Khār-i-Mughailān, a thorny tree, 624
n 1.
Kharisur, country of, 468 n 2.
Kharkū, the chief of Kaithar at the
time of Sulān Fīroz Shāh Tughlaq,
335 nn 5 and 7.
Khartang, a villege near Samarqand,
6 n 3.
Khas
, a fragrant grass, 411 n 1.
Khas Khas
tatties, 411 n 1.
Khāṣṣ-i-Khail
, Chief of Cavalry, 439.
Khātampūr. See under the town­ship of Kūra Khātampūr.
Khaā. See under Khiā.
Khatanī musk, 426.
Khathai, the country of Khiā
(Cathay), 143 n 4, 147 n 1.
Khaīb, Al-,—the Historian of Bagh­dād, 17 n 2.
Khaībpūr, town of, 389 n 3.
Khaīru-d-Dīn, Khwāja-i-Jahān, one
of the Amīrs of Sulān Kaiqubād
Balbanī, 220, 222.
Khatra, country of, 408 n 4.
Khatrī family, the,—protégés of the
Mubārak Shāhī family, 393 and n 3,
397.
Kha
, meanings of the word, 615 n 5.
Kha-i Bābarī (the Bābarī script),
invented by Emperor Bābar, 450.
Khaṭṭu, a village near Nāgor, 357
n 3.
Khaulah, wife of ‘Abdu-llah ibnu-z-
Zubair, the Khalīfah of al-Hijāz,
287 n 2.
Khawāf, a district and town in Khu­rāsān, 609 n 5.
Khawāfī, Zainu-d-Dīn. See under
Khāfī.
Khawārij, the,—a sect of Muḥamma­dan heretics, 157 n 2.
Khawāriqu-l-‘Ādat
, meaning of the
expression, 424 n 9.
Khawāṣpūr, a dependency of Rohtās,
466, 468, 512.
Khawāṣṣ Khān, one of the Maliks of
Sulān Sikandar Lodī, 418, 419.
Khawāṣṣ Khān, servant of Sher Shāh
of the Afghān Sūr dynasty, 457,
468, 474, 486, 487, 488, 489, 492,
493, 494, 495, 512, 525, 537.
Khāwind Naqshbandī, Khwāja, con­temporary of Bābar, 446.
Khazāinu-l-Futūḥ, known also as the
Tārīkh-i-‘Alāī, 252 and n 1, 266.
Khīlī, the betel in the form it is offer-
ed for sale, 303 n.
Khilj, the,—a Turkish tribe of Ghūr,
81 n 2, 86, 88 n 1, 191, 230 n 1,
231.
Khiljī, son of Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn
Muḥammad Sām Ghūrī, 69.
Khiljī, Rāo, Governor of the fort of
Bhaṭ at the time of Tīmūr's inva­sion, 355 n 4
Khiljī Sulāns, the, 475.
Khiljīs, the. See under the tribe of
Khilj.
Khing bud, or the white idol, one of
two enormous images in Bāmiān,
46 n 1.
Khirad Nāma
, one of the works of
Maulānā Jāmī, 272 n 1.
Khīrī
, a flower, 173 and n 3.
Khiā (Cathay), country of, 125, 143
and n 4, 170, 172 n 2, 232 n 5.
Khiāb, the Afghān, Malik,—one of
the Amīrs of Sulān Fīroz Shāh
Tughlaq, 335.
Khiāī Kings of Turkistān, 71 and n 7.
Khiẓr, the Prophet, 92 n 2, 267, 282,
372 and n 3, 373 n, 485 and n 1.
Khiẓr Khān, son of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 256, 258, 266, 267 and n 1,
268, 272, 275, 276, 281, 283, 284.
Khiẓr Khān, Masnad-i-‘Ālī, ibn
Maliku-sh-Sharq ibn Malik Sulei­mān,—first of the Saiyyid dynasty
of Dihlī, 335, 343, 352, 358, 359,
360, 362, 363, 364, 365 and n 4,
375, 376, 378, 379 and n 2, 380,
381 and n 3, 384, 388 and n 1, 395,
400 n
, 409.
Khiẓr Khān, Saiyyid, son of Malik
Mubārak,—one of the Amīrs of
Masnad-i-‘Ālī Khiẓr Khān, of the
Saiyyid dynasty, 378.
Khiẓr Khān, son of Muḥammad Khān
Gauria, Governor of Kor, assumes
the title of Sulān Muḥammad
Bahādur, 556.
Khiẓr Khān Sarak, one of the com-
manders of Shīr Shāh, 474.
Khiẓr Khwāja Khān, one of the Amīrs
of Humāyūn, 591.
