Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Muḥammad Shāh, the
ruler of Oudh, son of Sulān Shamsu-d-Dīn Iyal-timish, 98.
Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Tughlaq Shāh, Sulān,
first of the Tughlaq Shāhī dynasty
of Dihlī, 296, 298, 299, 300, 301,
304, 321. Before his accession he
was called Ghāzī Malik (q. v.).
Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Tughlaq Shāh II, ibn
Fatḥ Khān ibn Sulān Fīrūz Shāh,
338 n 1, 341.
Ghiyāu-l-Lughāt, a lexicographical
work, 60 n 3, 108 n 4, 142 n 1, 145
n 1, 152 n 2, 163 n 1, 321 n 2, 617
n 1, 621 n 5, 628 n 1, 635 n 5.
Ghor, country of, 13 n 1, 22 n 2,
60, 61 n 4, 63, 64 and n 2, 65
n 2, 68, 71, 77 n 1, 81 and n 2.
The name is also written Ghūr and
Ghaur.
Ghor, Kings of, 60, 61 n 4, 63. See
also under the Ghorī dynasty.
Ghorī, fortress of,—in Ghaznīn, 21
and n 3.
Ghorī dynasty of Dihlī, 64, 68, 228.
See under Kings of Ghor.
Ghūl, centre of a Turkish army, 439
n 4. Also called Qūl.
Ghūr. See under Ghor.
Ghurjistān, same as Gharjistān (q. v.),
22 and n 2, 63 n 1, 68.
Ghurratu-l-Kamāl of Mīr Khusrū, the
famous poet of Dihlī, 134, 197 and
n 1, 216.
Ghuzz, tribe of,—a tribe of Turks
61 and n 5, 65, 167 n 3, 291.
Gīlān, a province of Persia, 99 n 4.
Gilauṛī, note on, 303 n.
Gilī, town, 250 and n 4. Called also
Kīlī.
Gīr, Malik, son of Malik Qabūl
Khalifatī, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh,
315.
Girāī, one of the poets of the time of
Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 266.
Gīrat Singh, Rāi, Governor of Gwāliār,
contemporary of Sulān Buhlūl
Lodī, 408.
Girgīn-i-Milād, one of the chief
warriors of Kai Khusrau in the
Shāhnāmah of Firdausī, 116 and nn
4 and 5, 180 n 2.
Gīsī, a place, 548 n 3.
Gladwin's Dissertations, 608 n 3.
Glossary of Anglo-Indian Words, Yule
and Burnett's, 495 n, 543 n 3.
Glossary on Muqaddasī, De Goeje's,
217 n 2.
Gobind Chand, Rājā,—one of the
Rājās of Hindūstān at the time of
Sulān Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn, 25.
Godī river, the, 222 n 3. Called
also the Gumtī and the Kowah
(q. v.).
Goeje, de, Glossary on Muqaddasī,
217 n 2.
Gog and Magog, Wall of, 191 n 2.
Commonly known as the rampart
of Sikandar.
Gogra, the, 222 n 3. Called also the
Ghāghar and Ghāgra.
Gohana, a district of the N.-W. Pro-
vinces, 122 n 1.
Gokultāsh, one of the Amīrs of Bābar,
441.
Golius, Dictionary of the Arabic
Language, 509 n 5.
Gonds, the,—a tribe of Hindūs, 433
and n 4.
Gonor, a place at 24 miles from Dihlī,
21 n 4.
Gorakhpūr District, 409 n 5.
Gorgang, the capital of Khwārazm,
called Jurjān by the Arabs, 23 n 1.
See under Gurgān.
Gour, country of, 456. Read Gaur,
a name of Bengal from its capital.
Goyā, or Kanhaiyā, minister and
agent of Rāi Māldeo, contemporary
of Shīr Shāh, 478 and n 7. See
also under Kanhaiyā.
Grand Trunk Road, the, 386 n 3.
Grant Duff's History of the Mahrattas,
265 n 4.
