,—
in the Masnawī, 421 n 1.
Messiah, the, 201 n 4. See also the
next.
Messias, 73. See also the above.
Metaphysics, Aristotle's, 21 n 2.
Mēwar,—one of the three great
Rājpūt States, 45 n 8. Called also
Ūdīpūr.
Mēwāt, town of, 33.
Mhow, town of, 84 n 5.
Midas, king of Phrygia, 66 n 2.
Midrash, 255 n 1.
Mihr 'Alī,—a retainer of Mīrzā Ibrā-
hīm Ḥusain, son of Sulṭān Muḥam-
mad Mīrzā, 256.
Mihr 'Alī Bēg Sildūz,—Governor of
the fortress of Chītor, 26, 27, 28,
43.
Mihr 'Alī Khān Bēg Sildoz. See the
above.
Mihtar Khān,—one of the Amīrs and
Generals of Akbar, 233, 236, 238,
247. See the next.
Mihtar Khān Sulṭānī,—Governor of
the fortress of Rintambhor, 111.
See the above.
Mihtar Sa'ādat, the Pēshrau Khān,—
one of the officers of the Imperial
Court, 285, 297.
Mikrī, Sayyid, one of the chief
Sayyids of Kālpī, 113.
Mill, 240 n 3.
Mīr 'Abdulawal,—a heretical writer,
[254.
Mīr 'Abdu-l-Ḥayy,—a learned man in
the Court of Akbar, 64.
Mīr 'Abd-ullāh Bakhshī,—an officer
of Akbar's Court, 20.
Mīr 'Abdu-l-Laṭīf, one of the Sayfī
Sayyids of Qazwīn, 24. See also
under 'Abdu-l-Laṭīf.
Mīr Abu-l-Ghays Bokhārī of Dihlī,—
Saint and Soldier, 14. See also
under Abu-l-Ghays.
Mīr 'Adal ['Adl], the,—Mīr Sayyid
Muḥammad, Judge of Amrāhah,
226 and n 2, 252.
Mīr Adham,—colleague of Rāī Patr
Dās in the Dīwānship of Bengāl,
276.
Mīr 'Adl, office of, 22 n 4.
Mīr Aḥmad-i-Razawī,—father of
Yūsuf Khān Mashhadī, governor of
Kashmīr, 96 n 1.
Mīr 'Alāu-d-daulah Qazwīnī, author
of the Biography of the Poets,
108 and n 2.
Mīr Bakhshī, Paymaster of the
Court, 233 and n 3.
Mīr Çāliḥ Dā'ī,—a holder of Jāgīrs in
Gujrāt, 333.
Mīr Chobān,—Wazīr of Sulṭān Abū
Sa'īd Mughūl, 31, 60.
Mīr Fārighī, brother of Shāh Fatḥ-
ullāh Shīrāzī, the Chief Çadr of
Hindūstān, 111.
Mīr Fatḥullāh of Shīrāz, Sayyid, 325.
See also under Fatḥullāh of Shīrāz,
'Azdu-d-daulah and Shāh Fatḥ-
ullāh.
Mīr Gesū, Governor of Narnoul, and
one of the Amīrs of Akbar, 58, 138.
Mīr Ghiyāsu-d-dīn Naqīb Khān, son
of Mīr 'Abdu-l-Laṭīf Qazwīnī, 24.
Mīr Ghiyāsu-d-dīn Mançūr of Shīrāz,
a religious teacher, 325.
Mīr Ḥabsh,—or
Mīr Ḥabshī,—a Shī'ah Doctor of Law,
201, 262.
Mīr Hādī Sadr,—a trusty friend of
'Alī Qulī Khān Uzbek, the Khān
Zamān, 83.
Mīr Ḥaidar,—a riddle writer, 248,
273.
Mīr Ḥājī,—or
Mīr Ḥājj, Leader of the pilgrims,—
office of, 246 and n 4, 275.
Mīr Jamālu-d-dīn,—father of Mīrak
Shāh, the traditionalist, 173.
Mīr Kai, Sayyid, 245. See under
Mīrak Ispahānī.
Mīr Kalān, Mulāna,—the tradition-
alist of Herāt and teacher of
Prince Salīm, the eldest son of
Akbar, 173.
Mīr Khalīfah, father of Muḥibb 'Alī
Khān, the governor of Bakkar, 138.
Mīr Khusrau, a great poet of Dihlī,
101 and n 6, 102. See also under
Khusrū, the king of poets.
Mīr Khusrou. See the above.
Mīr Muḥammad Amīn,—a confiden-
tial servant of the Court, 390.
