Ḥamīda Bānū Begam, the Queen-
consort of Humāyūn and mother
of Akbar, 560, 566, 568.
Ḥamīdu-d-Dīn, the Amīr of Koh, one
of the Maliks of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 261.
Ḥamīdu-d-Dīn ‘Umar ibn Maḥmūd
Balkhī, 76 n 1. See Qāẓī Ḥamīd
of Balkh.
Ḥamīn, Malik, Governor of Badāon
under the Saiyyid dynasty, 396
n 1.
Hamīr Dev, Rāi of Rantanbhor,
grandson of Rāi Pithora and con­temporary of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 257 and nn 3 and 7, 263.
Ḥamra, Malik, Governor of Rāparī
under Masnad-i-‘Ālī Khiẓr Khān
(q. v.), 377.
Hamza of iẓāfat
, remarks on, 545 and
n 10, 546 n.
Ḥamza, Malik, one of the Amīrs of
Mubārak Shāh of the Saiyyid
dynasty, 387.
Ḥamzah, son of ‘Abdu-llah ibnu-z-
Zubair, 287 n 2.
Ḥandā
, a Hindū Masnawī, 333 n 6.
See Chandāban.
Handāl, Mīrzā. See under Hindāl.
Handīya, a town on the Narbadā in
the Central Provinces, 517 and
n 9, 521. Called also Hindīya.
Ḥanīfite sect of Sunnī Muslims,
founded by Abū Ḥanīfah, 57 n 1,
514.
Hankāyat, town, 423 n 6.
Hānsī, district and town of, 37 and
n 2, 70 and n 1, 98 and n 2, 248,
322, 323, 324, 326, 364 n
5, fortress
of, 431, 433.
Hansū Bhatī, Rāī, one of the Amīrs
of Mubārak Shāh of the Saiyyid
dynasty, 388 and n 3.
Hanwantgaṛh, fortress of, 422 n 6,
424 n
2.
Ḥaqāiqī, takhalluṣ or poetical name
of the poet Khāqānī, 583 n 4.
Ḥaramain-i-Sharīfain, the two sacred
cities of Mecca and Medina, 585
n 6.
Haran ibn Muḥammad al-Khākī ash-
Shīrāzī, author of a Muntakhabu-t-
Tawārīkh, 11 n
1.
Ḥarand, a country of Hindūstān, 445
and n 10.
Harawī, a native of Harāt, 35 n 2.
Harcaran, a Hindū Prince, founder of
Banghar, 71 n 2.
Hardat, Governor of the fortress of
Mīrath at the time of Sulān Maḥ­mūd Ghaznawī's invasion, 24 n 1.
Hardwār, city of, 88, 344 n 7.
Harī, another name of the city of
Harāt or Herāt in Khurāsān, 35
and n 2.
Ḥarīd, a country of Hindūstān, 445
n 10.
Ḥarīrī, the celebrated author of the
Maqāmāt, 348.
Harpāl Deo, Rāi of Deogīr, contem­porary of Sulān Qubu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 283, 286 n 1.
Harsana, a town in the province of
Mīwāt, 129 n 2.
Har Singh Dev,—or
Harsingh Rāi, Rājā of Itāwa and
Kaithar, contemporary of Khiẓr
Khān of the Saiyyid dynasty, 346
and n 4, 359 and n 4, 361 and nn
2 and 3, 377, 379.
Harumān, a fortress on the frontier
of Egypt, 321 and n 4.
Hārūn ar-Rashīd, the ‘Abbāsī Khalī­fah, 74 n 2, 75 n, 286.
Ḥasan, son of ‘Alī ibn-Abī Ṭālib,
second of the twelve Imāms of the
Shī‘ah, 151 n 5.
Ḥasan ‘Alī Kharās, Maulānā, a poet
of the time of Humāyūn, 587.
Ḥasan of Bangāla, Shaikh, father of
Shaikh ‘Alāi Mahdī of Baiāna,
507.
Ḥasan Barāwar-bacha, favourite of
Sulān Qubu-d-Dīn Khiljī who
gives him the title of Khusrū Khān,
274, 290. See under Khusrū Khān.
Ḥasan Barwabacha, 290. Same as
the above (q. v.).
Ḥasan Dihlavī, Mīr, a famous poet of
Dihlī, contemporary of Mīr Khusrū,
115 n, 187, 188, 245, 269, 270 and
n 6.
Ḥasan Ghaznavī, Saiyyid, a poet of
the time of Sulān Bahrām Shāh
Ghaznawī, 56 and n 3.
Ḥasan Jalāyer, Shaikh, King of
Khurāsān, 633 n 1.
