350 and n 3, 351, 354. See under
Iqbāl Khān Malloo.
Mallū Khān, Governor of Mālwā, one
of the slaves of the Khiljī Sulāns,
475.
Malot, in the Jhīlam District of the
Panjāb, 437 and n 8, 438 and
n 7.
Malūta, district, 349.
Mālwā, or Mālwah, 95 and n 4, 129,
264 and n 4, 274, 292, 313, 379 n 2,
384 n 5, 385 n 3, 398, 399, 422 n
3,
423, 424 and n 4, 425, 432, 433,
454, 474, 475, 492, 495, 554.
Ma'mūn, Al-, the ‘Abbāside Khalīfah,
157 n 1.
Man
, a weight, 72 n 4.
Mān, Rājā, the Governor of Gwāliār,
contemporary of Sulān Buhlūl and
Sulān Sikandar Lodī, 410, 414 and
n 5, 432 and n 7.
Manāt, an idol worshipped by the
old Arabs, 28 and n 1.
Manḍāgar,—or
Manḍāgarh, a town in the district of
Āgra, 552 and n 12.
Manḍākar, 552 n 12. See the above.
Mandalayer, a fortress on the western
bank of the Chambal, 420 n 5.
Mandāwar, fortress of, 93 n 1, 233,
236.
Mandawī, name of a place, 326 n 2.
Mandilī, town of, 326 and n and n 2.
Mandir, town of, 455.
Mandlāer, town of, 420 n 5.
Mandla Gaṛh, one of the two chief
fortresses of the province of
Bāndhū, 417 n 7.
Mandler, town of, 420 n 5, 422 n 2.
Mandrāyal, fortress of, 420 and n 5.
Mandsūr, a dependency of Mālwā,
454.
Mandū, town of, 93 n 1, 472 and n 5.
Called also Mandawar.
Mandūī (Mandilī), town of, 326 and n
and n 2.
Mandūr, fort of, 93 and n 1.
Mandwar, town of, 93 n 1.
Manér, or Munér, a town on the
banks of the Ganges, 82 and n 1.
Māngalāī
, a Turkī word signifying
advance-guard of an army, 592 n 5.
Māngaṛh, fortress of, 500 and n 8,
527 and n 2.
Mangburnī, Sulān Jalālu-d-Dīn, son
of Sulān Muḥammad Khwārazm
Shāh,—the last of the Khwārazm
Shāhī dynasty, 91 and n 1.
Manghalāī
, advance-guard of an army,
592 n 5.
Mangsāl, fort of, variously called
Walaj and Bajj, 34 n 7.
Mangū Khān, nephew of Sulān
‘Alān-d-Dīn Khiljī, 259.
Mangū Khān, infant son of Sulān
‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 289.
Mangūtah, the Mughūl, one of the
Generals of Chingīz Khān, 126 n 1.
Mānī, Mīrzā, or Mīrzā Amānī (q. v.),
a poet of the time of Humāyūn,
587 and n 3.
Mānī Mālā
, a treatise on gems, 631 n.
Manīḥ
, one of the blank arrows in
the game of maisir, 369 n 1.
Manījeh,—or
Manīzha, daughter of Afrāsiyāb, one
of the heroines of the Shāh-nāma,
116 n
5, 180 and n 2.
Mānik, Malik, a slave of Sulān
‘Alāu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 251.
Manik Deo, Rāi, the Rājā of Dholpūr,
contemporary of Sulān Sikandar
Lodī, 419 and n 4.
Manikganj, pass of,—in Gujrāt, 313.
Mānikpūr, district and town on the
Ganges, 221, 241, 243, 247 n, 325,
411 n
2, 415, 468.
Manikpūr, ford of, on the Ganges, 325.
Mankbarnin, for Sulān Jalālu-d-Dīn
Mangburnī (q. v.), 91 n 1.
Mānkoṭ, a fort in the northern hill-
range of the Panjāb, 498.
Manoarpūr, town of, 93 n 1.
Manqabat
, use of the word, 627 n 3.
Manqalāī
, in Turkī the advance-guard
of an army, 592 n 5.
Mān Singh, Governor of Gwāliār,
414 n 5, 432 and n 7. See under
Rājā Mān.