Mīr Muḥammad Ḥaidar Mu'ammāī,—
a writer of Akbar's time, 407.
Mīr Muḥammad Khān Atkah, brother
of Atkah Khān, 52. See also un-
der Muḥammad Khān Atkah.
Mīr Muḥammad Ma'çūm Bakkarī,—
one of the renowned Amīrs of
Akbar, 386.
Mīr Muḥammad Munshī,—holder of
the fief of Sarūt, in the Doāb, 52.
Mīr Muḥassan Razwī,—one of the
chief officers of the Court, 174.
Mīr Mu'izzu-l-Mulk Mashhadī,—of
the Mūsawī Sayyids of Mashhad,
descendants of Imām Mūsā Rizā,
80 and n 3. See also under Mu'iz-
zu-l-Mulk.
Mīr Munīr,—one of the confidential
servants of the Court, 390.
Mīr Munshī Ashraf Khān,—a Cour-
tier and army officer, 5, 7. See also
under Ashraf Khān.
Mīr Murtazā Sharīfī. See under
Murtazā Sharīfī.
Mīr Nizām,—sister's husband to
Mīrzā Shāh Rukh, son of Ibrāhīm
Mīrzā, 276.
Mīr Qāsim, a Mūsawī Sayyid of
Mashhad, 95 n 3.
Mīr Quraish. See under Quraish.
Mīr Sadr Jahān, of Pihānī,—muftī
of the imperial dominions, 365.
Mīr Sayyid Çafālī—one of the per-
sonages of Bhakkar, 252.
Mīr Sayyid Ḥusain Khang-sawār,—
a Muḥammadan saint buried in
Ajmīr, 143.
Mīr Sayyid Jalāl Mutawakkil,—a re-
ligious leader, 114, 121.
Mīr Sayyid Muḥammad, the Mīr 'Adl
and judge of Amrāhah and for
some time governor of Bakkar, 224,
226 n 2, 252.
Mīr Sayyid Muḥammad Makkī,—a
religious teacher and Qur'ān-
reader, 15.
Mīr Sayyid Ni'mat Rusūlī [Rasūlī?],
[24.
Mīr Sayyid Rafī'u-d-dīn Muḥaddis,
289.
Mīr Sayyid Sharīf Jurjānī,—a Mu-
ḥammadan saint, 86.
Mīr Tughān,—an Aḥadī in the ser-
vice of Akbar, 367.
Mīr Ya'qūb of Kashmīr. See under
Ya'qūb Çirfī of Kashmīr, Shaikh.
Mīrak Ispahānī, Sayyid,—a man
learned in charms, 179, 180. At
p. 245 this name appears as Mīr
Kai.
Mīrak Mīrzā Ghiyās,—builder of the
tomb of Humāyūn, 135.
Mīrak Radāī, son of Farḥat Khān,
one of the Amīrs of Akbar, 244.
Mīrak Razwī, Mīrzā,—one of the
chief officers of Akbar, 185. See
also under Mīrzā Mīrak.
Mīrak Shāh, son of Mīr Jamālu-d-
dīn,—a traditionalist, 173.
Mīrān Mubārak Shāh, ruler of Bur-
hampūr, 68.
Mīrat'h, town of, 6 and n 6, 153. See
also under Mirt'ha.
Mirchond, Defrémery's, 426. See
also the next.
Mīrkhānd, the Historian, 10 n 3. See
also the above.
Mirt'ha or Mirt'hah, fortress of,—
within 20 cosses of Ajmīr, 46, 105,
144. See also under Mīrat'h.
Mīrzā 'Abdu-r-raḥīm. See under
'Abdu-r-raḥīm.
Mīrzā Abu-l-Qāsim, son of Kāmrān
Mīrzā, son of Bābar, 5.
Mīrzā 'Azīz Kokah. See under Mīrzā
Kokah.
Mīrzā 'Azīz-ullāh of Mashhad, gover-
nor of the fortress of Ujjain, on
the part of Akbar, 110.
Mīrzā Bāiqrā, son of Mīrzā Mançūr,
son of Mīrzā Bāiqrā,—one of the
descendants of the great Taimūr,
87 n 1.
Mīrzā Bāiqrā, son of 'Umar Shaikh
Mīrzā, second son of the great
Taimūr, 87 n 1.
Mīrzā Bēg Kābūlī, Ḥājī,—author of
an account of Little Tibet, 388.
Mīrzā Bēg Qāqshāl,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 332.
Mīrzā Ghiyāsu-d-dīn 'Alī Qazwīnī,
title of Āçaf Khān Mīr Bakhshī
Sānī, 322. See under Āçaf Khān
Mīr Bakhshī Sānī.
