U.

Uchh, town of, 418 and n 1.
Udaipūr, district and town of,—in
Rājpūtānā, 106, 233 n 1. See also
the next and under Ūdīpūr.
Udaipūr Komalmair, district of, 105.
See also the above and under
Ūdīpūr.
Udai Singh, Rānā of Chīṭor. See
under Udī Singh and Rāī Udī
Singh.
Udaya,—the Hindi form of the name
Ūdī, 48 n 2.
Ūdī,—name of persons, the Hindi
Udaya, 48 n 2.
Ūdīpūr or Mēwār, a Rājpūt State, 45
n 8, 48, 249, 275 n 2. See also
under Udaipūr and Udaipūr Ko-
malmair.
Udī Singh, Rāī,—Rānā of Chīṭor, 26
n 2. See also under Rāī Udī Singh.
Ujain. See under Ujjain.
Ujayn. See under Ujjain.
Ujjain, district and town of, 43 and
n 3, 68, 105, 110, 153, 250, 391.
See the next.
Ujjayinī, i.e., “victorious,” the
name of Ujjain in Sanskrit, 43 n 3.
See the above.
Uljah, signification of the word, 47, n 1.
Ulugh Beg-i-Gurgān, Mīrzā,—a most
powerful king of the House of
Tīmūr, 276.
Ulugh Khān, the Abyssinian,—one of
the Amīrs of Gujrāt, 145, 292.
Ulugh Mīrzā, son of Muḥammad
Sulṭān Mīrzā,—one of the descen-
dants of the second son of the great
Taimūr, 87 n 1, 93, 105.
Ulur, Lake,—a lake between two
mountains in Kashmīr, called also
Zain lankā, 398 n 3.
'Umān, Sea of,—the sea between
India and Africa, 421 and n 3.
'Umar Shaikh Mīrzā, second son of
Tīmūr, 87 n 1.
Umm Kulsūm, daughter of 'Alī, son
of Abī Ṭālib, 328.
Ummaiya, sons of,—the Damascus
dynasty of Caliphs, 248.
Ummīd 'Alī,—one of the servants of
Mīrzā Sulaimān of Badakhshān
and administrator of the affairs of
Mīrzā Muḥammad Hakīm, son of
Humāyūn, 62.
Ūnḍchah, town of, 391 and n 4. Spelt
in our maps Oorcha.
'Urfī of Shīrāz, Mullā,—a celebrated
[poet, 387.
Uriah, of Scripture, 349.
Urumiyeh, Lake of,—in Persia, 243
[n 6.
Uymāqs, the,—a Turkish tribe, 355.
Uzbeks, the, 75, 83, 303, 355, 366, 367,
409, 416.

V.

Vādī, from the Sanscrit Vādya,—
meaning of the word, 315 n 1.
Vakīl or Prime-minister, office of,—
the first of the four officers of the
empire, 29, 34, 70 n 4.
Vazīr, office of,—the second of the
four officers of the empire, 70 n 4.
See alse the next two words.
Vazīr-i-kul, 290 n 2.
Vazīr-i-Mutlaq,—one of the High
Officers of the empire, 290 n 2.
Same as the Dīwān-i-kul, or Head
of the twelve Dīwāns of the
empire.
Vazīr Khān, brother of Āçaf Khān,
Khwājah 'Abdu-l-Majīd of Harāt,
78, 86, 94 and n 2. See also under
Wazīr Khān.
Vazīr Khān, title of Ismā'īl Qulī
Khān, son of Walī Bēg Zu-l-Qadr,
(q. v.), of the great Amīrs of
Akbar, 297, 298.
Vazīr Khān Jamīl Bēg,—one of the
Amīrs of Akbar, 290.
Vazīr Khān, title of Malik Sānī
Kābūlī, vazīr of Mīrzā Muḥammad
Ḥakīm, son of Humāyūn, ruler of
Kābul, 300.
Vedas, the, 215 n 1.
Venus,—one of the Sa'dain or two
beneficent planets, the other being
Jupiter, 87 n 1.
Vibhīshaṇa, brother of Rāvan, the
ruler of Lankā,—joins Rāmā
against his brother, 347 n 3.
Vikramā-ditya,—Sanscrit form of
the name Bikramājīt, (q. v.), 184
n 2.
Vīra-vara, or best warrior, 164 n 6.
See under Bīrbar Rājah.
Vrihaspatī Māna,—the common luni-
solar year of the Hindūs, 367 n 3.
Vüller's Lexicon Persico-Latinum, 196
n 4, 311 n 4, 398 n 5, 405 n 3, 423.

W.

