Jalālu-d-Dīn Kāshānī, Qāẓī, 123, 234.
See the above.
Jalālu-d-Dīn Khiljī, Sulān, whose
name was Malik Fīroz and his title
Shāyista Khān (q. v.), 185, 226, 230
and n 1, 231, 239, 240, 243, 244,
245, 247 and n, 248, 249, 507, 525.
Jalālu-d-Dīn Maḥmūd Dīwān, Khwāja,
one of the Amīrs of Humāyūn,
585 and n 4.
Jalālu-d-Dīn Mangburnī, Sulān, son
of Sulān Muḥammad Khwārazm
Shāh, 91 and nn 1 and 2.
Jalālu-d-Dīn, son of Sulān Shamsu-d-
Dīn Iyal-timish, 124, 125, 131.
Jalālu-d-Dīn, Sulān, son of Sulān
Sikandar Lodī, 430. See under
Jalāl Khān, son of Sulān Sikandar.
Jalālu-d-Dīn, Sulān, title assumed
by Muḥammad Khān Sūr, Governor
of Bangāla (q. v.), 552.
Jalālu-l-Ḥaqq wa-sh-Shar‘ wa-d-Dīn
al-Bukhārī, Shaikh, a famous Saiy­yid, 376.
Jālāmukhī, idol temple of, in Nagar­koṭ, 331 n 9.
Jālandhar, town of, 342, 382 and n 4,
390, 391 and n 5, 592 and nn 6 and
7, 593.
Jālesar, town of, 343 n 3, 346 n 5,
377 and n 6, 407 n 1.
Jaljīn Bhatī, Rāi, Governor of the
fort of Bhaṭ, at the time of Timūr's
invasion, 355 and n 4.
Jālor, fort of, 262, 265.
Jalwur, town, 379 n 2.
Jām, a town of Khurāsān, 32 n 2,
272 n
1.
Jām, the ruler of Thatha, 332 and
n 6, 333 and n 4, 592 n 9.
Jamāat
, technical sense of, 626 and
n 2.
Jamāl Khān of Dihlī, one of the
learned men of the time of Sulān
Sikandar Lodī, 427.
Jamāl Khān Muftī, Mīyān, one of the
learned men of the time of Islem
Shāh, 506.
Jamāl Khān Sārang-Khānī, one of
the Amīrs of Sulān Ibrāhīm Lodī,
470.
Jamāl Khān, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Sikandar Lodī, 466, 467.
Jamāl, Shaikh, a poet of the time of
Sulān Sikandar Lodī, 426 and n 2.
See the next.
Jamālī, Shaikh,—or
Jamālī Kanbawī of Dihlī, Shaikh,
one of the greatest of the ‘Ulamā
of the time of Sulān Sikandar
Lodī, 411 and n 10, 429, 455 and
n 9.
Jamālu-d-Dīn Abī ‘Umar ‘Umān bin
‘Umar, commonly known as Ibnu-l-
Ḥājib (q. v.), 428 n 6, 467 n 2.
Jamālu-d-Dīn of Hānsī, Shaikh, a
celebrated saint, 322.
Jamālu-d-Dīn Iṣfahānī, the poet, con­temporary of Khāqānī, 339 n 4.
Jamālu-d-Dīn, Mīr, the traditionist,
contemporary of Bābar, 449.
Jamālu-d-Dīn Muḥammad, surname
of Salmān Sāwajī, the poet, 571
and n 9, 633 n 1.
Jamālu-d-Dīn Muḥammad al-Ufī or
‘Aufī, author of a Taẕkira and
other works, 33 n 1.
Jamālu-d-Dīn Ṣadr Astarābādī, Mīr,
contemporary of Humāyūn, 625.
Jamālu-d-Dīn Yāqūt, the Abyssinian,
Chief Amīr under Sulān Raẓẓīyah,
120, 121 and n 2.
Jāmī, Mullā Nūru-d-Dīn ‘Abdu-r-Raḥ­mān, the celebrated author and
poet, 32 and n 2, 270 n 4, 272 and
n 1, 429, 588. Called also by the
title of Maulawī Makhdūmī ‘Ārif.
Jāmi‘u-l-Akhbār of Shaikh Ṣadūq, 139
n 5.
Jāmi‘u-l-Ḥikāyāt
of Muḥammad Ufī
of Merv, 29 n 1, 33 n 1, 220.
Jāmi‘u-r-Rashīdī, 8 n
2. See the Jā­mi‘u-t-Tawārīkh of Rashīdu-d-Dīn.
Jāmi‘u-t-Tawārīkh of Rashīdu-d-Dīn,
8 n 2, 73 n 2, 307 n 4. See the
Tārīkh-i-Rashīdī.
Jamna, the, 343, 354, 355, 356 and nn
1 and 5, 357, 360 n 3, 364, 377 n 6,
385 n
3, 386, 387, 393, 396, 406,
408, 439, 444, 551, 555, 610. See
also under the Jumna and Jamuna.