Mīrzā Ḥakīm, 273. See under Mīrzā
Muḥammad Ḥakīm, son of Hu-
māyūn.
Mīrzā Ibrāhīm Ḥusain. See under
Ibrāhīm Ḥusain Mīrzā.
Mīrzā 'Isā Tarkhān, ruler of Tattah,
138.
Mīrzā Kāmrān. See under Kāmrān
Mīrzā, son of Bābar.
Mīrzā Khān, son of the Khān Khānān
Bairām Khān,—one of the great
Amīrs of Akbar, 168, 342, 343, 344,
346, 370.
Mīrzā Khushḥāl Bēg,—one of the
Qūrchīs of the palace, 13, 101.
Mīrzā Kokah, the A'zam Khān, son
of Atgah Khān,—one of the great
Amīrs of Akbar, 98, 146, 202 and
n 1, 207 and n 2, 401. See also
under A'zam Khān, Khān-i-A'zam
and 'Azīz Kokah.
Mīrzā Makhdūm,—a Sharīf and au-
thor of the Kitābu-n-Nawāqis, in
blame of the Shī'ah, 327.
Mīrzā Mançūr, son of Mīrzā Bāiqrā
son of 'Umar Shaikh Mīrzā, second
son of the great Taimūr, 87 n 1.
Mīrzā Manohar. See under Manohar
Rāī, son of Räī Lonkaran.
Mīrzā Mīrak, afterwards Razawī
Khān,—Wakīl of the Khān Zamān,
'Alī Qulī Khān, 85, 94, 95 and n 2,
103 and n 1, 185.
Mīrzā Muflis,—a master of religious
philosophy and author of the Taf-
sīri Ḥāfiz, 190 [see page vi].
Mīrzā Muḥammad Ḥakīm. See un-
der Muḥammad Ḥakīm, son of
Humāyūn.
Mīrzā Muḥammad Muqīm,—one of
the Amīrs and Generals of Akbar,
252.
Mīrzā Muqīm of Içfahān,—Akbar's
Wakīl at the Court of Ḥusain
Khān, governor of Kashmīr, 128.
Mīrzā Muzaffar Ḥusain. See under
Muzaffar Ḥusain.
Mīrzā Nizāmu-d-dīn Aḥmad. See
under Nizāmu-d-dīn Aḥmad.
Mīrzā Nūru-d-Dīn Muḥammad, hus-
band of Humāyūn's sister, 13, 216.
Mīrzā Qandahārī, 417 and n 1. Same
as Mīrzā Muzaffar Ḥusain, son of
Sulṭān Ḥusain Mīrzā, commandant
of Qandahār.
Mīrzā Shāh Abu-l-Ma'ālī. See under
Shāh Abu-l-Ma'ālī.
Mīrzā Shāh Rukh. See under Shāh
Rukh Mīrzā.
Mīrzā Sharaf, 57 n 3. Same as the
next, which see.
Mīrzā Sharafu-d-dīn Ḥusain,—one of
the Amīrs and Generals of Akbar,
46. See also under Sharafu-d-dīn
Ḥusain and Mīrzā Sharaf.
Mīrzā Sulaimān, Governor of Badakh-
shān,—sixth in descent from the
great Taimūr, 5 and n 2, 57, 61 and
n 5, 71, 72, 89, 90, 91, 204, 217, 218,
220, 222, 350, 355, 357, 366, 425.
Mīrzā Ulugh. See under Ulugh Mīrzā,
son of Muḥammad Sulṭān Mīrzā.
Mīrzā Ulugh Beg-i-Gurgān,—a power-
ful King of the House of Tai-
mūr, 276.
Mīrzā Yūsuf Khān Mashhadī. See
under Yūsuf Khān Mashhadī.
Mishkātu-l-anwār, the,—name of a
book, 205.
Mishnāh,—one of the books of the
Talmūdīm, 55 n 5, 287 n 2, 400 n 1.
Mishnāh Ābōth. See the above.
Mit'hra, town of, 306.
Miyān Amān-ullāh Sarhindī. See
under Amān-ullāh Sarhindī.
Miyān Fatḥ-ullāh Sharbatī,—one of
the imperial courtiers, 357, 361.
Miyān Ḥātim Sambhalī,—a famous
Moulawī and learned Doctor, 42,
294.
Miyān Mān Pānīpātī,—a tradition-
alist, 286 [see page x].
Miyān Shaikh 'Abd-ullāh, descendant
of Miyān Shaikh Dāūd Jahnīwāl,
403.
Miyān Shaikh Dāūd Jahnī Wāl,—a
great saint and spiritual guide,
200, 403, 408.
