Ibnu'l-Athír (Arab historian, xiii), 6,
12, 88, 144 n.
Ibráhím. Shaykh Ṣadru'd-Dín —
al-Ḥamawí (xiii), 40; Shaykh Ibrá-
hím al-Juwayní (xiii), 40 n.;
Khwája — b. Rashídu'd-Dín Faḍ-
lu'lláh (xiv), 52, 71, 83, 84, 86;
Mírzá — Sulṭán b. Sháh-rukh
(xv), 364, 387, 500; — b. 'Alá'u'd-
Dawla b. Báysunqur (xv), 388;
Sulṭán — Lódí of Dihlí (xvi), 393;
— (brother of Sháh Isma'íl-i-Ṣa-
fawí, A.D. 1500), 416; Amír
Shaykh — of Shírwán (xv), 488
Iconium, 63, 127. See also Qonya
Ídájí, Sulṭán — (put to death, A.D.
1291), 33
Idol-temples destroyed in Persia by
Gházán (A.D. 1295), 40
'Ídu'l-Fiṭr, 349 and n.
Iftikhárí, clan or family of Qazwín, 93
Iftikháru'd-Dín, Malik Ṣa'íd — Mu-
ḥammad b. Abú Naṣr (xiii), 93, 115
Íj (place in Fárs), 356, 357
Ikhtiyáru'd-Dín, castle of —, 366
Íldaci or Ildonchi, Thomas — (Mon-
gol envoy to Edward II in A.D.
1307), 11 and n., 49
Íl-Kháns. This title is properly ap-
plied to the Mongol successors
of Húlágú Khán, whose history
is contained in ch. i (1-61), but it
is also sometimes applied to the
dynasty founded by Shaykh Ḥa-
san-i-Buzurg, more correctly
called Jalá'ir or Ílkání (170-3).
The references to the former are:
15, 17, 18, 20, 27, 44, 45, 49, 50,
58, 71, 74, 83, 87, 92, 172, 205;
to the latter: 160, 161, 170-3,
208, 260, 261, 262, 401. On the
forms Il-Khání and Ílkání see
especially 171; but it is to be
noted that in the received text of
Ḥáfiẓ (ed. Rosenzweig-Schwan-
nau, vol. iii, p. 8) the former title is
applied to the grandson of Shaykh
Ḥasan-i-Buzurg
Ilminsky (editor of the Bábur-náma),
391
'Imádu'd-Dín. — Faqíh (“the Juris-
consult,” poet of Kirmán, xiv),
159, 209, 211, 258-9, 280, 281, 325,
348, 350, 352; — Nasímí (Nesímí,
the Turkish Ḥurúfí poet, xiv-xv),
368. See Nasímí
Imáms, the Twelve — (vii-ix), 91.
See also under 'Alí, Ḥasan,
Ḥusayn, etc.
Imám-qulí Khán, 318
'Imárat-i-Túqchí (Iṣfahán), 368
Ínál (old Turkish name), 120, 121 and
n.
-Inbá (of Ibnu'l-Ḥajar, xiv-xv), 367
India, Indians, 3, 44, 64, 73, 74, 83,
85, 89, 101, 106, 107, 108, 111,
125, 127, 128, 174, 181, 182, 183,
184, 193, 194, 272, 284, 302, 318,
357, 380, 383 n., 393, 397, 398,
419, 420, 423, 429, 433, 442, 461,
466, 468, 498, 504, 335, 536, 540
Indian hemp (Bang, Ḥashísh), 150
and n., 151 and n.
Indian Mutiny, 183 n., 380, 391, 420
Indus, 4, 175, 193, 194, 393
Injú, Shaykh Abú Isḥáq — (xiv), 163,
164-5, 166, 225, 226, 230, 231,
233 n., 235, 237, 274, 275, 290,
357
“Institutes” (Tuzúkát) of Tímúr, 183,
202, 361 n.
Iouldouchi, Thomas —, 11, 49. See
above s.v. Ildaci
Iram, 525
Iranchin (Mongol officer, xiv), 52, 53
'Iráq, 20, 21, 160, 168, 173, 191, 204,
225, 317, 325, 364, 368, 385, 387,
389, 397, 398, 402, 409, 410, 418,
464, 466, 468
'Iráqí, Fakhru'd-Dín — (poet), 63,
124-39, 174, 321, 344, 350, 445,
446, 512
Ireland, Irish, 44, 102, 107
Írín (place near Ray), 265
'Ísá. Sulṭán — (governor of Márdín,
xiv), 192; — brother of the Otto-
man Sulṭán Muḥammad I, 401.
