‘Alī Ismā‘īl, the Sipah Sālār,—one
of the Amīrs of Sulān Qubu-d-Dīn
Aibak, 88.
‘Alī, son of Iyal Arsalān, a relative of
Sulān Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn, 33 n 2.
‘Alī Karmākh, 69 n 1. See under
‘Alī Kirmāj.
‘Alī, of Kashmīr, Sulān, 381.
‘Alī Khān, a prince of the family of
Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 291.
‘Alī Khān, a relation of Muḥammad
Khān, the ruler of Nāgor, 423 n 11,
425.
‘Alī Khaaī, a court officer of Sulān
Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh, 304.
‘Alī, Khilāfat of, 577 n.
‘Alī Khishāwandī, a relative of Sulān
Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn, 33 n 2.
‘Alī Kirmāj, au Amīr of the Ghorī
dynasty, Governor of Multān, 66
and n 4, 69 and n 1.
‘Alī Kirmāny, 66 n 4. For ‘Alī
Kirmāj (q. v.).
‘Alī, son of Kizil Arsalān, father-in-
law of Sulān Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn,
33 n 2.
‘Alī Kurbat, a relative of Sulān
Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn, 33 n 2.
‘Alī Malik, Governor of Uchh, under
Sārang Khān, the ruler of Dīpālpūr,
353.
‘Alī Mardān, one of Muḥammad
Bakhtyār's Generals, seizes the
sovereignty of Lakhnautī under the
style of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn, 85, 86
and n 2, 88 n 1.
Āl-i-Marwān, the,—a branch of the
Umayyad family, 59.
‘Alī Masīj (Mīch), Amīr, a chief of
the tribes of Kūnch and Mīj, 83
and n 4. Called also ‘Alī Mīj.
‘Alī ibn Mas‘ūd ibn Maḥmūd Ghazna­wī, Sulān of Ghaznīn, 50 and n 1.
‘Alī Mīj, 83 n 4. See under ‘Alī
Masīj.
‘Alī Mubārak, Inspector of Troops
under Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq
Shāh, 308, 309. Assumes the title
of ‘Alāu-d-Dīn as Sulān of Lakh­nautī.
‘Alī Mughul, Shaikh, ruler of Kābul,
—contemporary of Sulān Mubārak
Shāh of Dihlī, 388, 389, 390, 391,
392.
Āl-i-Muḥammad Muṣaf, the Family
of the Prophet, 59.
‘Alī ibn Muḥammad Ṣāḥibu-z-Zanj,
of the family of ‘Alī, raises a revolt
at Baṣra, 458 n 3.
‘Alī, son of Mūs ar-Riẓā, one of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī‘ah, 573
n 3.
‘Alī Qulī, Ustā, the Artillerist of
Bābar, 439 and n 6.
‘Alī Qulī Khān Shaibānī, the Khān-i-
Zamān, son of Ḥaidar Sulān
Osbak-i-Shaibānī,—one of the Amīrs
of Humāyūn and Akbar, 592 and
n 9, 594, 597, 598, 599, 600.
‘Alī Qulī Khān Sīstānī,—one of the
Amīrs of Humāyūn, 590. Probably
the same as above.
‘Alī bin Rabī‘, an Amīr of the Ghaz­navide dynasty, 48, 50 and n 1.
‘Alī, ring of, possessed of magical
properties, 505 and n 6.
‘Alī Sarjāndār, Malik,—one of the
Amīrs of Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq
Shāh, 313.
‘Alī, Shaikh, one of the Amīrs of
Humāyūn, 565 n 1.
‘Alī, Shaikh, the ruler of Kābul. See
under ‘Alī Mughul.
‘Alī Sharanjī, Khwāja, Auḥadī's Life
of, 114 n 2.
‘Alī Sher, the Vazīr Amīr, disciple of
Maulānā Jāmī, 32 n 2.
‘Alī Sher, sister's son to afar Khan
‘Alā'ī,—an Amīr of the time of
Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh,
311.
‘Alī, Sulān, King of Kashmīr, con­temporary of Sulān Mubārak Shāh
of Dihlī, 381.
‘Alī Tagīn, ruler of Māwarā-an-Nahr,
—contemporary of Sulān Maḥmūd
Ghaznawī, 27.
Allahabad, city of, 415 n 5, 417 n 7,
486 n
6.
Allahabad, Sarkār of, 416 n 3.
Allāhdād Kālū or Kāla, Lodī, Malik,
—one of the Amīrs of Sulān
Mubārak Shāh of Dihlī, 391, 395
396, 398.
