Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Muḥammad Shāh, the
ruler of Oudh, son of Sulān Sham­su-d-Dīn Iyal-timish, 98.
Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Tughlaq Shāh, Sulān,
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.).
Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Tughlaq Shāh II, ibn
Fatḥ Khān ibn Sulān Fīrūz Shāh,
338 n 1, 341.
Ghiyāu-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
Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh,
315.
Girāī, one of the poets of the time of
Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 266.
Gīrat Singh, Rāi, Governor of Gwāliār,
contemporary of Sulān 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
Sulān 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 Sulān
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
Khiāī, 103 n 3.
Gūrkhān of Qarā Khiā, the con­temporary of Sulān Muḥammad
Khwārazm Shāh, 71 n 7.
Gushtāsp, an ancient King of Irān,
35 n 2.
shwāra
, 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.