See also Jesus
Isen-búqá (Mongol officer, xiv), 52
Iṣfahán, 15, 22, 37, 81, 82, 119, 141,
160, 161, 165, 168, 169, 181, 188,
190, 208, 274, 331, 344, 360, 364,
368, 384, 389, 402, 410, 416, 489
Isfandiyárí dynasty, 401
Isfará'in, 186, 497, 503
Isfizár, 175, 176
Isḥáq Efendi (author of the Káshifu'l-
Asrár, xix), 371, 450
Abú Isḥáq. — b. Sulṭán Uways b.
Sháh Shujá' Muẓaffarí (slain by
Tímúr, A.D. 1393), 169; Shaykh
— Injú (xiv); see above s.v. Injú;
— Aḥmad b. Yá-Sín (historian of
Herát), 174, 431; — of Shíráz
(gastronomic poet, xiv); see above
s.v. Busḥáq; — Ibráhím (saint
of Kázarún), 226
'Ishq-náma (Persian Ḥurúfí book by
Firishta-záda, q.v.), 371, 450, 451
Iskandar. — b. 'Umar Shaykh Mírzá
(Tímúrid, xv), 344, 345, 366; —
b. Qára Yúsuf Aq-qoyúnlú (xv),
382, 400, 401, 402, 404, 489. See
also Alexander the Great
Iskandar-náma (Ḥurúfí poem), 449
Islám, 4, 8, 11, 17, 31, 32, 40, 43, 44,
46, 48, 49, 73, 78, 93
Isma'íl, Sháh — Ṣafawí (A.D. 1500),
315, 316, 379, 380, 381, 400, 407,
414, 415, 416, 417-19, 434, 458,
459, 507
Isma'íl 'Alí (Indian copyist, xix), 154
Isma'ílí sect, 53, 73, 74, 154. See also
Assassins
'Iṣmat of Bukhárá (poet, xv), 352,
353, 501
Iṣṭahbánát (in Fárs), 331
Iṣṭakhr (in Fárs), 414, 416
Istiwá-náma (Persian Ḥurúfí poem),
373, 450
Istiẓháru'l-Akhbár (one of the sources
of the Ta'ríkh-i-Guzída), 89
Italy, Italians, 381, 395, 399, 405,
414. See also Venetians
Iyás b. Mu'áwiya, 255
Izníq, 369
'Izzat Malik (wife of Shaykh Ḥasan-
i-Kúchak, xiv), 60
'Izzu'd-Dín. — Muẓaffar (minister
responsible for introducing paper
money into Persia, A.D. 1294), 38;
— 'Umar-i-Marghiní (minister,
xii-xiii and ancestor of Kurt dy-
nasty), 174, 175; Malik — (ruler
of Luristán, xiv), 187, 192, 368;
— Shír (xv), 401
Jacob, 413, 414, 415. See Ya'qúb
Ja'far. — b. Abí Ṭálib-Ṭayyár (vii),
144 and n.; — Ṣádiq (Imám, viii),
440; — of Tabríz (calligraphist,
xv), 395, 499
Jahángír. — b. Tímúr (xiv), 381;
— (Mogul Emperor of Dihlí, xvii),
273, 319, 391; — b. 'Alí Beg b.
Qára 'Osmán ('Uthmán) Áq-qoy-
únlú (xv), 404, 407, 408
Jahán-gushá, Ta'ríkh-i- — (by 'Alá-
'u'd-Dín 'Aṭá Malik-i-Juwayní,
xiii); see under Ta'ríkh
Jahán Khátún (satirized by 'Ubayd-i-
Zákání, xiv), 233 n.