Great Larās, town, 326 n, 327 n 1.
Called Rās by Badāonī.
Grecian Emperor, the, 18 n 1.
Greece, 119 n 5.
Greeks, the, 18 n 1, 41 n 2, 75 n 2,
76 n 1, 104 n 2, 182 n 1.
Greenhill, Dr., 30 n 1.
Griffith's Yūsuf and Zuleikha, 272
n 1.
Gūgird-i-Aḥmar or Sulphur, notes on,
340 and n 2.
Gujarāt. See under Gujrāt.
Gujerāt. See under Gujrāt.
Gujrāt, 9 n 2, 12, 17 n 4, 27 n 4,
28, 66, 71, 89, 255, 256 n 4, 257,
267, 274, 282, 283, 284, 285, 287,
313, 314, 315, 324, 333, 334, 337,
346, 354, 357 and nn 3 and 4, 379,
389, 450, 452, 454, 456, 472, 533,
534, 559 and n 8, 567, 597, 635.
The name is also written Gujarāt,
Gujerāt and Guzerāt.
Gulangabīn, confection of rose and
honey, 148 and n 4.
Gulbarga, town, 311 and n 6.
Gulistān of Shaikh Sa‘dī of Shīrāz,
187 n 2, 467.
Gulistāna Saiyyids, the,—a family of
Saiyyids, 584 n 3.
Gul-i-Yūsuf, a red flower without
odour, 629 n 1.
Gulnār tree, called also Nārwan, 172
n 3.
Gulqand, confection of roses, 452 and
n 2.
Gulrukh, the pseudonym of Sulān
Sikandar Lodī, 426.
Gumtī, the, 222 n 3, 329 n 2. Called
also the Godī and the Kowah.
Gungūna, fortress of, one of the
dependencies of Malot, 437 and
n 7.
Gurdāspūr, town, 383 n 8.
Gurgān, town of,—the Jurjān of the
Arabs, 37 n 7, 38, 117. See under
Gorgang.
Gūrgān, a surname of the great Tīmūr
and a title applied to the sons-in-
law of a Mughul Emperor, 103 n 3,
353 and n 1.
Gurgāon, a district of Mīwāt, 134 n 1,
366 n.
Gurgīn-i-Milād, one of the chief
warriors of Kai Khusrau in the
Shāh-nāmah of Firdausī, 116 and
nn 4 and 5, 180 n 2.
Gurīz-gāh, a term of Prosody, 627
and n 4.
Gurjistān, 43 n 4, for Gharjistān (q. v.).
Gurkān, a Mongol title, 103 n 3. See
under Gūrgān.
Gūrkhān, or universal king, hereditary title of the Kings of Kara
Khiāī, 103 n 3.
Gūrkhān of Qarā Khiā, the contemporary of Sulān Muḥammad
Khwārazm Shāh, 71 n 7.
Gushtāsp, an ancient King of Irān,
35 n 2.
Gūshwāra, a term of Prosody, 609
and n 1.
Guzarate. See under Gujrāt.
Guzerāt, town of, 28 n 2, 71 n 3.
Guzerāt, province of. See under
Gujrāt.
Guzerāt, peninsula of, 27 n 4.
Guzīda. See under the Tārīkh-i-
Guzīda.
Guzr-i-Ganjīna, a ford on the Jamna,
406 n 6.
Gwāliār, 26, 81, 89, 94, 129, 238, 239,
246, 248, 268, 272, 273, 275, 277,
283, 349, 361, 362, 377 and n 4, 378,
379, 381, 384, 385, 386, 387 and
n 3, 391, 398, 408, 410, 414 and
n 5, 419 and nn 3 and 6, 422 nn 2
and 3, 423 n 5, 427, 432, 433, 443,
445, 459, 474, 489, 490, 491, 493,
498, 499, 512, 529, 530, 538, 540
542. The fortress of Gwāliār is
called also Kālewar.