Jamshīd, ancient king of Persia, 108,
176, 201, 405, 454, 559, 613.
Jammoo. See under Jamūn.
Jammū. See under Jamūn.
Jamū, kingdom of. See Jamūn.
Jamū, river of,—the Jhelum, 355
n 1.
Jamūn, country of, 19 n 2, 349, 355
n 1, 358 n 6, 383, 384 n
1. Called
also Jammoo, Jammū and Jamū.
Jamuna the, called also the Jann or
Jon and the Yamunā, 23 n 3. See
under the Jamna and the Jumna.
Jandī (Junaidī), the Wazīr Niāmu-l-
Mulk, of the Amīrs of Sulān Sham­su-d-Dīn Iyal-timish, 90, 98, 120
and n 1.
Janhār, fortress of,—in Jaunpūr, 415
and n 2, 416 n 4.
Janjūhah, one of the two tribes in­habiting the Jūd hills, 128 n 3.
Jannat Āshīyānī, invades Hindustān,
547.
Jannatābād, new name of Gaur the
capital of Bangāla, so called by
Humāyūn, 82 n 3, 458.
Jānoha, a tribe of the Hindūs, 500.
Jānpānīr, fortress of, 455 and n 1.
Jānūr, town, 379 n 2.
Japhet, son of Noah, 61 n 5, 147 n 1,
231.
Jārin Manjhūr, the country of Sīwis­tān, 249 and n 7.
Jarrett's Āīn-i-Akbarī, 13 n 1, 14 n 3,
17 n 4, 23 n 3, 25 n 5, 27 n 4, 28 n
2, 34 n 5, 36 n 10, 48 n 1, 52 n 3,
62 n 2, 65 n 1, 69 nn
2 and 5, 71 n
3, 72 n 4, 76 n, 81 n 2, 82 nn
3 and
5, 84 n 2, 87 n 1, 91 n 2, 92 n 2, 95
n 5, 124 n 4, 128 n 3, 129 n 2, 130
n 1, 133 n
and n 2, 142 n 1, 193 n
1, 236 n 2, 248 n 2, 249 n 5, 264 n
6, 265 nn
2 and 5, 266 n 4, 304 n 4,
330 n 8, 332 n 5, 357 n 3, 380 n 2,
384 n 3, 410 n 4, 415 n 7, 416 nn
3
and 13, 417 n 7, 420 n 5, 422 n 3,
425 n 2, 439 n 2, 536 n 6, 546 n 7,
557 n 3, 573 n 3, 587 n 7, 588 n 4,
590 n
5.
Jarrett's History of the Caliphs, 12 n 2,
15 n 4, 17 n 2, 18 n 1, 29 n 2, 571 n
2.
Jartaulī, a famous city of Mawās, 386
and n 5.
Jasrat Khakar,—or
Jasrat Khūkar, son of Shaikhā Khū­kar, contemporary of the Saiyyids,
381 and n 5, 382 and nn 2 and 5,
383 and n 3, 384 n, 390 and n 4,
391, 399.
Jasrat Shaikhā, 382 and n 5. Same
as the above (q. v.).
Jatāmānsī
, Sanskrit name of the nard
or Indian Spikenard, 374 n.
Jāts, the,—a tribe of the Hindūs, 29
and n 4, 121, 122 n 1, 129 n 2.
Jauhar
, essence, 397 n 3.
Jauhar
or Jūhar, a rite of self-sacri-
fice, 397 and nn 1 and 3.
Jauhar, Malik, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Muḥammad Tughlaq Shāh,
314.
Jauharan, a term of Muslim theology,
614 n 2.
Jaun, the,—a name of the river Jum­na, 23 n 3, 24 n 4. Called also the
Jon (q. v.).
Jaunān, original name of Sulān Mu­ḥammad Tughlaq Shāh, 329 n 2.
Jaunānpūr, origin of the name Jaun­pūr, 329 n 2.
Jaunpūr, town of, 185, 329 and n 2,
348 n 10, 359, 361, 363 and n 2,
364 and n 3, 387 n 2, 400, 403 and
n 7, 404 and n 2, 408, 409 and n 8,
411 n
2, 413, 414, 415, 417, 420 and
n 8, 430, 444, 445, 446, 451, 456,
457, 459, 467, 471 and n 1, 477,
508, 552.
Jausā,—or
Jausah, a village on the bank of
the Ganges, 459 and n 4, 462 and
n 3.
Jauz
, 535. See under Jauzu māil.
Jauzhar, the head and tail of Draco,
162 and n 4, 193 and n 1.
Jauzu māil, or Datura, a narcotic and
intoxicant, 535 and n 2.
Java, 303 n.
Jawāhiru-l-Khamsa
, the,—name of a
book, 459 n 2.
Jawālamukhī, an idol temple of Na­garkoṭ, 331 and n 9.
Jawālāpūr, for the ford of Mīāpūr on
the Ganges, 131 n 1.
Jawānghār,—or
Jawāngūl, left wing of a Turkish
army, 439 n 4.