Jahán-náma (one of the sources of the
Nuzhatu'l-Qulúb), 99
Jahánsháh b. Qára Yúsuf Qára-
qoyúnlú (xv), 387-9, 400-3, 406,
408-10, 412
Jalá'ir family and dynasty, 54, 59, 60,
160, 161, 166, 170-3, 187, 191,
260, 284, 320, 399. See also Íl-
khání (Ílkání)
Jalál. — i-'Adudí (poet, xiv), 159,
344, 350, 352; Khwája — [or
Jalálu'd-Dín] b. Rashídu'd-Dín
Faḍlu'lláh (xiv), 82, 84; — -i-
Khwárí (poet), 65; — i-Ṭabíb
(poet), 65, 159, 344, 350, 352
Jalálu'd-Dín. — Mankobirní Khwá-
razmsháh (xiii), 12, 66; — Sim-
nání (minister to Arghún, put to
death in A.D. 1289), 31; — Kay-
Qubád b. 'Alá'u'd-Dín Kay-Qubád
Seljúq of Rúm (xiii), 83; Khwája —
b. Rashídu'd-Dín Faḍlu'lláh (xiv),
82, 84; Mawláná — Rúmí (author
of the Mathnawí, q.v.), 105, 106,
111, 139, 140, 155, 217, 302, 344,
350, 445, 479, 484, 514, 548; —
Manṣúr-i-Muẓaffarí, 163 (see also
infra, s.v. Manṣúr); Mawláná —
b. Ḥusám of Herát (contemporary
of 'Ubayd-i-Zákání), 257; Khwája
— (patron of Ḥáfiẓ), 292; —
Dawání (philosopher, xv), 389,
398, 423, 442-4; Mawláná —
Isḥáq of Samarqand (xiv-xv), 428
Jám (town in Khurásán), 175, 435,
473, 507
Jám-i-Jam (poem by Awḥadí of Mará-
gha, xiv), 141
Jámí, Mullá Núru'd-Dín 'Abdu'r-
Raḥmán (poet, xv), 124, 125, 132,
133 n., 139 n., 140, 141 n., 258,
261, 273, 283, 320, 321 n., 331,
347 n., 395, 398, 399 n., 422-3,
426 n., 434, 435-6; 437, 440,
445-8, 457, 459, 461 n., 463, 475,
486, 496, 497, 503, 505, 506, 507-
548
Jamálu'd-Dín. Shaykh — (xiii),
35, 36 and n.; — Dastajirdáni
(minister of Baydú, A.D. 1295),
39, 41; — Sháfi'í doctor of Bagh-
dád (xiv), 70; — Abu'l-Qásim of
Káshán (historian cited in Ta'ríkh-
i-Guzída), 88; — Muḥammad b.
Ḥusám (poet, xiv), 177; — (poet
parodied by Maḥmúd Qárí of
Yazd), 352
Jámi'-i-Mufídí (monograph on the
town of Yazd), 360, 362, 464
Jámi'u't-Taṣáníf-i-Rashídí (xiv), 77
and n.
Jámi'u't-Tawáríkh (by Rashídu'd-
Dín Faḍlu'lláh, author of the pre-
ceding work), 12, 17, 44 n., 49,
67, 68, 72-5, 89
Jamshíd. — or Jam (the Yima of
the Avesta, a legendary Persian
demi-god or king), 151, 290, 317;
— Mawláná, Ghiyáthu'd-Dín —
(astronomer, xv), 386, 502; —
(unidentified), 494
Jamshíd u Khurshíd (by Salmán-i-
Sáwají, xiv), 261
Jání Beg Khán (of the Golden Horde,
xiv), 354
Jarbádhaqání, Abú Sharaf — (trans-
lator of al-'Utbí's Kitábu'l-Ya-
míní), 88 and n.
Jarún, 397
Java, 398
Jawáhiru'l-Asrár (of Ádharí), 259;
— of Kamálu'd-Dín Ḥusayn b.
Ḥasan of Khwárazm (commentary
on the Mathnawí), 444-5
Jawáhiru't-Tafsír (larger commen-
tary on the Qur'án by Ḥusayn
Wá'iẓ-i-Káshifí, xv), 442
Jawharí, Ṣadru'd-Dín Muḥammad —
(parodied by Busḥáq and Maḥmúd
Qárí), 350, 352
Jáwidán-i-Kabír (by Faḍlu'lláh al-
Ḥurúfí), 367-9, 449 (where Jáwí-
dán-náma is a mistake for the
above title), 450-2
Jaxartes (river), called by the Arabs
Síhún, 202
-Jazíra (Mesopotamia, q.v.), 368
Jedda, 398
Jerusalem, 99, 357
Jesus Christ ('Ísa'l-Masíḥ), 298
Jews, 17, 31-6, 39-40, 47, 49, 69, 71,
73, 74, 89, 101, 194, 251, 372;
Society for the propagation of
Christianity amongst the —, 346
“Jex” (Italian corruption of Yazd,
q.v.), 389
Jibba (place), 81
Jinn, 317 n.
Johan-Yokhnan-Úng (origin of “Pres-
ter John”), 11 n.
John XXII, Pope — (A.D. 1322), 54
Jones, Sir William —, 303, 304
Joseph, 263. See Yúsuf
Juḥá (a celebrated wit or jester), 254,
255
Junayd, Shaykh — (Ṣafawí, grand-
father of Sháh Isma'íl), 414
Jurján (province of Persia), 355, 390.
See Astarábád, Gurgán
-Jurjání, -Sayyidu'sh-Sharíf (xv), 159,
276 n., 353, 355, 370
Júshkab (Mongol noble executed), 33
Juwayní (family), 20-24; 'Alá'u'd-
Dín 'Aṭá Malik-i- — (author of
the Ta'ríkh-i-Jahángushá, q.v.),
10, 11 n., 12, 17