Waḥdat 'Alī, brother of Jallālah the
Roshanāī, (q. v.), 401.
Wais Mīrzā, son of Mīrzā Bāiqrā,
son of Mīrzā Mançūr,—a descendant
of the second son of the great
Taimūr, 87 n 1.
Wajīhu-d-dīn, Shaikh,—a learned and
profound sage, 385.
Wajīhu-l-mulk,—one of the Amīrs of
Gujrāt, 145.
Wajrāīl, district of,—in the Sawālik
Mountains, 129.
Walī Bēg Atkah, 35. See under Shāh
Walī Bēg Atkah.
Walī Bēg the Turkomān,—one of the
officers of Bairām Khān, the Khān
Khānān, 4. See the next.
Walī Bēg Zu-l-Qadr,—one of the
partisans of Bairām Khān, the
Khān Khānān, 33, 35, 38. See the
above.
Walī Na'mat Bēgum,—or
Walī Ni'mat Bēgum, wife of Mīrzā
Sulaimān, ruler of Badakhshān, 61
and n 6, 89, 90, 217, 425.
Wāsi', or wide, 60 n 1. See under
'Abdu-l-Wāsi'.
Wazīr Khān, brother of Āçaf Khān,
Khwājah 'Abdu-l-Majīd of Harāt,
—one of the great Amīrs of Akbar,
86, 89 and n 2, 169, 170, 171, 173,
296. See also under Vazīr Khān
and the next.
Wazīr Khān, Governor of Gujrāt,
256. Same as the above.
Wazīrpūr Mandalgaṛh, town of, 105.
Called simply Mandalgaṛh or Mān-
dal Gaṛh, which also see.
William, the Conqueror,—his falling
down on landing in England, 40
n 1.
Wilson and Mill, History of British
India, 240 n 3.
Wilson's Glossary of Indian Terms,
371 n 2.

Y.

Yadgār Kal, nephew of Mīrzā Yūsuf
Khān Razwī, governor of Kashmīr,
—makes himself Sulṭān of Kashmīr
for a short while, 394, 395, 396.
Yaḥā [Yaḥyā], Khwājah, son of the
celebrated saint the Khwājah Aḥrār,
57.
Yaḥyāpūr,—a place in the environs
of Jounpūr where the waters of the
Ganges and the Gowadī meet, 179.
Yak, [Bos Grunnions], the Khiṭā-ī
bull, 377.
Yakaspah,—one of the divisions of
the Aḥadī troopers, 194 and n 2.
Yaklāna, used incorrectly for the
district of Baglāna, 151 n 1.
Ya'qūb Çirfī or Çarfī of Kashmīr,
Shaikh,—a great writer and autho-
rity on religious matters, 127, 139,
266, 407, 417. Çarfī is his takhal-
luç
or poetical name.
Ya'qūb of Kashmīr, Mīr,—Wakīl of
Ḥusain Khān, governor of Kash-
mīr, 128.
Ya'qūb, Qāzī,—an inhabitant of
Dihlī and son-in-law of Qāzī
Fazīlat Shershāhī,—for ten years
Qāzī of the realm and then district
Qāzī of Gaur, 104, 212, 213, 285.
Ya'qūb, son of Yūsuf Khān Kashmīrī,
Governor of Kashmīr before its
conquest by Akbar, 365, 380.
Yār,—title of Yār Muḥammad, son
of Çādiq Khān, 391.
Yār Muḥammad, alteration of such
names in the reign of Akbar, 324.
Yār Muḥammad, son of Çādiq Khān,
—one of the attendants of Prince
Sulṭān Murād, the second son of
Akbar, 391.
Yā Sīn,—title of the 36th chapter
of the Qur'ān, considered and often
used as a name of Muḥammad, 35
and n 4.
Yathrab [Yathrib],—old name of
Madīnatu-n-Nabī, i.e., Medina, in
Ḥijāz, 324.
Yazd, town of,—in Persia, 214, 230,
[267.
Yazīdī,—nickname of Mullā Muḥam-
mad of Yazd, (q. v.), 214.
Yemen, country of, [Arabia felix],
[32 n 1.
Yule, Colonel,—his edition of Marco
Polo, 405 n 2.
Yūsuf, the Patriarch, 132.
Yūsuf Khān, Kashmīrī, Governor of
Kashmīr before its conquest by
Akbar, 363, 364, 365.
Yūsuf Khān Mashhadī, Mīrzā, 96 and
n 1. See under the next.
Yūsuf Khān Mīrzā, son of Mīr Aḥmad-
i-Razawī,—one of the great Amīrs
of Akbar and Governor of Kashmīr
after its conquest from Yūsuf Khān
Kashmīrī, 96 and n 1, 165, 178,
185, 376, 380, 394, 395, 396, 398.
His name has also appeared as Mīrzā
Yūsuf Khān Mashhadī and Mīrzā
Yūsuf Khān Razawī.
Yūsuf Khān Razawī of Mashhad,
Mīrzā, 376, 394. See under the
above name.
Yūsuf Muḥammad Khān, son of
Shamsu-d-dīn Atkah Khān,—one
of the Amīrs of Akbar, 34, 77.
Yūsuf Zāī,—chief of the Yūsufzāī
Afghāns, 376.
Yūsufzāī Afghāns, the,—the Afghāns
of Sawad and Bijor, 383. See also
the next.
Yūsufzāīs, the,—an Afghān tribe,
369. See also the above.