Ḥasan Kaithalī, Saiyyid, generally
known as Ḥasan Kāngū, afterwards
‘Alāu-d-Dīn Bahman Shāh, Sulān
of the Deccan, 309. See under
Ḥasan Kāngū.
Ḥasan Kāngū, contemporary of Sulān
Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh, 309, 310,
314, 327. See under Ḥasan Kai­thalī.
Ḥasan Kānkū, 310. Same as Ḥasan
Kāngū (q. v.).
Ḥasan Khān Mīwātī, of the Khān­zādas of Mīwāt, one of the Amīrs
of the Lodī dynasty, 398, 443, 444,
447, 470.
Ḥasan Khān, an impostor of Mīwāt
who pretended to be the Ḥasan
Khān Mīwātī mentioned above, 447.
Ḥasan Khān, Governor of Rāparī
under Masnad-i-‘Ālī Khiẓr Khān
(q. v.), 377, 387.
Ḥasan Khān Sūr, father of Shīr Shāh,
461 and n 5, 466 and n 7, 467.
Ḥasan, Kotwāl of Ghaznīn under
Sulān Maudūd Ghaznawī, 48. See
also under Abū ‘Alī Ḥasan.
Ḥasan Maimandī, Vazīr of the Ghaz­navides, 35, 47 n 6.
Ḥasan, Maulānā, a learned man of the
time of Bābar, 449.
Ḥasan, Mīr, son-in-law of Sulān
Fīroz Tughlaq Shāh, 338.
Ḥasan, Shaikh, a famous surgeon of
Pānīpat, 366 n 3.
Ḥasan Zinjānī, Shaikh, Shaikhu-l-
Mashāikh, a famous Saint of Lāhor,
383 and n 6.
Ḥashf
, the last and most severe stage
of the fever called Diqq, 320 n.
Hasht Bihisht
of Mīr Khusrū Dehlavī,
the famous poet, the first poem in
his Khamsa, 134 and n 3, 142 n 3,
269 n 5.
Ḥashw
, a term of Prosody, 606 n 4.
Hastināwar, town, 266 n 4.
Ḥatānpūr, district, 267 n 1.
Ḥātim Khān, Malik Ikhtiyāru-d-Dīn
Sanbal, one of the Amīrs of the
Khiljī dynasty, 272, 291.
Ḥātim Sanbalī or Sambhalī, Miyān, a
learned Doctor, 428, 506, 545.
Ḥātim of Ṭaiy, the type of Arab
generosity, 127.
Hatkān, town, 423 n 6.
Hatkānt,—or
Hatkānth, chief town of the Bhadā­war district, 408 n 1, 423 and n 6.
Hatkānt, tribes of, a clan of the
Bhadaurīs, 408 and n 1.
Hatnāpūr, town, 266 and n 4, 267 and
n 1.
Hatnāwar, town, 266 n 4, 267 n 1.
Ḥauẓ-i-‘Alāī, an artificial lake at
Dihlī, constructed by Sulān ‘Alā­u-d-Dīn Khiljī, 294 n 3.
Ḥauẓ-i-Khāṣṣ
, a reservoir at Dihlī
constructed by Sulān Fīrūz Tughlaq
Shāh, 294, 339, 344, 347 and nn 2
and 3, 348 n 1, 356 and n 5.
Haẓaj-i-Muamman
, a kind of metre,
606 nn 4 and 5.
Hazār Dīnārī, a name of Malik Mānik,
the slave of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 251 and nn 3 and 7, 256.
Called also Kāfūr Nāib.
Hazār Sutūn palace, at Dihlī, 273,
285, 288, 289, 290.
Ḥaẓīra, Mausoleum, 397 and n 4.
Haẓramaut, a province of Arabia,
262 n.
Ḥaẓrat A‘lā, Tāj Khān Karrānī, ruler
of Bengal, 540. See under Tāj
Khān Karrānī.
Ḥaẓrat-i-‘Ālī, a title assumed by Shīr
Shāh, 461 n 10.
Ḥaẓrat-i-Muqaddas Saiyyid Rafī‘u-d-
Dīn Ṣafwī, of Balkh, 445.
Heavens, Nine, 142 n 1.
Helmund, called also the Hendmand,
a river of Sijistān, 15 n.
Hendmand, called also the Helmund,
a river of Sijistān, 15 n.
Heraclea, 586 n.
Herāt, district and town of,—in
Khurāsān, 17, 22 n 2, 32 n 2, 34
and nn 2 and 4, 35 and n 2, 38
and n 4, 42, 43 n 4, 71 n 4, 73 n 1,
361, 609 n 5.