Miyān Tān Sīn or Tānsingh,—a
famous Hindū musician of Akbar's
time, 37, 273, 345.
Miyānah, village of,—at 15 cosses
from Patna, 340.
Miyānkāl, a hilly tract between
Samarqand and Bukhārā, 324 and
n 1.
Modern Egyptians, Lane's, 35 n 4.
Moghul Emperors, the, 59 and n 6.
Moghuls, the, 6, 152, 168, 170, 177,
338, 342, 350, 371.
Moguls, the. See the above.
Moḥammad. See under Muḥammad
the Prophet.
Mohanī, town of,—in the neighbour-
hood of Kokandah, 242, 248, 249.
Mohinī, wife of a Hindū goldsmith
of Āgra,—her story with Sayyid
Mūsā of Garmsīr, 113, 114, 119 n 1.
Morely's Descriptive Catalogue, 397 n 2.
Moses of Scripture, 190 n 3, 302.
Mou or Mhow (properly Mahu), town
of, 84 and n 5. See also under
Mow.
Moulawī, Jāmī, 35. See under Jāmī
and 'Abdu-r-raḥmān Jāmī.
Mou-maidānah,—name of a hunting-
ground, 105.
Mow, town of,—in Mālwa, 68 n 3.
See also under Mou.
Muayyid Bēg, brother of 'Abdu-r-
raḥmān Bēg, son of Muayyad Bēg,
17.
Mu'azzu-l-mulk. See under Mu'izzu-
l-mulk.
Mubārak, al-, title of the month of
Ramzān, 44 n 2.
Mubārak Khān Afghān, the assassin
of Bairām Khān, the Khān Khānān,
40.
Mubārak, Mullā,—anti-Islāmic writer
of Akbar's time, 316.
Mubārak of Nāgor, Shaikh,—father
of Shaikh Abu-l-Fazl 'Allāmī and
Shaikh Faizī, 26, 176, 200, 201, 202,
207 and n 3, 273 and nn 4, 5 and 6,
278, 280, 322, 402 and n 1.
Mubārik. See under Mubārak.
Muçāḥib Bēg, son of Khwājah Kalān
Bēg Naqshbandī, the grandson of
Khwājah Aḥrār, 19.
Muçtafā Kātib of Lāhor, Mullā,—
editor, in conjunction with our
author, of the Tārīkh-i-Alfī, 407.
Mudāriya,—a hill district in Mālwa,
ix, 249 [see page ix].
Muflis, Mīrzā,—a master of religious
philosophy and author of the Tafsīr-
i-Ḥāfiz
, 190 [see page vi].
Muḥammad, the Prophet, 1 and n 3,
23 n 6, 28 n 2, 35 n 4, 36 n 2, 59
n 4, 203 n 4, 214 n 2, 227 n 2, 231
244, 266, 281, 316, 324, 347 n 4,
374, 378.
Muḥammad, the Judge of Amrāhah,
Mīr Sayyid, 224, 226 n 2. See also
under the Mīr 'Adl.
Muḥammad Akbar Pādshāh. See un-
der Akbar.
Muḥammad 'Alī, the treasurer,—one
of the chief officers of the Court,
359, 365.
Muḥammad 'Alī Dīwānah,—one of
the officers of Mīrzā Muḥammad
Ḥakīm, son of Humāyūn, the gov-
ernor of Kābul, 302.
Muḥammad Amīn. See under Amīnu-
d-dīn.
Muḥammad Amīn Dīvānī,—or
Muḥammad Amīn Dīwānah,—one of
the Amīrs of Akbar, 32, 76, 82, 95
and n 4.
Muḥammad Amīn Khaṭīb,—a Court
attendant, 42.
Muḥammad Amīn, Mīr,—one of the
confidential servants of the Court,
390.
Muḥammad Bairām Khān Turkomān,
—prime-minister of Akbar, 7 n 3
41 and n 3. See also under Bairām
Khān the Khān Khānān.
Muḥammad Bāqī Khān, son of Māhum
Ankah, the nurse of Akbar, 49 n 4,
351. See also under Bāqī Khān.
Muḥammad Bāqī Tarkhān, son of
Muḥammad 'Isā, the ruler of Sindh,
—a direct descendant of Chingīz
Khān, 93 and n 1, 370.
Muḥammad Bāqir, the fifth of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 36n 2.
Muḥammad Bokhārī of Dihlī, Shaikh,
—one of the Amīrs and Generals
of Akbar, 151, 152, 174, 359.
