Jawārī, the small variety of millet,
549 and n 14.
Jawazahr
, the head and tail of Draco,
162 and n 4, 193 and n 1.
Jazarī, Ibn Aīr, author of the Kāmi­lu-t-Tawārīkh, 624 n 8.
Jazīrat Ibn ‘Umar, an island of the
Tigris above Mosul, 624 n 8.
Jerusalem, 105 n 2, 151 n 2, 368 n 1,
613 n
.
Jesuits, the 130 n 1.
Jews, the, 30 n 1, 279 n, 600 n 9.
Jeypore State, the, 395 n 3. See
under Jaipūr.
Jhāban, town, 379 n 2. Probably
Jhāīn (q. v.) is intended.
Jhāīn, a city near Rantanbhor, better
known as Naushahr, 257 and n 1,
259, 283, 379 and n 2. Called else­where Chhāīn (q. v.).
Jhajhar, town of, 325 n 3.
Jhālawān, a district of Bilūchistān, 48
n 4.
Jhelam, the,—or
Jhelum, the, one of the rivers of the
Panjāb, 19 n 4, 23 n 3, 44 n 6, 89
n 5, 128 n 3, 355 n
1, 392. Called
also the Jhilam.
Jhilam, river, the, 44 n 6. See the
Jhelum.
Jhīlam, town of, 389, 390.
Jhīlam, a District of the Panjāb, 437
n 8.
Jhosī, a town near Allahabad, 415
n 4.
Jhunjhnū, a town in Rājputāna, 69
n 2.
Jidjer, the,—the river Jahjar, 325
n 3.
Jigilī, Abū Muḥammad ‘Abdu-r-Raḥ­mān, the Khaīb of Samarqand,
159 n.
Jihād
, holy war in defence of Islām,
293 and n 4, 356 n 4.
Jihāds
, the two—, 191 n 4.
Jihādu-l-Akbar
, or the greater war­fare, 191 n 4.
Jihādu-l-Aṣghar
, or the lesser warfare,
191 n 4.
Jīḥūn, the,—the Oxus, 38, 45 n 2, 166
and n 1, 209. Called also the Jai­ḥūn (q. v.).
Jī Jī Anāgah, wet-nurse of Prince
Akbar, 568 n 6.
Jilaudār
, an attendant to run beside
the horse, 503 and n 3.
Jildū
, a Turkī word in the sense of
in‘ām or reward, 596 n 6.
Jīr, 593 n 9.
Jirm
, the separate members of the
body, 630 n 6.
Jirm-i-Qamar
, rays of the moon, 630
and n 6.
Jītal
, an imaginary division of the
dām, 499 n 3.
Job, Book of, 198 n 2, 630 n 4.
Jodhpūr, a city of Rājputānā, 379 n 1,
512, 563.
Jodhpūr State, in Rājputānā, 379
n 1.
John, St., the Gospel of, 146 n 6.
Jomanes, the,—a name of the river
Jumna, 24 n 6.
Jon, the,—a name of the river
Jamuna or Jumna, 24 and n 4,
25, 541. See also the Jaun.
Jones, Sir William, 76 n.
Joseph, the Patriarch, 89, 115 and
n 2, 217.
Joshua, the son of Nun, 373 n.
Journal of the Asiatic Society of
Bengal, 186 n 6, 191 n 3, 324 n 6,
325 n 3, 326 n, 546 nn
1, 3 and 7,
609 n 3.
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society,
16 n 2, 33 n 1, 47 n 2, 59 n 1, 87
n 1, 103 n 1, 109 n 4, 115 n
and n 3,
141 n 4, 330 n 7, 479 n 7, 571
n
2.
Jūd hills, the, 128 and n 3, 185, 186,
221. See also under the Koh-i-
Jūd.
Jūd tribe, the,—one of the two
tribes inhabiting the Jūd hills, 128
n 3.
Jūhar
or Jauhar, a rite of self-sacri-
fice, 397 n 1, 422, 476.
Jūkī Bahādur Uzbakī, one of the
Amīrs of Mīrzā ‘Askarī, 568 n 1.
Jūlāha
, a weaver, 528 n 1.
Juldū
, a Turkī word in the sense of
in‘ām or reward, 596 n 6.
Jūlga
, a dale, 438 n 7.
Julius Cæsar, 76 n.
Jumlatu-l-Mulk
, chief finance-minister
of the State, 625.
Jumna, the, 24 nn 4 and 6, 122 n 1,
220, 227, 228, 231, 235, 244, 325
and n 3, 326 and n, 327 n 5. See
also under the Jamna.
Jūnā Khān, or Jūnān Khān, Governor
of Shamsābād under Sulān Maḥ­mūd Sharqī, 403 and nn 4 and 5,
404 n 2.
Jūnā Shāh, or Jūnān Shāh, Khān-i-
Jahān
, son of Malik Qubūl, one of
the Maliks of Sulān Fīroz Shāh
Tughlaq, 333, 336 n 5, 337 n 7.
Junaid, the famous Muḥammadan
Saint, 59 n 1.
Junaid Birlās, Sulān, of the Amīrs
of Bābar, Governor of Karra and
Mānikpūr, 439, 446, 468, 469.
Junaidī, the Wazīr Niāmu-l-Mulk,
of the Amīrs of Sulān Shamsu-d-
Dīn Iyal-timish, 90, 98, 120 and
n 1.
Jundī (Junaidī), the Wazīr, 120 and
n 1. See the above.
Junūbī,—or
Junūnī Badakhshī, Maulānā, the enig­matist, one of the poets of the
time of Humāyūn, 605 and n 5.
Jupiter, notes on the planet, 78 and
n 2, 151 n 4, 154 n 4, 630 n 2.
Jureah canal, the,—a canal leading
from the Sutlej, 325 n 3.
Jurjān, the capital of Khwārazm,
23 n 1, 34 n 2, 52 n 5. Called also
Gargang.
Jurjān, Sea of,—the Caspian, 153
n 1.