Allāhdād Lodī, Malik, 398. See
Allāhdād Kālū Lodī.
Almagest of Ptolemy, 76 n.
Almanṣūra in Sindh, 36 n 10. See
under al-Manṣūrah.
Alor, city of, 66 n 2.
Alp Arsalān, son of Dāūd, son of
Mīkā'īl, son of Saljūq, second
monarch of the Saljūqīyah dynasty,
35 and n 1. 51 and n 2.
Alp Khān, Governor of Dhār, 384
and n 5, 385, Governor of Kālpī,
393. Same as the next q. v.
Alp Khān, commonly called Sulān
Hoshang, ruler of Mālwā, 363 n 2,
384 and n 5, 385, 393.
Alp Khān, title of Sinjar, wife's
brother of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī,
247, 249, 254, 267, 282.
Alptagīn. See under Alptigīn.
Alptigīn, a slave of the house of the
Sāmānīs, the independent gover­nor of Ghaznī and Kābul, 13 n 1,
14 and n n 1 and 2, 16 n 3.
Alptigīn Ḥājib, an Amīr of the
Ghaznavide dynasty, 47 n 5.
Altamish or Iyaltimish, 88 n 3. See
under Shamsu-d-Dīn Iyaltimish.
Altamsh, meaning of the word, 89
n 1.
Altigīn, 47 and n 5. Same as Alpti­gīn Ḥājib (q. v.)
Altūn Bahādur,—one of the Amīrs of
the king of Khurāsān, 320.
Altūn Tāsh, an officer of Sulān Maḥ-
mūd of Ghaznīn, whom he appoints
Governor of Khwārazm, with the
title of Khwārazm Shāh, 23.
Altūnīyah, Malik. See under Ikhti­yāru-d-Dīn Altūnīyah.
Alwar, town and fortress, 129 n 2,
256, 385, 443, 462, 534, 542, 543,
547, 553. See also under Ulwar.
Alyās Khān, Governor of Chhāīn,
under Masnad-i-‘Ālī Khiẓr Khān,
Sulān of Dihlī, 379 and n 2.
‘Amād Khān Karrānī,—one of the
Afghān Amīrs of Hindustān, 540.
Amal or Amol, capital of Ṭabaristān,
36 and n 2.
Amānī Kābulī, Mīrzā, a poet of the
time of Humāyūn, 587 and n 3, 616.
Amarcōsh, a Sanskrit Dictionary,
374 n.
Amarkôṭ, town, 464 n 5, 564, 566 and
n 13, 567 n 1, 568 n 6.
Ambālā, town, 330 n 7, 334, 362 n 1,
Ambēr, town, 520.
Ambergris, notes on, 182 n 1.
[492, 493.
Ameer Jadeeda, 334 n 2.
‘Amīd Abū Naṣr, Maqāmāt of,—by
Baihaqī, 32 n.
‘Amīd Dailamī, the poet, 99 n 4,
138 n
1. Called also ‘Amīd Lūmakī,
q. v.
‘Amīd Lūmakī, of Gīlān, the poet,
—panegyrist of Sulān Muḥammad
Yamīn, 99 and n 4, 138 and n 1,
141, 144, 151, 159 n 1, 160, 165 and
n 1, 169, 172, 177, 182. Called
also ‘Amīd Dailamī.
‘Amīd Lūyakī, 99 n 4, for ‘Amīd
Lūmakī the poet, (q. v.).
‘Amīd Tūlakī, 99, for ‘Amīd Lūmakī,
the poet, (q. v.).
Amīn
, Chief Commissioner, 497.
Amīn b-‘Abdullah Kasharī, governor
of Khurāsān, under Hishām ibn
‘Abdu-l-Malik (q. v.), 13 n 1.
Amīn Khān, Governor of Bengal,
under Sulān Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Balban,
186.
Amīr of the Eight Squares, the
Wazīr at Chess, 103 and n 1.
Amīr Abū Ṭālib, of ‘Irāq, Saiyyid,
—a skilful physician of the reign
of Islem Shāh, 505.
Amīr ‘Alī Sher, the Vazīr, disciple of
Maulānā Jāmī, 32 n 2.
Amīr Arslān Kātibī. See Arslān
Kātibī.
Amīr Ḥasan. See Ḥasan of Dihlī,
the poet.
Amīr Khalifa, Prime Minister of
Bābar, 451.
Amīr Khān ibn-i-Dā'ūd Khān ibn-i-
Shams Khān Auḥadī, the Governor
of Baiānā, 385 n 1.