‘Alī Ismā‘īl, the Sipah Sālār,—one
of the Amīrs of Sulān Qubu-d-Dīn
Aibak, 88.
‘Alī, son of Iyal Arsalān, a relative of
Sulān Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn, 33 n 2.
‘Alī Karmākh, 69 n 1. See under
‘Alī Kirmāj.
‘Alī, of Kashmīr, Sulān, 381.
‘Alī Khān, a prince of the family of
Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 291.
‘Alī Khān, a relation of Muḥammad
Khān, the ruler of Nāgor, 423 n 11,
425.
‘Alī Khaaī, a court officer of Sulān
Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh, 304.
‘Alī, Khilāfat of, 577 n.
‘Alī Khishāwandī, a relative of Sulān
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 Sulān Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn,
33 n 2.
‘Alī Kurbat, a relative of Sulān
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 Sulān ‘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, Sulān of Ghaznīn, 50 and n 1.
‘Alī Mīj, 83 n 4. See under ‘Alī
Masīj.
‘Alī Mubārak, Inspector of Troops
under Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq
Shāh, 308, 309. Assumes the title
of ‘Alāu-d-Dīn as Sulān of Lakhnautī.
‘Alī Mughul, Shaikh, ruler of Kābul,
—contemporary of Sulān Mubārak
Shāh of Dihlī, 388, 389, 390, 391,
392.
Āl-i-Muḥammad Muṣaf, 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 Sulān
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 Sulān 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 Sharanjī, 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
Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh,
311.
‘Alī, Sulān, King of Kashmīr, contemporary of Sulān Mubārak Shāh
of Dihlī, 381.
‘Alī Tagīn, ruler of Māwarā-an-Nahr,
—contemporary of Sulān 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 Sulān
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 Sulān
Hoshang, ruler of Mālwā, 363 n 2,
384 and n 5, 385, 393.
Alp Khān, title of Sinjar, wife's
brother of Sulān ‘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 Sulān 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,
Sulān 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 Sulān 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 Sulān Ghiyāu-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.