S.

Sābāṭs,—signification of the term,
106 and n 1, 111.
Sabeites, the,—held to be of the People
of the Book
, 265 n 1.
Sabṭī, etymology and signification of
the word, 262 n 3.
Sabwī,—a fortress in the province of
Bhakkar, 252.
Sa'd,—an Arabian general at the
time of the conquest of Persia,
317 n 1.
Sa'dain,—Jupiter and Venus, the two
beneficent planets, 87 n 1.
Sadr Jahān, of Pihānī, Mīr,—the
muftī of the imperial dominions,
365.
Sa'dullāh, Shaikh, son of Shaikh
Badah,—one of the nobles of the
Court, 102.
Safevi [Ṣafawī] dynasty of Persia,
the, 13 n 5.
Sahasnak, Lake,—called also Sahnas
Lang, a lake in the vicinity of
Patan in Gujrāt, 40 n 3.
Sahnas Lang, Lake,—in the vicinity
of Patan in Gujrāt, 40 and n 3.
See the above.
Sai or Sye, the,—the river Siyāh,
which falls into the Gūmtī near
Jounpūr, 82 n 4.
Sa'īd Khān Badakhshī,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar's army, 199, 290.
Sa'īd Khān Gakkh'har,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 361.
Sa'īd Khān the Moghūl, governor of
Multān, and then of the Panjāb
and one of the great Amīrs and
Generals of Akbar, 9, 80, 138, 153
[see page iv], 162, 163, 168, 223,
261, 292, 300, 304, 417.
Sa'īd, Mulānā, of Transoxiana,—a
celebrated Doctor and Professor,
45.
Saif Khān Kokah,—one of the Amīrs
of Akbar's army, killed at the
battle of Aḥmadābād, 170, 174.
Saifu-d-dīn, the Tātār, Amīr, father
of Amīr Khusrū, the poet of Dihlī,
38 n 4.
Sajahrāk [?], the, 317.
Sajāwal Khān Sūr, the Afghān, father
of Bāz Bahādur, the governor of
Mālwah, 29 and n 3, 42 and n 4.
The name is also written Suzāwal
and Shujāwal.
Sakat Singh, son of Mān Singh, the
famous Hindū general of Akbar,
399.
Sakīt, town of, 96.
Sālabāhan, son of Rām Shāh Rājah
of Gwālyār, 239 [see page viii].
Sāl Darbārī, Rāī,—one of the officers
of the court, 333 n 1.
Sale's Koran, 174 n 2.
Sale's Preliminary Discourse, 189 n 2.
Salīm Chishtī of Fatḥpūr, Shaikh,—
one of the great Shaikhs of India.
See under ChishShaikhu-l-Islām.
Salīm Khān,—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar's army, 82.
Salīm Shāh, Sūr,—of the Afghān
dynasty of Dihlī, 27. Variously
called Aslīm, Islām and Islīm Shāh,
which see.
Salīm, Sulṭān, son of Akbar,—suc-
ceeded his father with the title of
Jahāngīr, 124, 136, 145, 173, 302,
320 and n 2, 352, 364, 368, 390 n 1,
391 and n 2. See under Bābā
Shaikhū Jī.
Salīmah Sulṭān Begum, daughter of
Mīrzā Nūru-d-dīn Muḥammad, and
sister's daughter to the Emperor
Humāyūn, 13, 216, 320, 389.
Salsabīl, the,—one of the rivers of
Paradise, 360 and n 3.
Sāmānīs, Mirchond's Account of the
Dynasty of the, 426.
Samanas [Sansk. çramana], the,—
Buddhist ascetics, 264.
Sāmarī [the Samaritan],—mentioned
in al-Qur'ān and said to be a rela-
tive of Aaron, 348 and n 8.
Samarqand, city of, 187, 210, 280,
324 n 1.
Sambhal, district and town of, 5, 14,
15, 63, 87 and n 3, 93, 105, 109,
139, 147, 154, 156 and n 1, 157, 158,
223, 294, 416.
Sāmbhar, town of,—in Rājpūtānā, 45,
236, 259.
Sangānīr, town of,—in Rājpūtānā,
[173.
Sangrām Khān, a ghulām of 'Adalī
the Emperor of India, 25 and n 3,
26.
Sānī Khān,—one of the Amīrs of
Akbar's army, 76.
Sānī Khān Kābulī, Malik, the Vazīr
Khān,—vazīr of Mīrzā Muḥammad
Ḥakīm, son of Humāyūn, ruler of
Kābul, 300.
Sankrah, town of, 159.
Sannyāsī-s, the,—a class of Hindū
devotees, 95 and n 1, 369.
Sansawān, town of,—a dependency
of Sambhal, 63.
