Cairo, 210. See also under the Dāru-l-
Khilāfat of Egypt.
Cakra, the, 22 n 1. See also the
Chakra.
Cakra svāmin, or owner of the Cakra,
name of the idol of Taneshar, 22
n 1. See also Chakra-svāmin.
Calcutta edition of the Kashshāf of
az-Zamakhsharī, 28 n 1.
Calcutta text of the Muntakhabu-t-
Tawārīkh of Badāonī, 132 n 2, 187
n 1, 368 n 1.
Calcutta edition of the Nafaḥātu-l-
Uns of Maulānā Jāmī, 609 n 5.
Calcutta edition of the Shāh Nāma,
88 n 2.
Calcutta text of Shams-i-Sirāj ‘Afīf,
[329 n 3.
Calcutta edition of the Ṭabaqāt-i-
Nāṣirī, 65 n 1, 84 n, 126 n 3, 131
n 4, 134 n 1.
Calcutta text of Ẓiāu-d-Dīn Barnī,
306 n 1, 307 n 3, 310 n 1, 311 n 5.
Calendar of Julius Cæsar, 76 n.
Camâl eddīn, Kâdhi, one of the Qāẓīs
of Sulān Nāṣiru-d-Dīn Maḥmūd
Shāh of Dihlī, 128 n.
Cambay, in Gujerat, 256 n 4, 311 n 3,
454 n 6. See also under Kuhanbāyāt, Khambhāt and Khambāt.
Cambāhat, the Cambay of Europeans,
a port of Gujerat, 256 n 4. See
under Cambay.
Canda, a place near Somnāth, 28 n 4,
[29 n.
Cannia coubadj, name of Qanauj in
ancient monuments, 23 n 2.
Carmate. See under Karmat or
Qarma, founder of the Karmatian
sect of heretics.
Carnal, town of, 21 n 4.
Carolī, town, 420 n 5.
Cathay, the country of Khaā, 143
n 4, 232 n 5.
Caussin de Perceval, Essai sur
l'Histoire de Arabes, 12 n 1, 46 n 5.
Cavalum, the town of Kūlam, 265 n 5.
Cave, Chapter of the,—the Sūratu-l-
Kahf, in al-Qur'ān, 279 n.
Cawnpore, 408 n 5.
Celestial Empire, the, 147 n 1.
Central Asia, 362 n 2.
Central India, 298 n 7, 364 nn 2 and
3, 385 n 3.
Central Provinces, the, 433 n 4, 517
n 9.
Chāch, a town in Turkestān, 296 n 6.
See also Shāsh.
Chach Nāma, the,—a History of India
in verse, 11 n 3.
Chādar, a garment worn by the
women of India, 503 and n 1.
Chaghar Beg Saljūqī, King of
Khurāsān, contemporary of Sulān
Maudūd Ghaznawī, 49 n 4. Called
also Chughz Beg or Chaghz Beg.
Chaghatai line of Mogul princes, 145
n 2, 464 n 8.
Chaghatai Khān, son of the Chingīz
Khān, 145 n 2, 464 n 8.
Chaghatai tribe, Amīrs of,—adherents
of Humāyūn, 464 and n 8, 472,
574 and n 6, 576, 582 n 7, 583 n 3,
593. See also under Chaghtā.
Chaghtā, Ulūs-i-, 575 n 1. See also
under the Chaghatai tribe.
Chāhar Ajārī, independent Rājā of
Narwar, contemporary of Sulān
Nāṣiru-d-Dīn Maḥmūd Shāh of
Dihlī, 129 n 4. Called also Chāhar
Deva and Jāhir Dev.
Chāhar Deva, Rājā of Narwar, 129
n 4. See Chāhar Ajārī.
Chaghz Beg Saljūqī, 49 n 4. See
under Chughz Beg.
Chahār Khanḍ, a place, 457.
Chahār pāi, charpoy, 494 n 11.
Chakarsūm, name of the idol of
Thānesar, 21. See Chakrasvāmin.
Chakra, 22 n 1. See under Cakra.
Chakrasvāmin, or Lord of the Chakra,
name of the idol of Thānesar, 22
n 1. See Cakrasvāmin.
Chaldī, a Mughul commander, in the
time of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī,
249 n 5.
Chaman, Malik, Ghāzīu-l-Mulk,
Governor of Badāon,—one of the
Amīrs of Muḥammad Shāh of
Dihlī, 396 and n 1, 398.
Chambal or Chhanbal river, a river of
Central India, the Charmanwatī
of Sanskrit writers, 385 and n 3,
387, 419, 420 n 5.
Chambarhā, a roof, 593 n 9.
Chāmpānīr, fortress of,—in Gujrāt,
455 n 1. Called also Jānpānīr.
Chanbarhā, 593 n 9.
Chāndā, the heroine of a Manawī in
Hindī, mistress of Lūrak, 333. See
under the next.
Chandāban, a Manawī in Hindī relating the loves of Lūrak and Chāndā,
333 and n 6.
Chandan, the white sandal in Hindī,
484 n 1.
Chandawār district, 377. See also
under Chandwār.
Chandērī, district and town of, 129,
237, 238, 297, 423, 424 and n 4, 435,
469, 475.
Chanḍol of silver, i.e., the palanquin
of honour for governors, 334.
Chandrabhaga, name of the river
Chenāb in Sanskrit, 23 n 3.
Chandragupta, King of Magadha or
Behar, 18 n 1.
Chandwār, district, 70 and n 3, 380,
387, 405. See also Chandawār.
Chang, a musical instrument, 146 n 1.
Changīz Khān. See under Chingīz
Khān.
Chanouā, in the Sarkār of Āgra, 70
n 3.
Chaptar, a town on the Ganges, 343
and n 3, 344. Called also Chītar.
Charkh-i-Alas, the highest of all the
heavens, 246 n 3.
Charmanwatī, Sanskrit name of the
Chambal, a river of Central India,
385 n 3. See under the Chambal.
Charpoy, description of, 494 and
n 11, 495 n.
Chartūlī, a dependency of Kol, 431
n 4.
Chāshtgāhe, breakfast time, 488 and
n 8.
Chataldī, a Mughul commander, contemporary of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 249 n 5.
Chatar La‘l, district, 216.
Chaugān, game of,—origin of the
modern game of polo, 79 n 1, 417
and n 8.
Chaugān, a stick with a curved end,
79 n 1, 143 n 2.
Chauhāns of Mainpūr, a tribe of
Rājpūts, 414 n 13.
Chaul, a village on the route from
Amarkoṭ to Jaisalmīr, 566 n 13,
567 and n 1. Called also Chore.
Chaund, country of, 468.
Chaurāsī, pargana of, in the district
of Hānsī, 323.
Chausā, village of, 462 n 3. See
under Jausā.
Chavica betle, 302 n 6, 303 n.
Chenāb, the,—one of the five rivers
of the Panjāb, 23 n 3, 67 n, 355 n 1,
383 and n 1, 384 n and n 1, 503.
Written also the Chīnāb, Chināb
and Chhināb.
Chenār, town, 416 and n 4. See under
Chinār.
Chengīz Khān. See under Chingīz
Khān.
Chess, Bland, On the Persian game of,
103 n 1, 114 n 2, 115 n, 479 n 7.
Chhāīn, town, 379 and n 2.
Chhajū, Malik, Kishlū Khān, Khān of
Karra, brother's son of Sulān
Ghiyān-d-Dīn Balban, 221 and nn
1 and 3, 227, 229, 230, 231, 232,
238.
Chhanbal, a river of Central India.
See the Chambal.
Chhappar Khatta, a place, 555.