Muḥammad Çādiq Khān,—one of the
Great Amīrs and commanders, 56,
320, 376, 401. See also under
Çādiq Muḥammad Khān.
Muḥammad Çāliḥ of Hirāt, Khwājagī,
grandson of Khwājah 'Abd-ullāh
Marwarīd, the Wazīr,—one of the
Çadrs of Akbar, 48, 340.
Muḥammad Ghous, one of the great
Shaikhs of India, 28, 62, 122.
Muḥammad Ḥaidar Mu'ammāī, Mīr,
—a writer of Akbar's time, 407.
Muḥammad, Ḥājī, an Aḥadī soldier of
Akbar, 303.
Muḥammad Ḥakīm, Mīrzā, son of
Humāyūn, son of Bābar,—ruler of
Kābul, 54, 56, 57, 58 and n 1, 61
and nn 3 and 4, 71, 72, 87, 89, 90,
91 and n 2, 92, 93, 94, 186, 207 and
n 3, 289, 299, 300, 302, 303, 321,
350, 355, 357, 358, 359, 360.
Muḥammad Hāshim, son of Muḥam-
mad Qāsim Khān, Mīr baḥr, the
commandant of Kābul, 409.
Muḥammad Humāyūn Pādshāh Ghāzī,
Ḥazrat, 2. See under Humāyūn.
Muḥammad Ḥusain,—a holder of
jagirs in Gujrāt, 333.
Muḥammad Ḥusain Khān, 11, 140.
Same as Ḥusain Khān, the son-in-
law of Mahdī Qāsim Khān, which
also see.
Muḥammad Ḥusain, Khwājagī,—
brother of Muḥammad Qāsim Khān
Mīr baḥr, and one of the Amīrs of
Mīrzā Muḥammad Ḥakīm, son of
Humāyūn, 303.
Muḥammad Ḥusain Mīrzā, son of
Sulṭān Muḥammad Mīrzā, one of
the descendants of Taimūr, the
Great, 87 and n 1, 93, 145, 151, 152,
167, 169, 170, 171, 172.
Muḥammad Ḥusain, Shaikh,—one of
the old Amīrs of Akbar, 385.
Muḥammad 'Isā, Mīrzā, ruler of
Sindh,—a direct descendant of
Chingīz Khān, 93 and n 1.
Muḥammad Ja'far, son of the mater-
nal aunt of Mīrzā Nizāmu-d-dīn
Aḥmad, 389.
Muḥammad Khān,—alteration of such
names in the reign of Akbar, 324.
Muḥammad Khān Atkah, brother of
Atkah Khān,—one of the great
Amīrs of Akbar, 52, 72 n 2, 92, 109
n 4, 143.
Muḥammad Khān, Malik, son of
Mahdī Qāsim Khān, one of the
great Amīrs of Akbar, 38.
Muḥammad Khān Qandahārī, Shāh,—
commandant of the fort of Kotah
Balāyah on the part of Akbar, 105,
108.
Muḥammad Khān Shirwānī, Pīr,—one
of the great Amīrs and Generals of
Akbar, 2, 6 and n 3, 9, 12, 16, 19,
20, 21, 22, 33, 34, 42, 43, 46, 47,
101.
Muḥammad Khān Sīstānī, Ḥājī,—one
of the Amīrs of Akbar and vice-
gerent of the Khān Khānān, 22,
31, 39, 40, 77, 105.
Muḥammad Khān Uzbek, Pīr, Gov-
ernor of Balkh, 90, 217.
Muḥammad Khudābandah, son of
Shāh Ṭahmāsp, Sulṭān,—king of
Persia, 248.
Muḥammad Ma'çūm Bakkarī, Mīr,—
one of the renowned Amīrs of
Akbar, 386. See also the next.
Muḥammad Ma'çūm Bakrī [Bakkarī?]
Mīr, 252. See the above.
Muḥammad Ma'çūm, son of Hāshim
Khān, the brother of Shihābu-d-dīn
Aḥmad Khān of Dihlī, 181.
Muḥammad Ma'çūm Jounpūrī, = Gov-
ernor of Jounpūr, 291. See under
Ma'çūm Khān Farankhūdī.
Muḥammad Ma'çūm of Kābul,—foster-
brother of Mīrzā Ḥakīm and gov-
ernor of Bihār for Akbar, 91, 277,
284, 289, 290, 291, 292, 299 and n 3,
309, 320, 332, 333, 338. See also
under Ma'çūm Khān and Ma'çūm
Kokah.
Muḥammad Ma'çūm Khān Farankhūdī
or Faranjūdī, son of Mu'īnu-d-dīn
Aḥmad Khān,—one of the great
Amīrs of Akbar, 80 and n 2, 284,
290, 292. See also under Ma'çūm
Khān Farankhūdī.
