Rabban Gamliel, son of Rabbi,—a
Talmudic writer, 400 n 1.
Races of the North-Western Provin-
ces of India, Elliott's, 240 n 3.
Rachna, dōāb of,—between the Che-
nab and the Rāwī, in the Panjāb,
304 n 5.
Rafī' Badakhshī, Khwājah,—one of
the Generals of Akbar, 385. See
also under Muḥammad Rafī' Badakh-
shī.
Rafī'u-d-dīn Muḥaddis, Mīr Sayyid,
289.
Rahab, the,—a river in the district
of Sambhal, 5 and n 9. The word
is written Rahat by Firishta.
Rahat, the,—for the river Rahab.
See the above.
Raḥmān Qulī Khān,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 157, 424.
Raḥmat, a name to which such names
as Yār Muḥammad, &c., were altered
at the time of Akbar, 324.
Rāī Barēlī, town of, 97.
Rāī Bhagvān Dās. See under Rājah
Bhagwān Dās.
Rāī Jaimal,—one of the Rāis of Rānā
Udai Sing and Governor of Chiṭor,
105, 107, 239.
Rāī Kalyān Mal, Rājah of Bīkānīr,
137.
Rāī Lonkaran, Governor of Sāmbhar,
259.
Rāī Manohar, son of Rāī Lonkaran.
See under Manohar.
Rāī Rām,—an Officer of the Imperial
Army, charged with guarding the
road to Gujrāt, 153.
Rāī Sāl Darbārī,—one of the Officers
of the Court, 333 n 1. Probably
the same as Rāī Singh Darbārī,
which see.
Rāī Sarjan,—one of the Rāīs of Rānā
Udai Sing of Chiṭor, 105 [see
page iii]. See also under Rāī
Surjan.
Rāī Singh B'hatta,—father-in-law of
Prince Sulṭān Salīm, eldest son of
Akbar, 364.
Rāī Singh Darbārī,—one of the
Amīrs and Generals of Akbar, 360,
364, 392, 400 [see page xiii], 403.
See under Rāī Sāl Darbārī.
Rāī Singh, son of Rāī Kalyān Mal,
Rājah of Bīkānīr,—Governor of
Joudhpūr, 137, 144, 153, 171, 172.
Rāī Surjan Hādā,—a relation of Rānā
Udai Singh of Chiṭor, 25, 26 and
n 2, 29, 111. See also under Rāī
Sarjan.
Rāī Udī Singh or Udai Sing,—Rānā
of Chīṭor, 26 n 2, 48, 105, 173.
Rāisin or Rāīsīn,—district of, 358,
372.
Rājah 'Alī Khān. See under 'Alī
Khān.
Rājah Awēsar,—a brigand and rebel,
155.
Rājah Bahār-Jiv of Baglāna, 151.
Rājah Bahār Mal,—Wakīl and Wazīr,
154, 158.
Rājah Bhagwān or Bhagvant Dās,
son of Rājah Pahārah or Bihārī
Mall, Governor of Lāhor,—one of
the great Amīrs and father of Mān
Singh, the famous Hindū general
of Akbar, 45, 144, 146 and n 2, 147,
173, 218, 243, 248, 249, 300, 302,
304, 320, 323, 352, 360, 363, 364 and
n 4, 368, 383, 384.
Rājah Bīrbar,—title of Gadāī Brah-
madās, (Sansk. vīra-vara). 164 n 5
See under Bīrbār and Gadāī Brah-
madās.
Rājah Gobind Chand, Governor of
the fortress of Talwārah, 38.
Rājah Jai Chand, Commandant of
Nagarkot, 164, 166.
Rājah of Kamāūn, in the Sawālik
hills, 377.
Rājah Maldeo, of Jodhpūr and Mār-
wār, 34. See also under Māldeo.
Rājah Mān, of Gwālyār,—a famous
Hindū chief, 238.
Rājah Mān Singh, the famous Hindū
general of Akbar. See under Mān
Singh, son of Rājah Bhagawan
Dās.
Rājah Muzaffar Khān, 247 n 2, 248.
See under Muzaffar Khān Rājah.