Khiẓrābād, a name of Chitor, 258.
Khocares, the, 129 n 1. See the
Khūkhars.
Khondī, Shāh Ṭāhir, one of the poets
of the time of Humāyūn, 626 n 6.
See under Shāh Ṭāhir.
Khoozdār, town of, 48 n 4. See
under Kusdar.
Khor, otherwise known as Shams­ābād, 384 and n 4.
Khorāsān. See under Khurāsān.
Khudādād, name of an elephant of
Sulān Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn, 25 and
n 3.
Khudādād, brother of Jalāl Khān
Jilwānī, one of the Afghān Amīrs
of Islem Shāh, 490.
Khudāwanda-i-Jahān, title of Shāh
Turkān, mother of Ruknu-d-Dīn
Fīroz Shāh, son of Sulān Sham­su-d-Dīn Iyal-timish, 98 n 1.
Khudāwandzāda Qiwāmu-d-Dīn, one
of the Amīrs of Sulān Muḥammad
Tughlaq Shāh, 314.
Khūkhar Rāi, Chief of Kaithar, con­temporary of Sulān Fīroz Shāh
Tughlaq, 335 and n 5.
Khūkhars, the,—a tribe of the
Hindūs, 67 and n 3, 72, 89, 121,
129 and n 1, 335.
Khulafā-e-Rāshidīn, the rightly-guided
Khalīfahs
, 3 and n 6.
Khul Gānw, one of the dependencies
of Lakhnautī, 416.
Khulūf, signification of the word, 176
n 1.
Khumak
, meaning of, 155 n 3.
Khūnzā, Bībī, Malika-i-Jahān, chief
wife of Sulān Ḥusain Sharqī of
Jaunpūr, 409 and n 2.
Khūran, Shaikh, one of the Hindūs-
tānī Amīrs of Bābar, 444, 445.
Khurāsān, 12 n 1, 13 n 1, 14 n 1, 15,
16 and n 2, 27 n 1, 29 and n 6, 32
n 1, 34 n 2, 35 nn
1 and 2, 42 n 1,
45 n 2, 49, 51, 52 n 1, 55 n 3, 59 n 1,
62, 64, 65 n 2, 132, 167 n 3, 250,
272 n 1, 305, 310, 320, 321, 353,
443, 449, 569, 588, 609 n
5, 632.
Khurram, Malik, the Vakīldar,—one
of the Amīrs of Sulān Jalālu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 242.
Khurram, Malik, ahīru-l-Juyūsh,
one of the Amīrs of Sulān Muḥam­mad Tughlaq Shāh, 302.
Khushanjar, Malik, 390 n 3. See
Malik Khushkhabr.
Khushkhabr, Malik, the slave of
Malik Sikandar, the Governor of
Lāhor under the Saiyyids, 390 and
n 3.
Khusrau Ghāzī, Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn
Muḥammad Sām Ghūrī, 75.
Khusrau Malik, son of Khusran Shāh,
the last of the Ghaznevide dynasty,
14, 62 and n 3, 63 and n and n 1,
64 n
1, 66, 67.
Khusrau Shāh, son of Bahrām Shāh,
Ghaznawī, 61, 62 and nn 3 and 4,
63 n 1, 64 and n 1, 67.
Khusrū, an ancient king of Persia,
136, 216.
Khusrū, Amīr,—one of the Amīrs of
Bābar, 437.
Khusrū, Amīr—or,
Khusrū, Mīr, the famous poet of Dih­lī, 96 and n 2, 134 and n 4, 137,
187 and n 2, 188 n 5, 196 and n 1,
197 n 1, 205 n 2, 216, 221, 222, 223,
232, 245, 247 n
, 251, 252 and n 3,
256, 264, 266, 267 n
1, 269 and
n 5, 270 and nn 1 and 6, 271 and
n 4, 273 nn 3 and 4, 274 n 1, 275
and n 1, 298, 301, 339, 340, 455,
610 n 4, 611 n
.
Khusrū Dehlavī, Mīr, the poet. See
the above.
Khusrū Khān, Ḥasan Barāwar bacha,
the favorite of Sulān Qubu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 274, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287,
288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294,
295, 269, 297.
Khusrū Khān, son of Sulān Ghiyāu-
d-Dīn Balban, 219, 220 and n 2,
See under Kaikhusrū.
Khusrūābād, town of, 389.
Khusrū-i-Shā‘irān, Prince of Poets,
title of Mīr Khusrū the famous
poet of Dihlī, 269.
Khusrū-o-Shīrīn of Shaikh Niāmī,
the poet, being one of his Khamsah,
298 n 4.
Khusūf
, an eclipse of the moon, 163
n 1.