Sārangpūr, town of,—in Mālwah, 42
and n 5, 44, 292. See the next.
Sārangpūr, town of,—in Mandū, 66, 68,
110, 153, 174, 250. See the above.
Sārbānbāshī, signification of the term,
13 and n 6.
Sārbarmatī, the,—a river, 371.
Sardār, district of, 80 and n 1, 81.
Probably we should read Sarwār.
Sarharpūr, district and town of,—
about 18 cosses from Jounpūr, 16,
76, 80 n 1.
Sarhind, district and town of. See
under Sirhind.
Sarhor Hindī Bengālī, Bikramājīt,—a
servant of Dāūd Kararānī, the ruler
of Bengal, 184 and n 2.
Sarjan, Rāī,—one of the Rāīs of
Rānā Udai Sing of Chiṭor, 105
[see page iii]. See also under
Surjan Hādā.
Sarkh Badakhshī,—one of the Amīrs
of Akbar's army, 147, 320.
Sarkich,—a place at 3 cosses from
Aḥmadābād, 342, 344. See also the
next.
Sarkij, town of, 338. See also the
above.
Sarmadī,—one of the servants of the
Court, 291.
Sarnāl,—a town on the banks of the
river Mahindrī and a district of
Rājpūtānā, 146, 151, 337.
Sarohī, a small district in Rājpūtānā,
144, 147 and n 3, 337 and n 3, 356,
372.
Saronj, town of, 110 [see page iii].
Sarūt, parganna of,—in the Dōāb, 52.
Sarw, the,—a river of Oudh, 80 n 1,
105. See also the Sarwār.
Sarwār, district of, 80 n 1. See under
Sardār.
Sarwār, the,—a river, 85. See also
the Sarw.
Satarsāl or Satr Sāl, the Jām of
Sūrat and Jūnāgaṛh, 370, 384. See
also under the Jām.
Sātgaṇw, town of, 244 n 2.
Satlaj, the,—one of the five rivers of
the Panjāb, 10 n 1, 34 n 5, 51 n 3,
161, 304 n 7, 358.
Satlij, the. See the above.
Satr Sāl or Satarsāl, the Jām of
Sūrat and Jūnāgaṛh, 370, 384. See
also under the Jām.
Satwās, fortress of, 87, 96, 162.
Sawad,—a province in the country of
the Afghāns, 360. See the next.
Sawād-u-Bajōr, or Bajūr, district of,
376, 393. See also the above and
under Bajūr.
Sawālik, mountain district of. See
under Siwālik.
Sawālikāt,—called in the maps Seal-
cot, 376 and n 3.
Sawāṭi'ul-ilhām, the,—or rays of
inspiration, a commentary on the
Qur'ān by Shaikh Faizī, the king of
poets, 407 n 3, 408.
Sayfī-Sayyids of Qazwīn, the,—
known for their Sunnī tendencies,
24 and n 2.
Sayūrgāl, or
Sayūrghāl, signification of the term,
23 and n 4.
Sayyid 'Abd-ullāh Khān. See under
'Abd-ullāh Khān Jokān Bēgī.
Sayyid Aḥmad Khān Bārha. See
under Aḥmad Khān Bārha, governor
of the fortress of Patan.
Sayyid 'Ārif, another name of Pahār
Khān Khaçç-i-Khail, one of the
officials of Akbar, 292.
Sayyid Bahān-d-dīn, Bokhārī,—one
of the Amīrs of Akbar, 386.
Sayyid Bēg, son of Ma'çūm Bēg,—
ambassador from Shāh Ṭahmāsp of
Persia to the Emperor Akbar, 49.
Sayyids of Bukhārā,—are Shī'ahs,
172 and n 1.
Sayyid Mikrī, one of the chief Sayyids
of Kālpī, 113.
Sayyid Ḥāmid Bokhārī,—one of the
Amīrs of Gujrāt. See under
Ḥāmid Bokhārī.
Sayyid Hāshim Bārhah, son of
Sayyid Maḥmūd Bārhah,—one of
the Amīrs of Akbar, 224 [see page
viii], 233, 236, 237 n 4, 342.
Sayyid Khān Bārha,—one of the
Amīrs and Generals of Akbar, 145,
371.
Sayyid Maḥmūd Bārha,—one of the
great Amīrs and Generals. See
under Maḥmūd Bārha.
Sayyid Mūsā, son of Sayyid Mikrī,
one of the chief Sayyids of Kālpī.
See under Mūsā of Garmsīr.
Sayyid Shāhī, son of Sayyid Mikrī,
of the chief Sayyids of Kālpī,—
author of a poem called Dilfarīb,
114, 115, 121.
Sayyidpūr,—a town beyond the
Indus, 299.
Sayyids of Bārha, the,—their exploits
in the battle of Kokandah, 237 and
n 4.