Muḥammad Ma'çūm, Mīr,—one of the
officers of the Imperial Army, 338.
Muḥammad Ma'çūm, Mullā,—Qāzī of
Bihār, 285.
Muḥammad Makkī, Mīr Sayyid,—a
learned Doctor and Qur'ān reader,
15.
Muḥammad Mīr 'Adl, Sayyid,—
governor of Bakkar, 214, 252.
Muḥammad Munshī, Mīr,—holder of
the fief of Sarūt, in the Dōāb, 52.
Muḥammad Muqīm, Mīrzā,—one of
the Amīrs and Generals of Akbar,
252.
Muḥammad Murād Khān,—governor
of the fort of Ujjain on the part
of Akbar, 110.
Muḥammad Naqī, the tenth of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 32 n 2.
Muḥammad Qāsim,—ambassador of
'Alī Khān, governor of Kashmīr,
to the Court of Akbar, 276.
Muḥammad Qāsim Khān, the High
Admiral, 51. See the next.
Muḥammad Qāsim Khān, Mīr baḥr,—
Commander-in-chief by land and
sea and governor of Kābul on the
part of Akbar, 51, 303, 364, 365,
376, 380, 383, 393, 408, 409.
Muḥammad Qāsim Kōhbar,—vakīl of
Mīrzā Muḥammad Ḥakīm, son of
Humāyūn, 57, 61.
Muḥammad Qulī Khān Barlās,—one
of the great Amīrs and Generals of
Akbar, 5, 12, 55, 72, 96, 104, 105,
169, 170, 195, 196.
Muḥammad Qulī Khān Toqyāī, or
Toqbāī,—one of the Amīrs and
Generals of Akbar, 195 and n 1,
199.
Muḥammad Qulij Khān,—comman-
dant of Kābul on the part of
Akbar, 409.
Muḥammad Rafī' Badakhshī, Khwā-
jah,—one of the Generals of Akbar,
236. See also under Rafī' Badakh-
shī.
Muḥammad Sa'īd Shaibānī, Bahādur
Khān, son of Ḥaidar Sulṭān Uzbek-
i-Shaibānī, 18 n 2, 84 n 1. See
also under Bahādur Khān.
Muḥammad Shāh Sūr 'Ādil, the Em-
peror of India, commonly known
as 'Adalī, 25 n 1. See also under
'Adalī.
Muḥammad, Shaikh, son of Malūk
Shāh Badāūnī, brother of the
author, 130, 132.
Muḥammad Sharīf, Mīrzā, son of Mīr
'Abdu-l-Laṭīf Qazwīnī, of the Sayfī
Sayyids of Qazwīn, 235.
Muḥammad Sharīf, son of Nizāmu-d-
dīn Aḥmad, author of the Ṭabaqāt-
i-Akbarī, 339, 363.
Muḥammad, Sulṭān, Governor of
Bakkar, 138, 423. See under Maḥ-
mūd, Sulṭān of Bakkar.
Muḥammad Sulṭān Mīrzā, son of
Wais Mīrzā, one of the descendants
of Taimūr, the Great, 87 and n 1,
105, 110.
Muḥammad Tāhir Khān Mīr farāghat,
—one of the Amīrs of Akbar and
commandant of Dihlī, 188.
Muḥammad Taqī, the ninth of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 36 n 2.
Muḥammad Uzbek, Derwish,—a ser-
vant of the Imperial Court, 34.
Muḥammad Wifā, the treasurer,—
one of the Court officers, 357.
Muḥammad Yaḥyā Naqshbandī, Khwā-
jah,—one of the descendants of
Khwājah Aḥrār of Ajmīr, 225,
275.
Muḥammad Yār Harāwal,—brother's
son of Sikandar Khān, the Uzbek,
82 and n 2.
Muḥammad of Yazd, Mullā,—a zeal-
ous Shī'ī, 214, 267, 271, 284, 285,
297.
Muḥammad Yūsuf Khān, son of
Atkah Khān, Shamsu-d-dīn Mu-
ḥammad, the A'zam Khān, 86.
Muḥammad Zāhid of Balkh, Maulāna,
—nephew of the great Shaikh
Ḥusain of Khwārizm, 253.
Muḥammad Zamān Mīrzā, son of
Shāh Rukh Mīrzā of Badakhshān,
366, 408, 409.
Muḥammadābād, a dependency of
Mou, 84.
Muḥassan Razwī, Mīr,—one of the
confidential servants of the Court,
174.
