H.

Ḥabīb Badāouī, Shaikh, one of the
notable men of Badāon at the time
of Humāyūn, 600.
Ḥabīb Khān Ṭughūjī or Ṭaghūchī, one
of the Afghān Amīrs under Sikandar
Khān Sūr (q.v.), 542, 593.
Ḥabību-llah, Mīr, grandson of Mīr
Saiyyid Jamālu-d-Dīn the tradi­tionist, 589.
Ḥabshī, original name of Sulān
Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Muḥammad Sām
Ghūrī, 65 n 2.
Habūlī, Rāi, of the Amīrs of Sulān
Mubārak Shāh of the Saiyyid
dynasty of Dihlī, 388 n 3.
Hadah, Shaikh, a learned physician
of Bihār in the time of Sher Shāh
and Islem Shāh, 521 n 4.
Ḥadāyan
, a Manawī in Hindī relating
the loves of Lūrak and Chandā,
333 n 6.
Hādī, son of al-Mahdī, the ‘Abbāside
Khalīfah of Baghdād, 75 n.
Hādī Sabzwārī, Ḥājī Mullā, author of
the Sharḥ-i-Manūma, 181 n 2.
Ḥadīqatu-l-Ḥaqīqat wa Sharī‘atu--
Ṭarīqat
, otherwise known as Fakhrī-
nāmah
, the most celebrated work
of the famous poet Sanāī, 35 n 1,
56 n
2, 57 and n 1, 60.
Ḥāfi, the famous Persian poet, 100
n 5, 101 n 1, 121 n 3, 151 n 6, 412
n 1, 487 n
6.
Ḥāfi Niām of Badāon, Imām of
Islem Shāh, 535.
Haft andām, the seven members of
the body, 165 n 2.
Haft Aurang
, a series of seven poems
by Maulānā ‘Abdu-r-Raḥmān Jāmī,
272 n 1.
Haft Jūsh
, seven metals melted toge-
ther, 321 and n 2.
Haft Khwān, the seven great labours
of Isfandiyār in the Shāh-nāmāh of
Firdausī, 116 n 3, 321 and n 1.
Haft Paikar
, a poem of Shaikh Niāmī
Ganjawī, 298 n 4.
Haft rang
, a variety of the Khīrī
flower, 173 n 3.
Ḥaiātu-l-Ḥaiwān
, a work on natural
history, 108 n 1, 157 n 1, 171 n 2,
178 n 4, 191 n 3, 352 n 1.
Ḥaiātu-l-Qulūb
of Āghā Muḥammad
Bāqir Majlisī, 110 nn 3 and 4,
149 n.
Haibat Khān A‘am Humāyūn of
Lāhor, 490. See under A‘am
Humāyūn Haibat Khān.
Haibat Khān Jilwānī, a subordinate
of Sulān Sharq of Baiāna, 414.
Ḥaidarābād, town,—capital of Ḥaidar­ābād Deccan, the Niām's domi-
nions, 299 n 3.
Ḥaidarābād Deccan, the Niām's
dominions, 299 n 3.
Ḥaidar ‘Alī, a common name among
the Shī‘ah, 604.
Ḥaidar-i-Karrār, a name of ‘Alī ibn-
Abī Ṭālib, 93 n 4, 207.
Ḥaidar Khān Chaghta, 553. Same
as Ḥaidar Muḥammad Khān Ākhta
Begī (q. v.).
Ḥaidar Khān the Amīr of Oudh, one
of the Maliks of Sulān Ghiyāu-d-
Dīn Balban, 184 n 4.
Ḥaidar, Mīrzā, the Mughūl, one of
the Amīrs of Humāyūn, 463, 465.
Ḥaidar Muḥammad Khān Ākhta
Begī, an old servant of Humāyūn,
597 and n 5, 598. See under
Ḥaidar Khān Chaghta.
Ḥaidar Sulān Osbak-i-Shaibānī, 592
n 9.
Ḥaidar Tūnī,—or
Ḥaidar Tūniā'ī, a poet of the time of
Humāyūn, 622, 623, 624.
Haimūe Baqqāl, 500 n 11. See under
Hīmūn Baqqāl.
Haimūn Baqqāl, 500 n 11. See under
Hīmūn Baqqāl.
Haiyāra, 532 n 2, for Daulat Khān
Ajyāra (q. v.).
Ḥaiyātu-l-Ḥaiwānāt. See under the
Ḥaiātu-l-Ḥaiwān.
Ḥajaru-l-Ḥaiyyah
, the Bezoar stone,
117 n 4, 118 n.
Ḥājī Barqa‘ī, a court officer of Sulān
Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh, of Dihlī,
311, 315.
Ḥājī Ilyās, ruler of Lakhnautī, con­temporary of Sulān Muḥammad
and Sulān Fīroz Tughlaq, assumes
the title of Sulān Shamsu-d-Dīn,
309, 324, 327.
