F.

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 Sulān Ghiyāu-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 Sulān
‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 250.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Jūnā, Malik, son of
Ghāzī Malik, one of the Maliks of
the Khiljī Sulāns, 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 Sulān 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 Sulān 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 Sulān Jalālu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 238, 243.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Kūjī, Malik, one of the
Maliks of Sulān Shamsu-d-Dīn
Iyaltimish, 120 n 2.
Fakhru-d-Dīn Rāzī, Imām, a doctor
of the Shāfi‘ite sect, contemporary
of Sulān Ghiyāu-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 Sulān 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 Sul­ānī, Governor of Gujrāt, under
Sulān 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 Sulān
‘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 Sulān Buhlūl and also of
Sulān Sikandar Lodī, 411 and n 7,
412 n
2, 414, 418.
Farmalī, Khān-i-Khānān, one of the
Amīrs of Sulān 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, Sulān, 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
Sulān Ibrāhīm Lodī, 433.
Fatḥ Khān, son of Sulān Buhlūl Lodī,
418.
Fatḥ Khān, son of Sulān Fīroz Shāh,
of the Tughlaq dynasty, 324 and
n 2, 328, 334.
Fatḥ Khān Harawī, of the Amīrs of
Sulān Maḥmūd Sharqī of Jaunpūr,
403 and nn 2, 3 and 4. See also
the next.
Fatḥ Khān, of Herāt, Shāhzāda, of
the Amīrs of Sulān Mubārak Shāh
of Jaunpūr, 361. Same as the
above (q. v.).
Fatḥābād, founded by Sulān Maudūd
Ghaznawī, 47 and n 1.
Fatḥābād, founded by Sulān 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.
Fāimah, 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.