Rājah of Orissa, the,—his relations
with Akbar, 77, 78.
Rājah Pahārah Mall, Governor of the
Rājpūt state of Ambēr or Jaipūr,
45. See also under Bihārī Mall.
Rājah Rāmchand,—the most re-
nowned of all the rājās of the
hills, at the time of Akbar's acces-
sion, 4 and n 3.
Rājah Rām Chand B'hatta. See un-
der Rām Chand ruler of Bhat'h.
Rājah Ramshāh,—grandson of the
famous Rājah Mān of Gwālyār,
238, 239.
Rājah Rankā,—a powerful zamīndār
with Ajmīr for his capital, 129.
Rājah of Sarohī, a small district of
Rājpūtānā, 144, 337.
Rājah of Sūratha, 145.
Rājah Todar Mal,—one of the great
Amīrs and generals of Akbar and
his finance minister, 82, 83, 84, 96,
148, 173, 174, 192, 194, 195, 196,
198, 247 n 2 [see page ix], 249,
251, 256, 290, 292, 295, 297, 321,
325, 362, 364, 377, 383. See also
under Todar Mal.
Rājataranginī, or “the Ocean of
Kings,” the only piece of History
in Sanskrit, 415 n 2.
Rājorī,—a town at the frontier of
Kashmīr, 3.
Rājpīplah,—a district, 341, 344.
Rājpūtāna, 147 n 3, 189 n 1, 233 n 1,
337 n 3.
Rājpūts of Chītōr, the,—slaughter
of, by the troops of Akbar, 107.
Rājū Bokhārī, of Sarhind, Shaikh,
334.
Rājūrī, town of,—on the frontier of
the Panjāb and Kashmīr, 395 and
n 3.
Rāk'hī, an amulet formed out of
twisted linen rags, 269.
Rakhuah, 394 n 1. See under Ḥāfiz
Sulṭān Rakhnah of Herāt.
Rakhsh, name of Rustam's charger,
47 n 4.
Raknu-d-doulah. See Ruknu-d-dau-
lah.
Rām,—one of the chief gods of the
Hindūs, 265, 336. See also the
next.
Rām, the name of Rām Chand, Rājah
of Oudh, 347. See also the above.
Rāmāyana, the,—the story of Rām
Chand, Rājah of Oudh, 346, 348,
378.
Rām Chand, Rājah,—the ruler of
Bhat'h, 124, 345.
Rāmchand, Rājah,—the most re-
nowned of all the rājās of the hills,
at the time of Akbar's accession,
4 and n 3.
Rām Chand, Rājah of Oudh,—hero
of the Rāmāyana, 347 and n 3.
Rām Dās of Lak'hnou,—one of the
musicians of Aslīm Shāh Sūr, of
the Afghān dynasty of Dihlī, 37.
Rām Parsād, or
Rām Parshād,—name of a celebrated
elephant of Rājā Kīkā's, 238, 241.
See also the next.
Rām-prasād,—a common Hindū name
meaning ‘Favour of Rāmā’, 243.
See the above.
Rāmpūr,—a mountainous district in
the neighbourhood of Ūdaipūr
Komalmair, 105.
Rāmshāh of Gwālyār, Rājah,—grand-
son of the famous Rājah Mān, 238,
239.
Ran, hill of, — which commands the
fortress of Rintambhor, 111.
Rānā Kīkā. See under Kīkā, ruler
of Gogandah and Kumalmair.
Rānā Udī Singh. See under Rāī
Udī Singh.
Rānī Durgāwatī,—ruler of the dis-
trict of Gaḍha-Katangah, 65.
Rantambhor. See under Rintam-
bhor.
Rapin,—Latin Poet, 400 n 1.
Rashīd Khān-i-Kalān,—one of the
Imperial Amīrs, 168.
Rashīd Mulā 'Içāmu-d-dīn Ibrāhīm
Asfarāyanī,—author of a commen-
tary on the Sūrah-e-Muḥammad,
190.
Rashīd Shaikh Zamān of Pānīpat,—
author of a commentary on the
Lawāiḥ, 265.
Rastam. See under Rustam, the
hero of ancient Īrān.