Sayyids of Mashhad, the,—their
harshness of character, 81, 103 and
n 2.
Sealcot, 376 n 3. See also under
Siālkōṭ and Sawālikāt.
Seifuddīn. See under Saifu d-dīn.
Seven Heavens, the. 73 n 3.
Shablī. See under Shiblī.
Shaçt, the symbol of Akbar's new
religion, 418 and n 2.
Shadād, king of the Arabs. See the
next.
Shaddād,—an ancient king of the
Arabs, 66, 81, 204. The word is
incorrectly spelt Shadād at page 66.
Shādī Khān, the Afghān, one of the
Amīrs of 'Adalī, the nominal
emperor of India at the time of
Humāyūn's invasion, 5. See the
next.
Shādī Khān Muswānī,—an Afghān
leader, 8, 9. See the above.
Shādmān,—servant of Mīrzā Muḥam-
mad Ḥakīm, son of Humāyūn, the
ruler of Kābul, 299, 300.
Shāfi'ī, Imām,—founder of one of the
four schools of Sunnī doctrine, 212.
Shāfi'īs, the,—one of the four sects
of Sunnī Muslims, the followers of
Imām Shāfi'ī, 212, 337.
Shāh Abu-l-Ma'ālī,—one of the Amīrs
of Humāyūn, the father of Akbar,
2, 3, 4, 32 n 3, 33, 56 and n 2, 57,
58 and n 4, 61 and n n 3, 4 and 7,
71, 72.
Shāh Abu Turāb, Mīr Ḥājī,—one of
the great Sayyids of Shīrāz and
counsellor of the Sulṭāns of Gujrāt,
145, 258, 320, 332, 371, 385.
Shāh 'Ārif Çafawī Ḥusainī, 68.
Shāh Bēg Khān Kābūlī,—one of the
renowned Amīrs of Akbar, 386,
416.
Shāh B'hekan,—a Muḥammadan
saint, 342.
Shāh Bidāgh,—or
Shāh Budāgh Khān,—one of the great
Amīrs of Akbar, 46, 76, 80, 83, 96,
105, 110, 152, 249.
Shāh Fakhru-d-dīn Khān,—a zamīndār
of Mālwah, 249.
Shāh Fakhru-d-dīn Mashhadī, son of
Mīr Qāsim, a Mūsawī Sayyid of
Mashhad,—one of the Amīrs of
Humāyūn and Akbar, 95 and n 3.
Shāh Farmūlī, 291.
Shāh Fatḥ-ullāh Shīrāzī, 'Azdu-d-
daulah, the Chief Çadr of Hindus-
tān, 111, 286, 326, 328, 331, 354,
370, 372, 379, 380, 381, 382, 398.
See also under Fatḥ-ullāh of Shīrāz
and 'Azdu-d-daulah.
Shāh Ghāzī Khān Tabrīzī,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 233.
Shāh Ismā'īl, the First,—King of
Persia, 323.
Shāh Ismā'īl, the Second, son of Shāh
Ṭahmāsp,—King of Persia, 246,
248, 327.
Shāh Madār,—a Muḥammadan Saint
whose shrine is at Makanpūr in
Qannouj, 140.
Shāh Mançūr, Khwājah,—a Shīrāzī
clerk who rose to the rank of
Dīwān-i-kul of the empire, 247,
248, 257, 295, 298, 300, 301, 303.
Shāh Mançūr, Vizīr, 145. Probably
the same as the above.
Shāh Mīrzā, son of Sulṭān Muḥam-
mad Mīrzā, a descendant on his
father's side from the great Taimūr,
87 and n 1, 93, 105, 151, 171, 173.
Shāh Muḥammad Khān Qandahārī,—
governor of the fort of Kotah
Balāyah on the part of Akbar, 105,
108.
Shāh Muḥammad of Shāhābād, Mullā,
—one of the Çadrs of the Panjāb
and translator of the history of
Kashmīr into Persian, 304, 386,
418, 420.
Shāh Murād. See under Murād, son
of Akbar.
Shāh Qūlī Khān Maḥrūm [Maḥram],
so called because Akbar, from good
will towards him, admitted him
into his ḥaram. See under Qūlī
Khān Mahrūm.
Shāh Rukh Mīrzā, son of Ibrāhīm
Mīrzā, son of Mīrzā Sulaimān, the
ruler of Badakhshān, 217, 220, 276,
350, 352, 360, 363, 401, 402, 408.
Shāh Sharafu-d-dīn, brother's son to
Shāh Abu Turāb, one of the Amīrs
of Akbar, 385.
Shāh Ṭahmāsp, son of Shāh Ismā'īl
Ṣafawī,—King of Persia, 13, 49,
210, 246, 327.