Muḥib 'Alī Khān, son of Mīr Khalī-
fah,—one of the Amīrs and Gener-
als of Akbar, 138, 179, 284, 290,
320.
Muḥiu-d-dīn 'Abdu-l-Qādir Jīlānī,
Shaikh, 200.
Muḥiu-d-dīn, son of al-Badāonī,
author of the Muntakhabu-t-Tawā-
kh, 276.
Mu'īn, Mullānā,—a celebrated
preacher, 285.
Mu'īn, Shaikh, grandson of Mullānā
Mu'īn, the celebrated preacher,
285.
Mu'īnu-d-dīn Aḥmad Khān Faran-
khūdī, Governor of Sambhal,—one
of the Amīrs and Generals of Ak-
bar, 48, 157, 158, 195, 284.
Mu'īnu-d-dīn Chishtī Sigizī, Khwājah,
—one of the greatest Muḥam-
madan Saints of India, buried in
Ajmīr, 45, 108, 111 n 5, 143, 168 n 2
188, 203 and n 2, 233 and n 4, 243
n 3, 246 and n 2, 262 n 1, 280, 320.
See also under Khwājah Ajmīrī.
Mu'īnu-d-dīn Khān Farankhūdī. See
under Mu'īnu-d-dīn Aḥmad Khān
Farankhūdī.
Mu'īnu-d-dīn, Khwājah, son of Khwā-
jah Khāwind,—one of the des-
cendants of Khwājah Aḥrār, 57.
Mu'izzu-l-mulk Mashhadī, Mīr,—one
of the Mūsawī Sayyids of Mashhad,
descendants of Imām Mūsā ar-Rizā,
80 and n 3, 81, 82, 83, 84, 284, 285,
297.
Mujāhid Khān, nephew of Muḥib 'Alī
Khān,—one of the Amīrs and
Generals of Akbar, 138, 233, 249.
Mu'jamu-l-buldān, the,—of Yāqūt,
388.
Mujdī of Sarhind, Mullā,—Receiver-
General of revenues, 274.
Mulānā Nizāmu-d-dīn,—an inhabitant
of Sūrat, 148.
Mulānā Qāsim Arsalān. See under
Qāsim Arsalān.
Mulānā Sa'īd, of Transoxiana,—Doctor
of Law, 45.
Mulānā Shīrī, the Poet. See under
Mullā Shīrī.
Mulathān, district of, 425.
Mullā 'Abd-ullāh Sulṭānpūrī. See
under 'Abd-ullāh Sulṭānpūrī.
Mullā Alim of Kābul. See under
Alim of Kabul.
Mullā 'AshKhān,—Vakīl of Qāzī
Çadru-d-dīn of Lāhor, 276.
Mullā Ghazālī, a poet of Mashhad,
94.
Mullā Ismā'īl 'Aṭā-i-Mu'ammā-i,—
disciple of Shaikh Muḥammad
Ghous, 62.
Mullā Mubārak,—anti-Islāmic writer
of Akbar's time, 316.
Mullā Mujdī of Sarhind,—Receiver-
General of revenues, 274.
Mullā Sherī,—a poet, 204. See also
the next.
Mullā Shīrī, the Hindū poet, 53, 112,
239, 304, 319, 330, 346, 362. See
also the above.
Mullā Ṭaib of Kīṭ'hal,—Dīwān of the
province of Bihār and Ḥājīpūr, 274.
Mullā Ṭālib Içfahānī,—author of
an account of Little Tibet, 388.
Mullā Taqī of Shustar,—one of the
followers of Akbar's new religion,
418.
Mullā 'Urfī of Shīrāz, a celebrated
poet, 387.
Multān, 138, 161, 162, 163, 168, 212,
213, 223, 258, 278, 286, 399, 402,
417, 425.
Mulūkshāh, Shaikh, father of the
author 'Abd-ul-Qādir al-Badāonī,
26, 51, 259.
Munawwar, Shaikh,—one of the
Ulamā of Lāhor and Çadr of
Mālwah, 285.
Mungīr, fortress of, 291.
Mun'im Khān, Governor of Kābul
and Ghaznī, and successor of
Bairām Khān as Khān Khānān, 5
and n 4, 34, 38, 39, 49 and n 4, 51,
54, 55 and n 4, 76, 78, 80, 87, 92 n 5,
138, 174, 177, 190, 194, 198 and n 2,
220, 221, 232, 247. See also under
the Khān Khānān Mun'im Khān.
Munīr, Mīr,—one of the confidential
servants of the court, 390.
Munkir and Nakīr, the judges of the
dead, 414 and n 1.
