Fadak, an estate north of Medina
which had belonged to Muḥammad,
156 and n 5, 157 n, 631 and n 1.
Fāiq, one of the Amīrs of ‘Abdu-l-
Malik ibn Nūḥ Sāmānī, King of
Khurāsān, 16 and n 2.
Faiẓī, a poet of Basāwar, contemporary of Shīr Shāh, 479 and n 5.
Fakhr, chief of the Bāzār at Dihlī,
in the reign of Sulān Ghiyāu-d-
Dīn Balban, 184.
Fakhr ‘Alī, Mīr, one of the Amīrs of
[Humāyūn, 462.
Fakhrī-nāmah, popular name of the
Ḥadīqatu-l-Ḥaqīqat, the most celebrated work of the famous poet
Sanāī, 35 n 1, 56 n 2.
Fakhru-d-Dīn ‘Amīd Lūmakī, the poet
of Gīlān, 138. See under ‘Amīd
Lūmakī.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Amīr Dād, Malik,
Governor of Baran under Sulān
‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 250.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Jūnā, Malik, son of
Ghāzī Malik, one of the Maliks of
the Khiljī Sulāns, 274, 290, 291,
292, 293,—receives the title of
Ulugh Khān, 297 and n 4,—succeeds to the throne of Dihlī under
the style of Sulān Muḥammad
‘Ādil ibn Tughlaq Shāh (q. v.). See
also under Ulugh Khān.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Kotwāl, the Maliku-l-
Umarā or Amīru-l-Umarā, one of
the Amīrs of Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn
Kaiqubād, of the Balbanī dynasty,
220 nn 2 and 3, 227, 229, 238, 260
n 2.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Kūchī, Malik, one of
the Amīrs of Sulān Jalālu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 238, 243.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Kūjī, Malik, one of the
Maliks of Sulān Shamsu-d-Dīn
Iyaltimish, 120 n 2.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Rāzī, Imām, a doctor
of the Shāfi‘ite sect, contemporary
of Sulān Ghiyāu-d-Dīn and
Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn Muḥammad Sām, 73
and nn 1 and 2.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Silāḥdār, Malik, one of
the Amīrs of Sulān Muḥammad
Tughlaq Shāh, 308, 309.
Fakhru-l-Mulk ‘Amīd Lūmakī,
Maliku-l-Kalām, 99 and n 4. See
under ‘Amīd Lūmakī.
Fakhru-l-Mulk Khwājā ‘Amīd-u-Dīn,
99 n 4, 138 n 1. Same as the
above.
Fa'l, a good omen, 412 n 1.
Fallon's Hindustānī Dictionary, 528
n 1.
Fals, a coin of small value, from the
Latin follis, 18 n 1.
Fanak, weasel or stoat, 158 n 4.
Fanākatī, the Historian, 16 n 1.
Faqār, vertebræ of the back, 74 n 2.
Faqāra, a vertebra of the back, 74
n 2.
Faqāra, a sort of waving ornament
on the blade of a sword or else a
notch on its edge, 75 n.
Faqīrs, various religious orders of,
510 n 4.
Far‘, one of the two chief divisions of
‘Ilmu-l-Fiqh, 5 n 4.
Farah, town of,—in Biluchistan, 420
[and n 9.
Farah, a town at a distance of ten
krohs from Agra, 542.
Farakhābād district, N.-W. P., 185
n 1. See also under Farukhābād.
Fara‘ūn (Fir‘aun), the Pharaoh of
Egypt, 137, 501.
Farazdaq, Abū Firās Hammām ibn
Ghālib, the celebrated Arab poet,
286, 287 and nn 1 and 2.
Farhād, the lover of Shīrīn, in the
romance of Khusru-o-Shīrīn, 279
and n 3.
Farhang-i-Anandrāj, a Persian dictionary, 596 n 6.
Farḥatu-l-Mulk, Malik Mufarriḥ Sulānī, Governor of Gujrāt, under
Sulān Fīroz Shāh, 334 and n 3.
Farīd Ganj-i-Shakkar, Shaikh, the
famous Muḥammadan Saint, 233,
460. See under Farīdu-d-Dīn.
Farīd Khān, son of Ḥasan Khān Sūr,
original name of Shīr Shāh, 461
and n 5, 466, 467 and n 5.
Farīd Khān, infant son of Sulān
‘Alān-d-Dīn Khiljī, 289.
Farīd Khān ibn-i-Masnad-i-‘Ālī Khiẓr
Khān (q. v.), 395, 400 n 1.
Farīd Tāran, one of the Amīrs of
Islem Shāh Sūr, 497.
Farīdu-d-Dīn Ganj-i-Shakkar, Shaikh,
grandson of Farrukh Shāh of
Kābnl,—a famous Muḥammadan
saint of Hindūstān, 132 and n 6,
133 n, 135 n, 355 n 1, 362 n 2. See
also under Farīd.