Rauzah-i-Ābā-i-Kirām, the,—a ce-
metery in Dihlī for the burial of
celebrities, 374.
Rauzatu-l-Aḥbāb, the,—name of an
historical work, 328.
Rāvan, ruler of the island of Lankā,
—one of the chief characters in
the Rāmāyana, 347.
Ravee, the, — a river of the Panjāb.
See under the Rāwī.
Rāwal Pindī,— between Atak Banāras
and Rohtās, 360.
Rāwī, the,—one of the five rivers of
the Panjāb, 92, 93, 304 n 5, 378,
394, 410. The name is also spelt
Ravee.
Razawī Khān, title of Mīrzā Mīrak,
the Wakīl of 'Alī Qulī Khān, the
Khān Zamān, 85, 250, 275, 289.
See also under Mīrzā Mīrak.
Rāzī, Imām—a celebrated Muḥam-
madan Doctor, 267.
Razm-nāmah, the,—name of the
Persian translation of the Mahā-
bhārata, 330, 413.
Razwī Khān. See under Razawī
Khān.
Revārī, town of, 259.
Rhotas, fortress of, in Bihār. See
under Rohtās.
Richard II, of England, 32 n 5.
Rig Veda, the, 296 n 1.
Rīmiyā,—the power of omnipresence
of the soul, 334 n 4.
Rin, the,—a Marsh in Gujrāt, which
enters the sandy desert of Jaisal-
mīr and there loses itself, 355.
Rinkasārī, town of,—in Bengāl, 195
and nn 3 and 5.
Rintambhor, fortress of, 25 and n 4,
29, 109, 110, 114, 117, 124, 128,
255, 286, 308, 309, 322. The name
is also spelt Rantambhor.
Rinthambor, fortress of. See the
above.
Rizā, Imām,—the eighth of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 35
and n 3, 81 n 3. His full name is
'Alī Mūsā Rizā, which also see.
Roebuck's Eastern Proverbs, 20 n 1,
22 n 3, 28 n 1, 178 n 1, 239 n 1, 425.
Rohīrpūr, town of,—in Bengāl, 195 and
n 4. The correct name of this town
is Harpūr.
Rohtās, fortress of,—in Bihār, 27, 77,
79, 159 n 1, 177, 185, 290, 301, 360,
381, 397, 398. The name is also
spelt Rhotās.
Romnī, town of—one of the depen-
dencies of Bhojpūr, 182 and n 1.
Ropar, a town on the river Satlaj,
51 n 3.
Roshan beg, a servant of Mīrzā
Muḥammad Ḥakīm, son of Humā-
yūn, the ruler of Kābul, 289.
Roshanāī,—a Hindūstānī solider who
made himself a religious teacher
and set up an heretical sect called
after him the Roshanāīs, 360, 361
and n 1, 362, 366, 368 n 1, 393, 401.
See also under Roshanī.
Roshanāīs, the,—an heretical sect.
See under the above name.
Roshanī, 357. Same as Roshanāī,
the founder of the heretical sect of
the Roshanāīs.
Rouzah. See under Rauzah.
Ruknu-d-daulah, title of Gūjar Khān
Kararānī, the general of Dā'ūd
Kararānī, ruler of Bengal, 184. See
also under Gūjar Khān Kararānī.
Rustam,—the famous hero in the
Shāhnāmah, 11 and n 3, 47 and n 4,
79 n 3, 237 and n 5, 326.
Rustam,—a Persian General at the
time of the conquest of Persia by
the Arabs, 317 n 1.
Rustam Khān Rūmī,—governor of the
fortress of Bhroj, in Gujrāt, 110,
146, 151.
Rustam, Mīrzā,—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar, 399, 416, 417. Same as the
next.
Rustam, Mīrzā, son of Sulṭān Ḥusain
Mīrzā, son of Bahrām Mirzā, son of
Ismā'īl Çafawī,—governor of the
Zamīndāwar, 402. See also the
above.
Rūyat, doctrine of,—whether God shall
be seen by the saints in heaven or
not, 317.
Ryots, the,—cultivators of the soil,
[354.