Shāh Walī Bēg Atkah, assumes the
management of the affairs of Kābul
under the title of 'Ādil Shāh, 54,
55, 56, 57.
Shāhābād, town of, 300, 304, 386, 418.
Shahāb. See under Shihāb.
Shāham. See under Shāhim.
Shahbāz Khān Kambo. See under
Shahbāz Khān Shahr-ullāh Kambo
of Lāhor.
Shahbāz Khān, Mīr Bakhshī, 185, 187,
193, 251, 275, 293. Same as the
next, which also see.
Shahbāz Khān, Shahru-llāh Kambo
or Kambui of Lāhor,—one of the
Amīrs and Generals of Akbar, 145.
146, 174, 176, 189, 282, 283, 291,
293, 298, 300, 303, 304, 333, 339,
383, 401, 416. See also the above.
Shāhim Bēg, son of the Sārbānbāshī,
or chief officer in charge of the
camels
, of Shāh Ṭahmāsp of Persia,
—of the corps of the Qūrchīs and
one of the attendants of the Em-
peror Humāyūn, 13, 14, 15, 16,
17.
Shāhim Khān Jalāīr,—one of the
Amīrs and Generals of Akbar, 44,
76, 196, 198, 222, 290, 320.
Shāhnāmah, the,—of Firdausī Ṭūsī,
47 n 4, 237 n 5, 317, 329, 339 n 1,
347, 357 n 3, 418.
Shahr-i-Khudā,—a name of the
month of Rajab, 333 n 4.
Shahr-ullāh,—a name of the month
of Rajab, 333 and n 4.
Shahr-ullāh Kambūī of Lāhor, 174.
See also under his title of Shahbāz
Khān.
Shāhū, son of Shaikh Rājū Bokhārī,
of Sarhind,—an attendant of Shaikh
Farīd Bokhārī, 334.
Shaikh 'Abdu-l-'azīz. See under
'Abdu-l-'azīz of Dihlī.
Shaikh 'Abdu-l-Qudūs of Gangoh,—
one of the greatest Shaikhs of
Hind, 70.
Shaikh 'Abdu-n-Nabī, grandson of
Shaikh 'Abdu-l-Qudūs of Gangoh.
See under 'Abdu-n-Nabī, the
Shaikhu-l-Islām and chief Çadr of
Hind.
Shaikh Abu-l-Fatḥ, son of Shaikh
Badah,—one of the nobles of the
Court of Akbar, 102.
Shaikh Adhan of Jounpūr,—saint and
religious teacher, 273, 309.
Shaikh Badah, Lord of Āgra,—one
of the nobles of the Court of Akbar,
59, 102.
Shaikh Badru-d-Dīn, son of Shaikh
Islām Chishtī, of Fatḥpūr, the
great Shaikh of Hind, 215, 344.
Shaikh Banj'hū,—a musician, the dis-
ciple of Shaikh Adhan, of Jounpūr,
273.
Shaikh Bhāwan,—a learned Brāhman
from the Dak'hin, 216, 424.
Shaikh Bīnāī,—the Physician of the
Imperial Court, 224.
Shaikh Chānīldah,—an inhabitant of
the town of Sīwahnah, 294. See
Shaikh Chāyan Ladah.
Shaikh Chāyan Ladah, of Sīhnah,
386. See Shaikh Chānīldah.
Shaikh Dāniyāl, a holy man of Ajmīr.
See under Dāniyāl.
Shaikh Farīd,—a Muḥammadan
Saint, 137.
Shaikh Faizī, the King of Poets,—
son of Shaikh Mubārak of Nāgor
and brother of Shaikh Abu-l-Fazl
'Allāmī. See under Faizī.
Shaikh Gadā-ī Kambōh, son of Jamāl
Kambo-ī, of Dihlī,—Çadr of Hin-
dustān, 9, 22, 23, 24, 28, 31, 33, 124.
Shaikh Ḥāmid Gīlānī Qādirī,—a
devotee, 418.
Shaikh Ibrāhīm Chishtī, of Fatḥpūr-
Sīkrī. See under Ibrāhīm Chishtī.
Shaikh Islām Chishtī, of Fatḥpūr.
See under ChishShaikhu-l-
Islām, the great Shaikh of Hind.
Shaikh Maḥmūd Bokhārī,—one of the
Court officers of Akbar, 145.
Shaikh Mangan of Badāūn, 139.
Shaikh Mubārak, father of Shaikh
Faizī and Shaikh Abu-l-Fazl
'Allāmī. See under Mubārak of
Nāgōr.
Shaikh Muḥammad Ghous. See
under Muḥammad Ghous.
Shaikh Muḥammad, son of Mulūk
Shāh, and brother of 'Abdu-l-Qādir
al-Badāonī, the author of this
Muntakhab, 130, 132.
