Mīr Jamālu-d-Dīn, the traditionist,
contemporary of Shāh Ismā‘īl
Ṣafawī, 449.
Mīr Khond, the Historian, contem-
porary of Humāyūn, 27 n 3, 450.
Mīr Khusrū, son of Amīr Maḥmūd
Saifu-d-Dīn, the famous poet of
Dihlī, 96 and n 2, 99 and n 3, 134
and n 4. See under Khusrū.
Mīr Saiyyid Khān of Jaunpūr, 420
n 8.
Mīr Saiyyid Muḥammad of Jaunpūr,
son of Mīr Saiyyid Khān, one of
the great walīs, 420 and n 8, 508
and n 8.
Mīr Saiyyid Muḥammad Mīr ‘Adl,
546.
Mīr Saiyyid Na‘matu-llāh Rusūlī, the
poet, contemporary of Islem Shāh,
533 and n 7, 534 and n 4.
Mīr Saiyyid Rafī‘u-d-Dīn Ṣafawī of
Ij, contemporary of Sher Shāh,
476 and n 5, 479, 513, 514.
Mīr Saiyyid Sharīf, a distinguished
author, 560.
Mi‘rāj, or the Ascent, nocturnal jour-
ney of Muḥammad to heaven, 105
n 2, 292 n 6.
Mīrak ibn Ḥasan, the Vakīl, one of
the Amīrs of the Ghaznavide dy-
nasty, 48, 49.
Mīrak, town of, 406 n 9.
Mīran, Amīr, one of the Maliks of
Sulān Fīroz Shāh, 333 n 2.
Mīrān Ṣadr Nāib-i-‘Arẓ-i-Mamālik, a
protégé of the Mubāruk Shāhī fami-
ly, 393, 394, 395, 397.
Mīrān Saiyyid Jalāl of Badāon, one of
the learned men of Hindūstān, 427.
Mīrat,—or
Mīrath, fortress of, 24 n 1, 345, 358
n 3, 359, 406, 597.
Mir'āt-i-Jahān Numā, an historical
work, 66 n 2.
Mīr-i-Kūe, Superintendent of Roads,
401.
Mīrzā Handāl,—or
Mīrzā Hindāl, 453, 458, 459, 462, 464,
465, 559, 560, 567 and n 10, 574,
578, 579, 580, 586, 587.
Mīrzā Ḥusain Khān, one of the Amīrs
of Humāyūn, 574.
Mīrzā Kāmrān, brother of Humāyūn,
453, 456, 462, 464, 465, 494, 500,
501, 502, 503, 567, 574, 578, 579,
580, 581 and n 3, 582 and n 7, 583
and n 3, 584 and n 3, 585, 586,
588, 606 n 3.
Mīrzā Murād, son of Shāh Ṭahmāsp of
Persia, 572, 573 and n 1, 575, 576.
Mīrzā Pīr Muḥammad, grandson of
the great Amīr Tīmūr, King of
Khurāsān and Māwarā-an-Nahr,
352, 353, 355.
Mīrzā Yādgār Nāṣir, one of the Amīrs
of Humāyūn, 462, 463, 464, 465,
560, 561, 562.
Mishk, or Musk, notes on, 172 n 2.
Mishkātu-l-Maṣābīḥ, Mathew's, 58 n 3,
150 n 2, 191 n 5, 199 n 3, 200 n,
279 n, 292 n 6, 293 n, 302 n 2, 356
n 4, 412 n 1, 449 n 8, 509 n 3, 571
n 1, 585 n 10, 601 n, 603 n and n 5,
613 n, 625 n 5.
Miqāl, a weight for gold and silver
and also a coin, 19 n, 25 and
n 1.
Miṣqal,—or
Miṣqalat, shell for polishing, 620 and
n 1.
Miṣrā‘, hemistich, a term of Prosody,
606 n 4.
Mīwāt, district and town of, 129 and
n 2, 134 and n 1, 185, 337, 343,
344 and n 7, 345, 350, 358, 359, 365
and n 8, 366 n, 375, 381, 385, 391,
398, 419, 447, 488, 489, 537.
Mīwātīs, the, 447.