Muntakhabu-t-Tawārīkh, the,—of al-
Budāonī, 62.
Muqarrab Khān, a Chief of the
Amīrs of the Dakkan, 68, 87, 88.
Muqbil Khān,—one of Akbar's
courtiers, 122.
Muqīm of Içfahān, Mīrzā,—Akbar's
Wakīl at the court of Ḥusain
Khān, Governor of Kashmīr, 128.
Muqīm Khān, called by the title of
Shujā'at Khān,—one of the Amīrs
of Akbar and sister's son to Tardī
Bēg Khān, 38, 66. See also under
Shujā'at Khān.
Murād, Prince Sulṭān, second son
of Akbar, 136, 267, 301, 302 and
n 2, 362, 381, 390, 391 and n 2,
401, 416.
Murtazā Sharīfī, or Murtazā Sharīf
Shīrāzī, Mīr,—of the family of the
celebrated Mīr Sayyid Sharīf Jur-
jānī, 85, 101, 102.
Murtazā, Mīr,—one of the Amīrs of
the Dak'hin, 354, 372.
Murtazī Nizāmu-l-mulk, governor of
the Dak'hin, 334. See also under
Nizāmu-l-Mulk.
Mūsā [Moses,] of Scripture, 190 and
n 3.
Mūsā of Garmsīr, Sayyid, son of
Sayyid Mikrī,—one of the chief
Sayyids of Kālpī, 113, 114, 115,
116, 117, 119, 121.
Mūsā Gīlānī Qādirī, Shaikh, son of
the sainted Shaikh Ḥāmid of Uchh,
418.
Mūsā Kāzim, the seventh of the twelve
Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 36 n 2.
Mūsā Khān Fulādī, Governor of
Patan, in Gujrāt, 40.
Mūsā Qāsim. See under Mūsā Kā-
zim, of which it appears to be a
mis-print.
Mūsawī Sayyids of Mashhad, the,
—descendants of 'Alī Mūsā Rizā,
the 8th Imām of the Shī'ahs, 80
n 3.
Musharraf Bēg,—a servant of Shāh
Mançūr, the dīwān of the empire,
300 and n 2.
Muṣṭafā, another name of Muḥam-
mad the Prophet, 35 n 4, 324.
Mus'ūd. See under Mas'ūd.
Muṭlab Khān,—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar, 297.
Muttahī Afghān Kāsī, Shaikh,—one
of the renowned Shaikhs of the
Panjāb, 294.
Muwaṭṭa, the,—a book of jurispru-
dence by the celebrated Imām
Mālik, 212.
Muzaffar 'Alī Dīwānah, Khwājah,
34. Probably the same as Khwājah
Muzaffar 'Alī Turbatī.
Muzaffar 'Alī Turbatī, Khwājah,—
becomes Minister of Finance with
the title of Khān, 64. See also
under Muzaffar Khān, 'Alī Turbatī.
Muzaffar Ḥusain Mīrzā, son of Ibrā-
hīm Ḥusain Mīrzā,— one of the
descendants of Taimūr and husband
of Sulṭān Khānum, the eldest
daughter of Akbar, 148, 256, 257
and n 1, 260, 274.
Muzaffar Ḥusain, Mīrzā, son of Sulṭān
Ḥusain Mīrzā, son of Bahrām
Mīrzā, son of Ismā'īl Çafawī,—
commandant of Qandahār and the
Garmsīr, 222, 402, 416, 417 n 1.
Muzaffar Khān, Governor of Bengāl,
277. Same as Muzaffar Khān 'Alī
Turbatī, which see.
Muzaffar Khān, 'Alī Dīwānah, 34.
Probably the same as Muzaffar
Khān 'Alī Turbatī.
Muzaffar Khān, 'Alī Turbatī, of the
tribe of Turbat, in Khurāsān,—
one of the great Amīrs of Akbar
who was made Minister of Finance,
then Prime Minister and afterwards
Governor of Bengāl, 64, 70, 78,
84, 89, 92, 94, 96, 104, 111, 153,
174, 185, 244, 245, 247, 275, 277,
288, 289, 290, 325.
Muzaffar Khān, Rājah, 247 n 2 (read
Rājah Todar Mall), 248 (dele Rājah.
See Muzaffar Khān 'Alī Turbatī).
Muzaffar Moghūl,—one of the Amīrs
of Akbar's army, 195.
Muzaffar, son of Sulṭān Maḥmūd
Gujrātī, 145, 337, 338, 339, 340,
341, 342, 344, 355, 365, 370 and
n 4, 371, 399, 426.
Muzill, al-, or the Tempter,—
a title of Iblīs or the devil,
266.