Shaikh Mulūk-shāh, father of the
author 'Abdu-l-Qādir al-Badāonī,
26, 51, 259.
Shaikh Munawwar,—one of the
Ulamā of Lāhor and Çadr of
Mālwah, 285.
Shaikh Nizām Narnoulī. See under
Nizām Narnoulī.
Shaikh Panjū Sambhalī,—one of the
Pīrs of Hind, 51 and n 2.
Shaikh Sa'du-llāh, son of Shaikh
Badah, of Āgra,—one of the most
powerful nobles of the Court
of Akbar, 102.
Shaikh Salīm of Fatḥpūr. See under
Chishtī, Shaikhu-l-Islām, the great
Shaikh of Hind.
Shaikh Tāju-d-Dīn, son of Shaikh
Zakariyā of Ajodhan, 265.
Shaikh Wajīhu-d-Dīn,—a learned and
profound sage, 385.
Shaikh Ya'qūb. See under Ya'qūb
Çirfī of Kashmīr.
Shaikh Zakariyā,—a hermit Dervish,
162.
Shaikh Ziyāu-d-Dīn, son of Shaikh
Muḥammad Ghous, a great Shaikh
of Hind, 123. See the next.
Shaikh Ziyāu-llāh, son of Shaikh Mu-
ḥammad Ghous, a great Shaikh of
Hind, 204. See the above.
Shaikhu-l-hadyah or Shaikhu-l-hidyah
Khairābādī,—one of the leading
Shaikhs of Hind, 228, 294.
Shaikhu-l-Islām Fatḥpūrī. See under
Chishtī, Shaikhu-l-Islām, the great
Shaikh of Hind.
Shaitānpārah or Devilsville, a place
outside the city of Āgrah, 311 and
n 5.
Shajā'at Khān. See under Shujā'at
Khān.
Shakespeare's Hindustānī Dictionary,
18 n 1, 27 n 5, 257 n 1.
Shamā'il, a collection of Traditions
by Tirmizī, regarding the figure
and looks of the Prophet, 318.
Shamsābād, Parganna of, 88, 96, 389.
Shamsu-d-Dīn Atkah Khān, 34. See
under Shamsu-d-Dīn Muḥammad
Atgah.
Shamsu-d-Dīn of Gīlān, the Ḥakīmu-
l-Mulk, 254 n 2. See also under
Ḥakīmu-l-Mulk.
Shamsu-d-Dīn Khāfī, Khwājah,—one
of the Amīrs of Akbar, 357, 359.
See also under Shamsu-d-Dīn Mu-
ḥammad Khawāfī.
Shamsu-d-Dīn Muḥammad Atgah or
Atkah Khān, surnamed A'zam
Khān, 34, 49 n 4, 92 n 4. See also
under Atkah Khān, and A'zam
Khān.
Shamsu-d-Dīn Muḥammad Khawāfī,
Khwājah,—the Chief Dīwān of the
empire, 290, 393 [see page xiii],
409. See also under Shamsu-d-Dīn
Khāfī.
Shamshīr Khān, Khwājah-Sarā,—
Superintendent of the Exchequer,
in the province of Bihār and Ḥājī-
pūr, 274.
Sharaf-i-āftāb, day of,—the 19th
degree of Aries, 363, 393. See also
under Sharafu-sh-Shams and Shara-
fu-sh-Sharaf.
Sharaf Bēg,—a servant of Shāh Man-
çūr, the dīwān of the empire, 300
and n 2.
Sharafu-d-Dīn Abu 'Abd-ullāh Mu-
ḥammad,—author of the Qaçīdah-
e-bordah, in praise of the Prophet,
397 n 1.
Sharafu-d-Dīn Ḥusain, Mīrzā,—son of
Khwājah Mu'īnu-d-Dīn, the great
grandson of Khwājah Aḥrār, 46,
56 and n 2, 57, 58 and n 4, 60, 105,
151, 174, 187, 290, 291.
Sharafu-sh-shams, day of, 414. See
under Sharaf-i-āftāb and Sharafu-
sh-Sharaf.
Sharafu-sh-sharaf, the day on which
the sun enters the nineteenth
degree of Aries, 319. Also called
the day of Sharaf-i-āftāb and Sha-
rafu-sh-Shams, which see.
Sharfuddīn. See under Sharafu-d-
Dīn.
Sharḥi-Waqāyah,—the name of a
book 45.
Sharīf of Āmul, an apostate from
Islām, 252, 253, 254, 295.
Sharīf Jurjānī, Mīr Sayyid,—a cele-
brated Doctor and saint of Islām,
86.
Sharīf Khān Atgah,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar and Governor of
Mālwah, 275, 293, 341. See also
the next.