Ḥājī Khalfa,—or
Ḥājī Khalīfa, author of the Kash­fu--unūn fī Asmā'i-l-Kutubi wa-l-
Funūn, 5 n 4, 33 n 1, 34 n 9, 35
n 1, 49 n 3, 56 n 2, 73 n 1, 181 n 2,
197 n 1, 221 n 2, 222 n 1, 270 nn

1 and 4, 272 n 1, 427 n 1, 428 nn
2, 3, 5 and 6, 467 n 2, 521 n 5, 533
n 1, 571 n 9, 624 nn
8 and 9.
Ḥājī Khān Alwarī, 553. Same as
Ḥājī Khān Sulānī, Governor of
Alwar (q. v.).
Ḥājī Khān Sulānī, Governor of
Alwar, one of the Amīrs of Shīr
Shāh and his successors, 475, 542,
543, 546, 547. See under Ḥājī
Khān Alwarī.
Ḥājī, Khwāja, a general of Sulān
‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 265 n 6.
Ḥājī Maulā, one of the slaves of
Maliku-l-Umarā Kotwāl (q. v.), 260
and n 2, 261.
Ḥājī Mullā Hādī Sabzwārī, author of
the Sharh-i-Manūma, 181 n 2.
Ḥājī Nāib, Malik, one of the Amīrs
of Sulān Qubu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 286.
Ḥājī Sa‘īd Ṣarṣarī, the envoy of
the Egyptian Khalīfah to Sulān
Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh, of Dihlī,
310 and n 1.
Ḥājib-i-Buzurg, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Mas‘ūd Ghaznawī, 43 and
n 5.
Ḥājib Shaibānī, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Mas‘ūd Ghaznawī, 43 n 5.
Ḥājipūr, a district of Bangāla, 469.
Ḥajj, the Pilgrimage to Mecca, 175,
176 n, 480 n 5, 623 and n 5.
Ḥajjāj ibn Yūsuf a-aqafī, Governor
of ‘Irāq and Khurāsān under the
Umayyad Khalīfahs, 12 and nn 1
and 2, 490 and n 6.
Ḥakīm Abū Naar ‘Abdu-l-‘Azīz ibn
Manṣūr, the celebrated poet ‘Asjadī,
17 n 3.
Ḥakīm Ansurī, a famous Persian poet,
contemporary of Firdausī, 17 n 3.
Ḥakīm Farrukhī, a famous Persian
poet, contemporary of Firdausī, 17
n 3.
Ḥakīm Firdausī, the celebrated
author of the Shāh-nāma, 17 n 3.
See under Firdausī.
Ḥakīm Khāqānī Shīrwānī, the famous
Persian poet, 339 n 4.
Ḥakīm Sanāī, a celebrated poet of
Ghaznī, 35 n 1, 56, 57.
Ḥākim bi-amri-llāh, Abu-l-‘Abbās
Aḥmad ibnu-l-Mustakfī billāh,
Egyptian Khalīfah of the House of
‘Abbās, 310 and n 2. See the next.
Ḥākim bi-amri-llāh, Abu-l-Fatḥ Abū
Bakr ibn Abil Rabī‘ Suleimān, sixth
of the Egyptian Khalīfahs of the
House of ‘Abbās, 327 and n 6.
See the above.
Halājun, one of the Maliks of Sulān
Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh, 309.
Halākū Khān, grandson of the
Chingīz Khān, 145 and n 2, 236.
Haldī, township of, 409 and n 7.
Halghāt, a place, 387 n 3.
Halīn, the,—a river of the Panjāb,
356 n 1.
Ḥalka
of elephants, or a hundred
elephants, 541.
Halkhāyat, town, 423 n 6.
Hamadān, a city of Persian ‘Irāq,
anciently called Ecbatana, 30 n 1,
533 n
1.
Hamadān, a district of Persian ‘Irāq,
30 n 1.
Ḥamal
, the sign Aries, 195 n 3, 626
and n 7.
Ḥamāsah
, Freytag's, 287 n 1.
Ḥāmī Tambān, or Jāhī Yatmām of
Bukhārā, a poet of the time of
Humāyūn, 618 and n 5.
Ḥamīd ibn ‘Abdu-r-Raḥmān, a Tradi­tionist, 139 n 5.
Ḥamīd of Balkh, Qāẓī, a celebrated
writer and poet, contemporary of
Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn Muḥammad
Sām Ghūrī, 76 and n 1.
Ḥamīd Khān, the Khāṣṣ-i-Khail of
Sulān Ibrāhīm Lodī, 439.
Ḥamīd Khān, Vazīr-i-Mamlakat of
Dihlī, under the Saiyyid dynasty,
401 and nn 2 and 4, 402 and
n 4.
Ḥamīd Lawīkī, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh,
302.
Ḥamīd Lodī, Shaikh, first ruler of
Multān, 19 n 5.
Ḥamīd of Sanbal, Shaikh, the com­mentator, contemporary of Humā­yūn, 604.