Maḥmūd Sharqī of Jaunpūr, Sulān,
contemporary of Sulān Buhlūl
Lodī, 402, 403 and nn 3 and 7, 420
n 8.
Maḥmūd, Sulān, son of Sulān Sikan-
dar Lodī, the ruler of Patna, 470,
471 and n 1.
Maḥmūd I, Sulān, 420 n 8. See
Sulān Maḥmūd Sharqī of Jaun-
pūr.
Maḥmūd Tarmatī, Malik, one of the
Amīrs of Maḥmūd Shāh of the
Fīroz Shāhī dynasty, 363.
Maḥmūd ibn Tughlaq Shāh, for Sulān
Muḥammad ibn Sulān Ghiyāu-d-
Dīn Tughlaq Shāh, 135 n.
Maḥmūd Zābulī, a name of Sulān
Maḥmūd of Ghaznīn, 17.
Mahnah, a small town between Abī-
ward and Sarakhs in Khurāsān,
43 and n 2.
Mahoba, district of, 335.
Mahomed Qāsim. See under Muḥam-
mad ibn Qāsim a-aqafī.
Mahometans, the, 80 n 5, 82 n 1, 129
n 2. See also under the Muḥam-
madans and the Muslims.
Mahtah, a small town in Khurāsān,
43 n 2.
Mâhurâ or Mathra, a sacred city of
the Hindūs, 24 n 6.
Maihana, a small town between Abī-
ward and Sarakhs in Khurāsān,
43 n 2.
Mainpūrī, town of, 377 n 5, 386 n 3,
414 n 13.
Mainpūrī District, 386 n 3.
Mainpūrī Chauhāns, a tribe of Rāj-
pūts, 414 n 13.
Maisir, Al-, a game of the ancient
Arabs, 369 n 1.
Maithilī country, the, 286.
Majbaristān, province of, 34 and
nn 6 and 7.
Majdūd, Amīr, son of Sulān Mas‘ūd
ibn Maḥmūd Ghaznawī, 44 n 1.
Majhaulī, a village in the Gorakhpūr
District on the north bank of the
Gandak, 409 n 5.
Majma‘u-l-Baḥrain of Shaikh Nāṣīf,
containing his Maqāmāt, 369 n 1.
Majma‘u-l-Fuṣaḥā, Lives of the Poets,
17 nn 1 and 3, 35 n 1, 38 n 4, 46
n 4, 53 n, 54 nn 1, 2 and 3, 56 nn 2
and 3, 73 n 1, 76 n, 78 n 2, 99 nn 2,
3 and 4, 106 n 6, 134 n 3, 135 n,
165 n 1, 187 n 2, 270 n 6, 271 n 4,
297 n, 298 n 4, 339 n 4, 341 nn 1
and 2, 571 n 9, 582 n, 584 n.
Majnūn, the hero of the romance of
Lailī-o-Majnūn, lover of Lailī,
620.
Makhdūm ‘Ālam, the Governor of
Ḥājīpūr, one of the Amīrs of the
Wālī of Bangāla, contemporary of
Sher Shāh, 469, 470.
Makhdūm Ganjshakar, Shaikh Farī-
du-d Dīn Mas‘ūd, 132. See under
Ganj-i-shakkar.
Makhdūm-i-Jahāniyān Sayyidu-s-Sā-
dāt Shaikh Jalālu-l-Ḥaqq al-
Bukhārī, 376.
Makhdūma-i-Jahān, mother of Sulān
Mubārak Shāh of the Saiyyid dy-
nasty of Dihlī, 391.
Makhdūma-i-Jahān, mother of Sulān
Muḥammad, son of Ghiyāu-d-Dīn
Tughlaq Shāh, 303.
Makhdūmu-l-Mulk Mullā ‘Abdu-llah
of Sulānpūr, Shaikhu-l-Islām and
Ṣadru-ṣ-Ṣudūr under Islem Shāh,
506 and n 2, 513, 514, 515, 517,
518, 519, 521, 523, 525, 534.
Makhdūmzāda-i-‘Abbāsī of Baghdād,
a prince of the House of ‘Abbās,
the Khalīfahs of Baghdād, 311 and
n 4, 322.
Makhdūmzāda-i-Baghdādī, Prince
Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Muḥammad, 311
n 4. Same as the above (q. v.).
Makhzan-i-Asrār of Shaikh Niāmī,
being one of his five works called
collectively Khamsa-i-Niāmī, 298
n 4, 449 and n 2.
Makhzanu-l-Adwiyah, a work on medi-
cine, 41 n 2, 101 n 1, 109 n 4, 117
n 4, 118 n, 172 n 2, 182 n 4, 452,
484 n 1, 535 n 2, 550 n 1, 586 n,
627 n 2.
