B.

Bābā Isḥāq Maghribī, a Shaikh of
Nāgor, 357 n 3.
Bābā Qashaqa.—or
Bābā Qushqah, one of the Amīrs of
Bābar, 441, 581
Baban, the Afghān, of the Amīrs of
Bābar, 439.
Baban, of the Amīrs of Sulān Maḥ­mūd, son of Sulān Sikandar Lodī,
471 and nn 4 and 6, 472.
Bābar, 9 n 2, 63 n, 128 n 3, 421 n 8,
436, 437, 438 and nn 3 and 5,
439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445,
447, 468, 469, 534, 570, 596, 605
n 1, 609 and n 5, 610.
Bābar, Erskine's Memoirs of, 421 n 8,
437 n 7, 439 nn
4, 6 and 7, 440 n,
448 n 4, 570 nn
5 and 6.
Bābarī script, or the Kha-i-Bābarī,
invented by Bābar, 450.
Bābar-nāmah, the,—the Memoirs of
Bābar, 325 n 3.
Bāber. See under Bābar.
Bābernāmah. See under Bābar-nāmah.
Bābtigīn, for Bārtagīn, the Ḥājib
Buzurg of Sulān Maudūd Ghazna­wī, 48 n 4.
Bābū Khān, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Sikandar Lodī, 419.
Babūl, the Acacia Arabica, 335 n 10,
550 n
1.
Babūlī, a place, 335 and n 10.
Babylon, 169 n 1.
Bachgotīs, a tribe of Rājpūts, 414
and n 13.
Badagh Khān, of the Amīrs of Shāh
Ṭahmāsp, King of Persia, 456.
Badakhshān, 27 n 2, 443, 448, 576,
580, 581, 582, 585, 605, 608 and n 5.
Bādalgarh, fortress of, in Gwāliar,
432 and n 7.
Bādalgarh,—or
Badal Gaṛh, original name of the
citadel of Āgra, 432 n 7, 551 and
n 7.
Badāon, district and town of, 71 and
n 2, 88, 89, 90, 97, 99 and n 2,
119, 123, 124, 130, 131, 185, 231,
233, 234, 236, 244, 251, 260, 266
n
1, 297, 305, 335, 375, 377, 379,
380, 386 and n 4, 396 and n 2, 398,
399, 401, 402 and n 1, 405, 409,
413 and n 13, 427, 535, 545, 546,
557, 558, 597, 598, 600. Written
also Badāūn, Budāon and Budāūn.
Badāonī, ‘Abdu-l-Qādir bin Mulūk
Shāh, author of the Muntakhabu-t-
Tawārīkh
, 1 and n 1, 8 and n 2,
9 n 2, 11 n 1, 31 n, 54 n 2, 62 n 4,
65 n 2, 84 n, 90 n 2, 133 n, 176 n 2,
300 n 3, 304 n 1, 306 n 1, 320 n 5,
326 n, 328 n 6, 330 n 6, 332, 334
n 2, 349 n 12, 356 n 3, 357 n 4, 358
n 3, 363 n, 366 n 4, 368 n 1, 388 n 2,
400 n, 402 n 1, 404 n 2, 414 nn
1
and 6, 466 n 7, 473, 497, 508 n 3,
511 n 2, 543 n 4, 545, 557 n 2, 579,
584 n 3, 592 n 9, 609 n
3, 610.
Badāūn. See under Badāon.
Badāūnī. See under Badāonī.
Badger's Imāms and Saiyyids of
Omān, 157 n
2.
Bādghīs, town of, 71.
Badr, battle of,—the principal of the
Prophet's military exploits, 74 n 2,
216 n
.
Badr Shā‘ir Shāshī, a poet of the
time of Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq
Shāh, 296 and n 6, 321 and n 6.
Known also as Badru-d-Dīn Chāchī,
of Turkestān.
Badra-i-Sakūn, a place, 283 and n 5.
Badru-d-Dīn Chāchī, the poet, 296
n 6. See under Badr Shā‘ir Shāshī.
Badru-d-Dīn of Hānsī, Shaikh, con­temporary of Sulān Fīroz Shāh,
322 and n 5, 323.
Badru-d-Dīn Sankar, or Sangar,
Rūmī, Amīr Ḥājib, of the Sham­sīyah Maliks, 121 n 7, 123.
Badru-d-Dīn afar Khān, one of
the Maliks of Sulān ‘Alān-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 247 and n 2.
Badshāpūr, town, 129 n 2.
