Chhapramau, township of, 540 and
n 8.
Chherāmau, township of, 540 n 8.
Chhināb river. See under the
Chenāb.
Chhinār, town, 541 and n 2. See
under Chinhār and also Chinār and
Chunār.
Chhota Jawār, small variety of millet,
549 n 14.
Chigil, a city of Turkestān, 158 and
[n 6.
Childū, a Turkī word in the sense of
In‘ām, 596 n 6.
Chīn, country of, 143, 147, 156, 232
n 5, 307, 426, 634. See also China.
Chīn, Sea of,—the Indian Ocean,
153 n 1.
Chīn, son of Japhet the son of Noah,
147 n 1.
China, 145 n 2, 147 n 3, 232 n 5. See
also under Chīn.
Chināb or Chīnāb, the. See under
the Chenāb river.
Chinār tree, Platanus orientalis, 162
and n 3, 276, 494 and n 6.
Chinār, fortress, 415 n 2, 456, 459,
470, 471. See Chenār and also
Chinhār and Chunār.
Chinese, the, 353 n 1.
Chinese Tartary, 145 n 2.
Chingīz Khān, Emperor of the
Mughuls, 91, 93, 103 n 3, 123, 135 n,
145 n 2, 188 n 2, 230, 236, 259 n 1,
269 n 5, 353 n
1.
Chingīzī line of Mogul Princes, 145
n 2.
Chinhār, town, 548, 555, 611. See
Chhinār and also Chinār and
Chunār.
Chirāgh, an open lamp with a naked
flame, 550 n 17.
Chishtīs, the,—descendants of
Khwājā Mu‘īnu-d-Dīn Chishtī, 416
n 13.
Chishtī, Khwājā Mu‘īnu-d-Dīn Ḥasan,
contemporary of Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-
Dīn Muḥammad Sām Ghūrī, 70 and
n 2.
Chītar, town on the Ganges, 343 and
n 3, 344. See Chaptar and also
Chītrā.
Chitor, 257, 258, 397 n 1, 452, 453,
454, 470.
Chītrā, same as Jalesar, 346 and n 5.
See also under Chītar.
Chorasmii, the, 23 n 1.
Chore, a village on the route from
Amarkoṭ to Jaisalmīr, 567 n 1.
Called also Chaul (q. v.).
Choroes I, son of Kobad, called
Naushīrwān, of the Sassanide
dynasty of Persia, 46 n 5.
Christians, the, 509 n 5, 577 n, 601 n.
Chronicles of the Pathān Kings of
Delhi
, Thomas's, 87 n 1. See under
Pathān Kings of Delhī.
Chronology of Ancient Nations
, Albī­rūnī's, 104 n 2, 108 n 4, 166 n 1,
280 nn
3 and 4, 369 n 3, 627
n 1.
Chūbhā-i-Sāl
, baulks of sāl wood, 599
and n 13.
Chughz Beg Saljūqī, King of Khurā­sān, contemporary of Sulān
Maudūd Ghaznawī, 49 and n 4.
Called also Chaghz Beg and Chaghar
Beg.
Chūlī Bahādur, Uzbakī, one of the
Amīrs of Mīrzā ‘Askarī, 568.
Chūnā, lime, 302 n 6.
Chunāb river. See under the Chenāb.
Chunār, fortress of, 489, 541 and n 4,
542. See also under Chinār and
Chinhār.
Chunhār, same as the fortress of
Chunār (q. v.), 489.
Chun-ti, the ninth and last Emperor
of the Mongol dynasty of China,
353 n 1.
Chuqmār
, Turkī word, meaning of,
215 n 1.
Clisobora of Pliny, corresponds to the
town of Kalikavartta or Vrindā­vana of Sanskrit writers, 24 n 6.
Clouston's Arabian Poetry, 99 n 6.
Clysma,—or
Clysmon, town of, 169 n 1.
Cockscomb, the flower called Tāj-i-
Khurūs, 629 n
1.
Coinage, First introduction of Muḥam­madan—, 18 n 1.
Coins of Kings of Ghaznī
, Thomas's,
16 n 2, 47 n 2.
Cól, fort of, 70 n 4.
Colebrooke, Essays, 332 n 4.
Colic, notes on, 49 n 2.
College of Fort William, Calcutta,
609 n 3.
Colombo, 303 n.
Commentaries of Bāber
, the, 421 n 8.
See the Wāqi‘āt-i-Bābarī.
Commentary on the Miftāḥu-l-‘Ulūm
(q. v.
), 428 and n 2.
Companions of the Prophet Muḥam­mad, 636.
Corah, town, 486 n 6.
Coromandel, 265 n 5.
Côtgangra, fortress of. See under
Kot Kangra.
Coupele, town, 344 n 7.
Courteille, de, 91 n 1, 145 n 2, 215 nn
1 and 5. See also under Pavet de
Courteille.
Crow, the,—believed by the Arabs
to be a bird of ill-omen, 7 n 2.
Cunningham's Ancient Geography of
India, 21 n 4, 22 n 5, 23 n 2, 24 n 6,
48 n 5, 66 n 3, 67 n 1, 69 nn
4 and
5, 80 n 1, 132 n 3, 265 nn 2 and 4
293 n 5, 294 n 4, 362 n 2, 363 n,
382 n 4, 389 n 2, 415 n
5.
Cureton's Milal and Niḥal of Shahras­tānī, 22 n 3, 157 n 2.
Cyrene, town of,—the modern Kair­wan in Tunis, 167 n 4.