Sharīf Muḥammad Khān Atgah, 249.
See aslo under Sharīf Khān Atgah.
Sharīf Sarmadī,—registrar of out-
posts, 345.
Sharīfs of Makkah, the, 295, 412.
Shaykh. See under Shaikh.
Sheba, Queen of, 12 n 8.
Shebhātīm, the sons of Jacob as the
heads-of-tribes of Israel, 262 n 3.
Shebheṭ, a Hebrew word signifying
‘a tribe,’ 262 n 3.
Sheopoor,—a town 120 miles S. W. of
Āgra, 29 n 5. See also under Sūpar.
Shēr Bēg Tawāchī,—one of the offi-
cers of the Court, 179, 260.
Shēr Khān, son of 'Adalī, of the
Afghān dynasty of Dihlī, 44.
Shēr Khān Fūlādī, the Afghān,—
sometime governor of Patan, in
Gujrāt, 144 and n 5, 151, 152, 168,
171, 339, 340 n 1.
Shēr Khān, son of I'timād Khān, the
governor of Gujrāt under Akbar,
338, 340 and n 1.
Shēr Khān, another name of Lashkar
Khān Bakhshī, 174. See under
Lashkar Khān Mīr Bakhshī.
Shēr Muḥammad Dīwānah,—the
adopted son of Bairām Khān, the
Khān Khānān, 34.
Shēr Shāh,—of the Afghān dynasty
of Dihlī, 10, 27, 193. See also
under Shīr Shāh,
Shēr-gaḍh,—or
Sher-Gaḍha, a dependency of Jahnī,
83, 159, 160.
Sher-gaṛh,—another name of Qan-
nouj, 96, 186. See under Qannouj.
Sherī. See under Mullā Shīrī, the
Hindū poet.
Shethpūr, 192 [see page vi].
Shī'ahs, the,—one of the two great
divisions of Muslims, the sect of
'Alī-ibn-Abī-Ṭālib, 36 n 2, 80 n 3,
81 n 2, 206 n 2, 212, 295, 313, 318,
337, 376.
Shiblī, a Muḥammadan Saint, 209.
Shihāb Khān,—one of the great
Amīrs of Akbar, 34, 52, 55, 91,
249, 384. See also under Shihābu-
d-dīn Aḥmad Khān, the governor
of Dihlī and Mālwah.
Shihāb Khān Turkomān—of the
parganna of Bhōjpūr, 95.
Shihābu-d-dīn Aḥmad Khān, Governor
of Dihlī and then of Mālwah and
one of the great Amīrs of Akbar,
30, 31, 33, 181, 251, 257, 308, 337,
338 and n 3, 340, 354, 358, 372.
See also under Shihāb Khān and
Shihābu-d-dīn Khān and also under
the next.
Shihābu-d-dīn Aḥmad Khān, a Sayyid
of Nīsāpūr, and relative of Māhum
Ankah, 49 and n 5, 105, 110, 178.
Same as the above.
Shihābu - d - dīn Guroh - pāhandah
Quzāq,—one of the imperial horse-
men, 236.
Shihābu-d-dīn Khān, 343, 386. Same
as Shihābu-d-dīn Aḥmad Khān and
Shihāb Khān, which see.
Shihābu-d-dīn Saharūrdī, Shaikh,—a
celebrated Doctor of Islām, 212.
Shī'itic Persia, 280.
Shikastah, 421.
Shikkdār,—signification of the term,
[301 and n 1.
Shīr Shāh,—of the Afghān dynasty
of Dihlī, 77, 79. See also under
Sher Shāh.
Shīrāz, town of,—in Persia, 295, 325,
370, 381, 387.
Shīrī. See under Mullā Shīrī, the
Hindū poet.
Shirwān, town of,—in the Persian
province of Āzarbījān, 248.
Shnjā'Khān Afghān, name of Suzāwal
Khān in the Ṭabaqāt-i-Akbarī, 29
n 3. See under Suzāwal Khān.
Shujā'at, another name of 'Isā Khān
Niyāzī, one of the great Amīrs of
the Afghāns, 181.
Shujā'at Khān, title of Muqīm Khān,
sister's son of Tardī Bēg Khān, 66.
See the next.
Shujā'at Khān,—one of the Amīrs
and Generals of Akbar, 38, 66, 78,
79, 146, 168, 292. See the above.
Shujāwal, name of Suzāwal Khān in
Blochmann, 29 n 3. See under
Suzāwal Khān.
Shukr, Qāzī of Mat'hura, and son of
Mīrzā Muflis, author of the Tafsīri
Ḥāfiz
, 191.
Shukr-talāo,—a great tank in the
city of Nāgor, 137 and n 1.
Shūkūn, son of Qarāchah Khān, one
of the Amīrs of Humāyūn, father
of Akbar, 57.