Makhzanu-l-Asrār of Shaikh Niāmī,
298 n 4. See under Makhzan-i-
Asrār.
Makka, city of, 8 and n 4, 21 n 1,
51, 56, 110 n 4, 111 n, 133 n 2,
149 n, 151 n 2, 158 n 1, 176 n,
216 n, 279 n, 368 n 1, 420 and n 8,
443, 450, 480 and nn 1 and 5, 504,
507, 508, 582, 583 and n 4, 585 and
nn 1 and 6, 600 n 9, 634. See
Mecca.
Makrān, province of, 91.
Mākūla. See under Ibn Mākūla.
Malabar, 484 n 1.
Malāgīr. See under Malayāgīr.
Malānwah, township of, 598 n 10.
Malāūn, a hill fort in the Panjāb, 598
and n 10.
Malāwah, township of, 598 n 10.
Malayāgīr, the yellow sandal, uses of,
484 n 1.
Malayālam or Malabar, 484 n 1.
Māldeo, Rāī, the ruler of Nāgor and
Jaunpūr and Rājā of the kingdom
of Mārwār, contemporary of Sher
Shāh and Humāyūn, 476, 477, 478,
479, 562, 563, 564 and n 6, 565 n 1.
Malfūāt-i-Tīmūrī, the, 355 nn 1 and
4, 356 n 5, 358 nn 2, 4 and 6, 366
n 1, 386 n 8.
Malgaṛh, fortress of, 500 n 8.
Malhab, name of a place, 258 and
n 4.
Malik Aḥmad, son of Amīr Khusrū,
the famous poet of Dihlī, 339, 340.
Mālik ibn Anas, founder of the
Mālikī School of Muḥammadan
Jurisprudence, 18 n 1, 59 n 1.
Mālik al-Ashtar, one of the Generals
of ‘Alī ibn Abī Ṭālib, the fourth
Khalīfah, 157 n 2, 158 n.
Malik Chhajū. See under Chhajū.
Malik Shāh Saljūqī, Sulān, of the
Saljūqī dynasty in Khurāsān, 38
n 4, 40, 55 and n 3.
Malika-i-Jahān, daughter of Sulān
‘Alāu-d-Dīn of Badāon, 405.
Malika-i-Jahān, the Queen-consort
of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 272.
Malika-i-Jahān Bībī Khūnzā, chief
wife of Sulān Ḥusain Sharqī of
Jaunpūr, 409 and n 2.
Malika-i-Jahān, the Queen-consort of
Sulān Jalālu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 237,
244, 247 n.
Malik-i-Jahān, mother of Nāṣiru-d-
Dīn Maḥmūd Shāh, son of Sham-
su-d-Dīn Iyal-timish, 131.
Mālīkhūliā, Melaucholia, defiuition of,
5 and n 3.
Malīkota, town of, 387 n 1.
Maliku-l-Kalām, or Lord of Elo-
quence, a literary title, 134.
Maliku-l-Kalām Fakhru-l-Mulk ‘Amīd
Tūlakī (Lūmakī), 99 and n 4. See
‘Amīd Lūmakī.
Maliku-l-munajjimīn, or Prince of
Astrologers, 622 and n 2.
Maliku-l-Umarā Fakhru-d-Dīn, the
Kotwāl of Dihlī, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn Kaiqubād, of
the Balbanī dynasty, 220 nn 2 and 3,
227, 229, 260 and n 2, 261 and n 4.
Maliku-sh-Sharq ‘Imādu-l-Mulk Maḥ-
mūd Ḥasan, one of the Maliks of
Mubārak Shāh of the Sayyid dy-
nasty, 383, 386, 387, 392.
Maliku-sh-Sharq Kamālu-l-Mulk, the
Vazīr, one of the Amīrs of the
Sayyid dynasty, 395, 396.
Maliku-sh-Sharq Malik Sikandar,
Governor of Lāhor under Shaikh
‘Alī of Kābul, 389.
Maliku-sh-Sharq Marwān-i-Daulat,
called Nuṣrat Khān, one of the
Amīrs of Sulān Fīroz Shāh Tugh-
laq, 335.
Maliku-sh-Sharq Mubārak Shāh
Qaranqal, the ruler of Jaunpūr,
360, 361.
Maliku-sh-Sharq Suleimān, son of
Malik Marwān-i-Daulat, of the
Amīrs of Fīroz Shāh, 335 and n 4,
352, 375.
Mallī, the,—a people of the Panjāb,
389 n 2.
Malloo Khān, brother of Sārang
Khān, one of the Amīrs of the
Fīroz Shāhī dynasty, 349 and n 10,