Manṣūr, Al-, the ‘Abbāside Khalīfah,
74 n 2.
Manṣūr, Saiyyid, one of the Generals
of Amīr Muḥammad, son of Sulān
Maḥmūd Ghaznawī, 46.
Manṣūr, son of Sulān Maudūd Ghaz-
nawī, 48.
Manṣūr ibn Nūḥ, of the dynasty of
the Sāmānīs, the Kings of Khurā-
sān and Māwarāu-n-Nahr, 13 n 1,
14 and n 1, 16 and n 2.
Manṣūr ibn Sa‘īd, Khwāja, 94.
Manṣūrah, or Al-Manṣūrah, old capi-
tal of Sindh, 36 and n 10.
Manṣūrpūr, town, 98, 330.
Manūchihr Shirwān Shāh, King of
Khurāsān, patron of the famous
poet Khāqānī, 583 n 4.
Manūchihrī Dāmaghānī, Ḥakīm
Abu-n-Najm Aḥmad, a poet of the
time of Sulān Mas‘ūd Ghaznawī,
46 and n 4.
Maqāmāt of ‘Amīd Abū Naṣr
, Al-
Baihaqī's, 32 n.
Maqāmāt
of Qāẓī Ḥamīd of Balkh,
76 n 1.
Maqāmāt
of Shaikh Aḥmad Khaṭṭu,
surnamed Ganjbakhsh, 358.
Maqāmāt-i-Ḥarīrī, 348.
Maqbūl, Malik, 337 n 7. Same as
Khān-i-Jahān Malik Qubūl the
Vazīr, of the Amīrs of Sulān Fīroz
Shāh.
Mardhan Koṭ, or Bardhan Koṭ, a city
of Tibet, 84 n.
Margan
, a Turkī word signifying ‘an
archer,’ 250 and n 6.
Marghūb, a slave of Sulān Ibrāhīm
Lodī, 444.
Marḥabā, Malik, slave of Iqbāl Khān
Malloo of the Maliks of the Fīroz
Shāhī dynasty, 364.
Mārhara, township of, in the Doāb,
407 n 1. See also Mārhira.
Marhaṭ or Maharashtra, country of
the Marhattas, 265 and n 4, 283.
Marhattas, the, 283.
Marhiṛa,—or
Mārhira, town of, 123 and n 2. See
under Mārhara.
Maria, sister of Martha and Lazarus,
198 n 2.
Mariam, the Mother of Jesus, 372
and n 1.
Mārī galah, fortress of, 46. Called
also Mārīkala (q. v.).
Mārīkala, a frontier fort on the
Jhilam river, 44 and n 6. Called
also Mārkala and Mārī galah (q. v.).
Mārīkala, a pass between Rāwal
Pindī and Attock, 44 n 6.
Mārkala, on the Jhilam, 44 n 6. See
under the Mārīkala fort.
Markanda river, the, 330 n 7.
Mār Muhra
, a mineral of an emerald
colour, 117 n 4.
Mars, notes on the planet, 217
n 5.
Martha, sister of Maria and Lazarus,
198 n 2.
Martyr Prince, the, 188 n 2, 199 n 3.
See the Khān-i-Shahīd Sulān
Muḥammad, son of Sulān Ghiyā-
u-d-Dīn Balban.
Ma‘rūf Farmalī, Malik,—one of the
Amīrs of the Lodī dynasty, 444.
Marv, a city of Khurāsān, 35. See
under Merv.
Marwān, Malik, 335, 352. See under
Marwān-i-Daulat.
Marwān ibnu-l-Ḥakam, a Khalīfah of
the Umaiyyad dynasty, 59.
Marwān Daulat,—or
Marwān-i-Daulat, Maliku-sh-Sharq,
Nāṣiru-l-Mulk Fīrūz Shāhī, Gover-
nor of Multān under Sulān Firoz
Shāh, 335, 352, 376.
Marwānī, Walīd ibn ‘Abdu-l-Malik,
the Umaiyyad Khalīfah, 12 and n 2.
Mārwār, the country of, 384 n 3, 465,
476, 562, 563.
Mashhad (Meshed), the holy city of,
in Persia, 569, 573 and n 3.
Mashk, goat-skin bag for carrying
water, 331 n 10.
Masīḥ, Christ, 267.