Shustar, town of,—in the Persian
province of Khūzistān, 418.
Siālkōṭ, town of, 358, 359. See also
under Sealcot.
Sīhnah, town of, 386.
Sīhwān, fort of,—in the district of
Tattah, 370.
Sijdah, a prostration to Akbar as
the head of religion, 266.
Sijistān, province of,—in Khurāsān,
316 n 1. See also under Sīstān.
Sikandar, Sulṭān,—the last of the
Afghān rulers of Dihlī, 2, 4, 7, 10,
11, 12, 96.
Sikandar, [Alexander the Great],
178 and n 2.
Sikandar Bēg, a relative of Ḥusain
Qūlī Khān. See under Iskandar
Bēg.
Sikandar Khān, father of 'Abd-ullāh
Khān, the chief of the Uzbeks in
Transoxiana, 365.
Sikandar Khān Uzbek. See under
Iskandar Khān the Uzbek, of the
great Amīrs of Akbar.
Sikandrah-rao, town of, 30.
Sīkrā, town of, 41. Perhaps we
should read Sīkrī, which see.
Sīkrī, town of,—residence of Shaikhu-
l-Islām Chishtī, 112, 139, 236, 237.
See also under Fatḥpūr-Sīkrī.
Sīkrī, hill of,—on the top of which
Akbar built the town of Fatḥpūr,
112.
Sildoz, name of a Chaghtāi clan, 43
n 1.
Sīmiyā, signification of the term, 334
n 4.
Sīmurgh,—a fabulous bird said to
dwell in the mountain of Qāf,
272 n 3.
Sind or Sindh, district of, 93, 138,
327, 386.
Sind, the, 90 and n 5. See also under
the Indus.
Sind-sāgar, Doāb of,—between the
Indus and the Jelum, in the Panjāb,
301, 304 and n 5.
Singh B'hatta, Rāī,—father-in-law of
Prince Salīm, eldest son of Akbar,
364.
Singh Darbārī. See under Rāī Singh
Darbārī, Amīr and General of
Akbar.
Singh-āsan Battīsi,—a collection of
tales about Rājah Bikramājīt of
Mālwah, 186.
Siprī, town of, 29 and n 4.
Sirhind, town and district of, 7, 34
n 3, 37, 92, 159, 190, 214, 274, 301,
322, 334, 393, 394, 403.
Sīrī, town of, 29 n 4
Sīstān, province of,—in Khurāsān,
31. Same as Sijistān, which also
see.
Sītā,—wife of Rām Chand [Rāmā],
Rājah of Oudh, 347.
Ṣiva,—god of the Hindūs, also called
Mahdeva, 204 n 2, 335 n 1.
Sivakanpūr, one of the dependencies
of Kālpī, 119.
Ṣivarātri, or night of Ṣiva, 335 n 1.
See the next.
Sivrāt, [Sanscrit Ṣivarātri, or night
of Ṣiva], a Hindū festival, 335 and
n 1.
Sīwahnah, town of, 294. See also
under Sīwānah.
Siwālik, Mountains of, 2, 10, 38 and
n 5, 85, 129, 298, 307, 377, 412.
Sīwānah, town of,—in Rājpūtānā, 189
and n 1. See also under Sīwahnah.
Siyāh, the,—the river Sai or Sye,
which falls into the Gūmtī near
Jounpūr, 82 and n 4.
Siyāh Yamīn,—one of the dancing-
girls of the Court, 356.
Sohail,—commandant of Gwālyār and
a ghulām of 'Adalī the Emperor of
India, 25 n 2.
Sohrāb, the son of Rustam, the fa-
mous hero of ancient Irān, 56 n,
303.
Sohrāb Bēg Turkmān,—one of the
officers of Akbar's army, 172.
Solomon of Scripture, 160, 199.
Spaniards, the, 307 n 1.
Sprenger's Catalogue of MSS. in
library of King of Oudh
, 30 n 1, 108
n 2, 112 n 1, 280 n 2.
Srīdhar Hindī Bengālī, 184 n 1. Sar-
hor Hindī Bengālī, q. v., as called
in the Ṭabaqāt-i-Akbarī.
Srīnagar,—the capital of Kashmīr,
365, 381 n 2.
Sthaneçwara,—the Sanskrit name of
the town of T'hānēsar, in the
neighbourhood of Dihlī, 94 n 4.
Subhān Qulī, one of the imperial
Amīrs. See under Turk Subḥān
Qulī.
Suflī, or base, a title of contempt
given to Aḥmad the Çūfī, 420 and
n 1.
Sulaimān Kararānī, Karānī or Kar-
zānī, the Afghān, Governor of Ben-
gal, 77 and n 1, 79 and n 2, 80, 159
n 1, 166, 176, 177, 184, 203.