Badward, a name of the town of
Bāward or Abīward in Khurāsān,
30 n.
gh-i-Jūd, the, 396 and n 3.
gh-i-Sabz, on the banks of the
Lāhor river, 188 and n 3, 190 n 1.
gh-i-Sard, 188 n 3. For the Bāgh-i-
Sabz (q. v.).
gh-i-Sarīr, 188 n 3. For the Bāgh-i-
Sabz (q. v.).
Baghdād, 12 n 2 (read Damascus),
17, 32 n 1, 57, 59 n 1, 88 n 3, 94
n 2, 205 n
1, 286, 311 and n 4, 322,
394 and n 5, 397, 432 n 10, 571
n
2.
Baghdād gate, at Dihlī, 432 n 10.
Bagore, town, 379 n 1.
Bagrām, old name of Peshāwar, 66
n 6.
Bahā, Qāẓī, one of the boon-com­panions of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 252, 253 and n 2.
Badādur Gurshasp, Malik, of the
Amīrs of Sulān Muḥammad Tugh­laq Shāh, 304 and n 1.
Bahādur, Sulān, ruler of Gujrāt,—
contemporary of Humāyūn, 452,
453, 454 and n 4, 455, 456, 458,
635.
Bahādur Khān, a prince of the family
of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 291.
Bahādur Khān, son of Daryā Khān
Lūhānī, of the Amīrs of Sulān
Ibrāhīm Lodī,—takes possession of
Bihār, assuming the title of Sulān
Muḥammad, 435. Elsewhere he is
called Bihār Khān (q. v.).
Bahādur Khān, Governor of Narnūl
under Sulan Maḥmūd, grandson
of Sulān Fīroz Shāh, 365 n 7.
Bahādur Khān Sīstānī (Shaibānī?),
Governor of Qandahār,—one of the
Amīrs of Humāyūn, 590, 591, 594.
Bahādur Shāh, otherwise known as
Tūda (? Nūda), independent Gover­nor of Sunār Gānw,—contemporary
of Sulān Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Tughlaq
Shāh, 299, 300.
Bahādur, Sulān Muḥammad, son of
Muḥammad Khān Gauria,—con­temporary of ‘Adlī, 556 and n 3.
Bahādur Nāhir, Khān Zāda of Mīwāt,
343, 344 and n 7, 345, 347, 351
and n 6, 354, 358 and n 4, 366 n,
375. Founder of the Khān Zāda
race, the rulers of Mīwāt.
Bahankar, fortress of, 80 and nn 4
and 5.
Bahāpūr, town, 227 and n 7, 229.
Bahār Khān, A‘am Humāyūn Sir­wānī, 521. See under Bihār Khān.
Bahārī, town, 232.
Bahāristān, one of the works of
Maulānī Jāmī, 32 n 2.
Bahārpūr, town, 227 n 7.
Bahāu-d-Dīn, one of the Amīrs of
Islem Shāh Sūr, 530.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Gurshasp, Malik, Gover­nor of Sāgur, under Sulān Muḥam­mad Tughlaq Shāh, 304 n 1.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Jangī, Malik, of the
Amīrs of Muḥammad Shāh Fīroz
Shāhī, 344.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Muḥammad Ūshī Far­ghānī, 78 n 2. See Bahāu-d-Dīn
Ūshī.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Naqshbandī of Bukhārā,
Khwājā, a renowned saint, the
founder of the Naqshbandī School,
588 n 4.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Sām Ghūrī, Malik, 77
n 1. Probably Malik ‘Alāu-d-Dīn
Muḥammad is meant.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Tughral, Malik, one of
the generals and slaves of Sulān
Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn Sām Ghūrī, 80, 81.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Ūshī, a famous preacher
and learned divine of the time of
Sulān Qubu-d-Dīn Aibak, 78 and
n 2.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Zakariyāī the Multānī,
Ghauu-l-‘Ālam Ḥaẓrat Shaikh, a
famous Muḥammadan Saint, 133
and n and n 2, 248 n 2.
Bahdā, a village of the dependencies
of Khurāsān, 588 and n 5. Called
also Bahdāyan.
Bahdāyan, village of, 588 n 5. See
the above.
Al-Baḥḥā, or the controversialist, a
name of Shaikh Niāmu-d-Dīn
Auliyā of Budāon (q. v.), 71 n 2.
Bahīra, town, 465.
Bahjat Khān, governor of Chanderī
under Sulān Maḥmūd of Mālwa,
transfers Chanderī to Sulān
Sikandar Lodī, 424 and n 4.
Bahlol, Sulān, 377 n 4. See under
Sulān Buhlūl Lodī.
Bahman, an ancient King of Irān,
35 n 2.