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 Sulān Maḥmūd, son of Sulān 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 Sulān Maudūd Ghaznawī, 48 n 4.
Bābū Khān, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān 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 Sulān 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 Sulān 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 Sulān ‘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.
Bāgh-i-Jūd, the, 396 and n 3.
Bāgh-i-Sabz, on the banks of the
Lāhor river, 188 and n 3, 190 n 1.
Bāgh-i-Sard, 188 n 3. For the Bāgh-i-
Sabz (q. v.).
Bāgh-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 Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 252, 253 and n 2.
Badādur Gurshasp, Malik, of the
Amīrs of Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh, 304 and n 1.
Bahādur, Sulān, ruler of Gujrāt,—
contemporary of Humāyūn, 452,
453, 454 and n 4, 455, 456, 458,
635.
Bahādur Khān, a prince of the family
of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 291.
Bahādur Khān, son of Daryā Khān
Lūhānī, of the Amīrs of Sulān
Ibrāhīm Lodī,—takes possession of
Bihār, assuming the title of Sulān
Muḥammad, 435. Elsewhere he is
called Bihār Khān (q. v.).
Bahādur Khān, Governor of Narnūl
under Sulan Maḥmūd, grandson
of Sulān 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 Sulān Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Tughlaq
Shāh, 299, 300.
Bahādur, Sulān 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 Sulān 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 Sulān
Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn Sām Ghūrī, 80, 81.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Ūshī, a famous preacher
and learned divine of the time of
Sulān Qubu-d-Dīn Aibak, 78 and
n 2.
Bahāu-d-Dīn Zakariyāī the Multānī,
Ghauu-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 Niāmu-d-Dīn
Auliyā of Budāon (q. v.), 71 n 2.
Bahīra, town, 465.
Bahjat Khān, governor of Chanderī
under Sulān Maḥmūd of Mālwa,
transfers Chanderī to Sulān
Sikandar Lodī, 424 and n 4.
Bahlol, Sulān, 377 n 4. See under
Sulān Buhlūl Lodī.
Bahman, an ancient King of Irān,
35 n 2.