Farīdu-d-Dīn Mas‘ūd Ganj-i-Shakkar,
132 n 6. Same as the above.
Farīdūn, an ancient King of Persia,
166 n 1, 435 n 2, 595.
Fārighī, a poet of the time of Humāyūn, 616, 617. See under Abu-l-
Wāḥid.
Farmalī, Khān-i-Khānān, one of the
Amīrs of Sulān Buhlūl and also of
Sulān Sikandar Lodī, 411 and n 7,
412 n 2, 414, 418.
Farmalī, Khān-i-Khānān, one of the
Amīrs of Sulān Ibrāhīm Lodī, 434.
Farrukhī, Ḥakīm, a famous Persian
poet, contemporary of ‘Asjadī,
Ansurī and Firdausī, 17 n 3.
Farrukh Shāh of Kābul, grandfather
of Shaikh Farid Ganj-i-Shakkar,
132 n 6.
Farrukh Zād, Sulān, ibn Mas‘ūd ibn
Maḥmūd Ghaznawī, 51.
Farshūr, old name of Peshāwar, 66
n 6.
Farukhābād district, N.-W. P., 377
n 3. See also under Farakhābād.
Fārūq, or the Discerner, a name of
‘Umar, the second Khalīfah, 59
and n 3.
Fāryāb a town of Māwarāu-n-Nahr
(Transoxiana), 339 n 4.
Farẓ, prayers enjoined in the Qur'ān,
488 n 7.
Fāsiq, immoral man, one who opposes
[‘Alī, 557 n.
Fateḥgarh, town in Farukhābād district, N.-W. P., 377 n 3, 384 n 4.
Fateḥpūr, 325 n 3. See under Fatḥpūr.
Fatepour, 80 n 5, for Fatḥpūr (q. v.).
Fatḥ Khān, son of A‘am Humāyūn
Shirwānī, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Ibrāhīm Lodī, 433.
Fatḥ Khān, son of Sulān Buhlūl Lodī,
418.
Fatḥ Khān, son of Sulān Fīroz Shāh,
of the Tughlaq dynasty, 324 and
n 2, 328, 334.
Fatḥ Khān Harawī, of the Amīrs of
Sulān Maḥmūd Sharqī of Jaunpūr,
403 and nn 2, 3 and 4. See also
the next.
Fatḥ Khān, of Herāt, Shāhzāda, of
the Amīrs of Sulān Mubārak Shāh
of Jaunpūr, 361. Same as the
above (q. v.).
Fatḥābād, founded by Sulān Maudūd
Ghaznawī, 47 and n 1.
Fatḥābād, founded by Sulān Fīroz
Shāh, of the Tughlaq dynasty, 324
n 2, 325 n 3, 365.
Fatḥpūr, otherwise known as Sīkrī,
one of the dependencies of Multān,
80 n 5, 97, 325 n 5, 363, 365, 366,
375, 433, 442, 445, 446, 486, 508,
535, 600.
Fatḥpūr District, N.-W. Provinces,
486 n 6.
Fāimah, daughter of the Prophet
Muḥammad and wife of ‘Alī, 151
n 5, 156 n 5, 303 n 4, 622 nn 3 and
4, 631 n 1.
Fatwas, legal decisions by a Muftī
(q. v.), 317 n 6, religious or judicial
rulings, 507 and n 7.
Faẓīḥat, Qāẓī, or Qāẓī Ignominy, 474
and n 6. See under Qāẓī Faẓīlat.
Faẓīlat, Qāẓī, the Qāẓī of the army of
Shīr Shāh, popularly known as Qāẓī
Faẓīḥat (q. v.), 474 and n 4.
Faẓlu-llāh Balkhī, Malik, styled
Qutlugh Khān, one of the Amīrs
of the Tughlaq Shāhī dynasty, 351
and n 2.
Faẓlu-llah Khān's Turkish Persian
Dictionary, 482 n 2, 483 n 2, 497
n 1, 575 n 1, 580 n 5, 592 n 5, 596
n 6.
Faẕẕ, the first arrow in the game of
maisir, 369 n 1.
Ferishta. See under Firishta.
Fidāīs, the,—disciples of the chief
of the Mulāḥidah heretics, 73 and
n 2, 122 and n 3.
Filband, a stratagem in the game of
chess, 114 n 2.
Fiqār, vertebræ of the back, 74 n 2.
Fiqh, the two chief divisions of, 5
n 4.
Firangīs, the, 458 and n 6. See also
under the Franks.
Firāqī, takhallus or poetical name of
Khwājā Aiyūb ibn Khwājā Abu-l-
Barakāt (q. v.), 633, 634.
Firāqnāmah, one of the poetical works
of Salmān Sāwajī, 571 n 9.
Firdausī, the celebrated author of the
Shāh-nāmah, 17 and nn 1 and 3,
32 and n 1, 88 n 2, 461 n 6.
Firdūsī, Ḥakīm, 17 n 3. See under
Firdausī.