Sulaimān Manklī, the Afghān,—
jāgīr-dār of the district of Ghorā-
g'hāt and one of the Amīrs of
Dāūd Karārānī, ruler of Bengāl,
194, 195.
Sulaimān Mīrzā. See under Mīrzā
Sulaimān, Governor of Badakh-
shān.
Sulaimān Sulṭān, the Emperor of
Turkey,—his attempt to conquer
Gujrāt, 149.
Sulṭān Abū Sa'īd Moghūl,—of the
House of Hulākū, 31, 60.
Sulṭān Ādam G'hakkar. See under
Ādam G'hakkar.
Sulṭān-i-'ādil, or just ruler,—his rank
higher than that of a Mujtahid,
279.
Sulṭān 'Alī,—a scribe from Hindūs-
[tān, 91.
Sulṭān 'Alī Wazīr Khān, Khwājah,—
one of the officers of Tardī Beg
Khān, commandant of Dihlī, 5, 7.
Sulṭān Bahādur,—a usurper of the
sovereignty of Bengāl, 18.
Sulṭān of Constantinople, the, 282.
Sulṭān Ḥājī of Thānesar,—translator
in part of the Mahābhārata into
Persian, 330.
Sulṭān Hoshang Ghōrī, King of
Mālwā, 65.
Sulṭān Ḥusain Jalāīr,—one of the
officers of Akbar's army, 39.
Sulṭān Ḥusain Mīrzā. See under
Ḥusain Mīrzā.
Sulṭān Khānum, eldest daughter of
Akbar and wife of Mīrzā Muzaffar
Ḥusain Maqçūr Jauharī (q. v.),
274 n 3.
Sulṭān Khusrau, son of the Prince
Sulṭān Sulīm, eldest son of Akbar,
368.
Sulṭān Khwājah, son of Khwājah
Khāwand Maḥmūd, or Dost,—one
of the Çadrs of the empire, 246,
249, 275, 277, 300, 351.
Sulṭān Maḥmūd, Governor of Bakkar.
See under Maḥmūd.
Sulṭān Maḥmūd of Gujrāt. See
under Maḥmūd of Gujrāt.
Sulṭān Muḥammad of Bakkar. See
under Muḥammad, Governor of
Bakkar. The correct name of this
Sulṭān is Maḥmūd (q. v.).
Sulṭān Muḥammad Mīrzā. See under
Muḥammad Sulṭān Mīrzā, son of
Wais Mīrzā.
Sulṭān Muḥammad, nephew of Pīr
Muḥammad Khān, 129. For Mu-
ḥammad read Maḥmūd. See page iv.
Sulṭān Murād, Prince, second son of
Akbar. See under Murād.
Sulṭān Salīm. See under Salīm, son
of Akbar.
Sulṭān Zainu-l-'ābidīn, King of
Kashmīr. See under Zainu-l-
'ābidīn.
Sultānpūr, town of,—at twenty-five
cosses from Lāhor, 39, 257, 304, 341,
403.
Sundar,—name of one of the ele-
phants of Akbar, from Sanscrit
Sundara, beautiful, 98 and n 1.
Sunnīs,—one of the two great divi-
sions of the Muslims, 318, 337.
Sūpar,—the town of Sheopoor, 120
miles S. W. of Āgra, 29 and n 5,
105.
Sūrat, province and town of, 145, 146,
147, 149, 150, 151, 152, 167, 177,
222, 249 n 3, 256, 339, 370, 371,
384, 399, 400 n 2, 401.
Suratha, the Rajah of, 145. It is the
same as Sūrat (q. v.).
Sūratu-l-baqarah, the,—the 2nd Sūrah
or chapter of the Qur'ān, 215 n 2.
Sūratu-l-ikhlāç, the,—the cxii chapter
of the Qur'ān, 23, 48 n 1, 407.
Sūratu-s-salwān, the,—meaning of the
expression, 48 n 1.
Surjan Hādā, Rāī,—a relation of
Rānā Udai Singh of Chīṭor, 25, 26
and n 2, 29, 111. See also under
Sarjan Rāī.
Surkhāb,—name of a place in the
province of Kābul, 302, 303.
Sutlej, the. See under the Satlaj.
Suzāwal Khān, father of Bāz Bahādur,
29 and n 3, 42 and n 4. Called
Shujā' Khān Afghān in the Ṭabaqāt-
i-Akbarī and Shujāwal by Bloch-
mann.
Swāt, in the country of the Afghān,
401. See also under Sawad and
Sawād-u-Bajor.
Sye, or Sai, the,—the river Siyāh,
which falls into the Gumtī near
Jounpūr, 82 n 4.
Syria, 189 n 2.