Mīyān ‘Abdu-llah Niyāzī, a Niyāzī
Afghān who adopted the manners
of a Mahdī, 508, 509, 510, 512, 518,
520.
Miyān Abu-l-Fatḥ of Thanesar,—a
learned doctor of the time of Islem
Shāh, 513.
Miyān Bahwa Lūhānī, Governor of
Baiāna, one of the Amīrs of Islem
Shāh, 518 and n 4, 519.
Mīyān Bhoh, the Vazīr and chief of
the Amīrs of Sulān Sikandar Lodī,
432, 435.
Mīyān Ḥātim Sanbalī or Sambhalī, a
learned Doctor of Hindūstān, 428,
506, 545.
Mīyān Ḥusain Farmalī, one of the
Amīrs of the Lodī dynasty, 435.
Miyān Jamāl Khān Muftī, one of the
Chief ‘Ulamā of the time of Islem
Shāh, 506.
Miyān Kālī or Kāhī Kābulī, one of the
poets of the time of Humāyūn, 584
n 3. See under Kāhī.
Mīyān Lādan, one of the learned men
of Hindūstān, 427.
Miyān Shaikh of Gwāliār, a learned
doctor, 427.
Mīyān Shaikh Abu-l-Fatḥ, son of
Shaikh-allahdīyah of Khairābād,
contemporary of Badāonī, 546.
Mīyān Tāusīn, the well-known musi-
cian, contemporary of ‘Adlī, 557.
Mīyān Yaḥya Paran, one of the gen-
erals of Sikandar Sūr (q. v), 547.
Mīyān Yaḥya Tūran, governor of
Sambhal, one of the generals of
Sulān Ibrāhīm Sūr (q. v), 545, 546.
Miyānī Afghāns, the, 554.
Mīzān, the constellation Libra, 142
n 2.
Modern Egyptians, Lane's, 177 n 4,
192 n 3, 412 n 1, 503 n 2.
Moghuls, the, 80, 103 n 3. See under
the Mughūls.
Mongīr, town of, 458.
Mongol dynasty of China, the, 353
n 1.
Mongols, the. See under the Mughūls.
Monorpour, fortress of, 93 n 1.
Moon, Splitting of the, miracle per-
formed by Muḥammad, 110 n 4.
Morādābād, in Rohilkund, 364 n 4.
Moradabad District, N.-W. Provinces,
546 n 5.
Moro, a peacock, 502 and n 3.
Mosambique, 454 n 7.
Moses of the Scriptures, 372 and n 3,
373 n.
Mosul, capital of Mesopotamia, 61 n
5, 394 n 5, 624 n 8.
Muaiyyidu-l-Mulk Sinjarī, Khwāja,—
one of the Amīrs of the Ghorī dy-
nasty, 74 and n 1, 77 n 1, 80.
Mu‘all, name of the seventh arrow
in the game of maisir, 369 n 1.
Mu‘allaqāt, the,—seven well-known
poems of the Jāhilīyat, 99 n 6, 109
n 4.
Mu‘amm, enigma, 456 n 7, 605 and
n 8.
Mu‘āwiyah, first Khalīfah of the
House of Umaiyyah, 157 n 2, 158 n.
Mu‘aam, Khwāja, one of the Amīrs
of Humāyūn, 568.
Mu'aẕẕin, the crier of the hour of
prayer, 472 and n 6, 600 and n 9,
601 n.
Mubaiyyin, a book on the Ḥanīfite
Theology, 450 and n 7.
Mubārak, Malik, one of the Amīrs of
Sulān Jalālu-d-Dīn Khiljī, 233.
Mubārakābād, a city on the Jamna,
393 and n 7.
Mubārak Kabīr, Malik,—one of the
Amīrs of the Tughlaq Shāhī dy-
nasty, 342 and n 1.
Mubārak Khān, son of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-
Dīn Khiljī 272, 273. See Sulān
Qubu-d-Dīn Mubārak Shāh.
Mubārak Khān Auḥadī, of the Auḥadī
family of Baiāna, 385.
Mubārak Khān, son of Bahādur Nāhir,
one of the Amīrs of the Fīrūz Shāhī
dynasty, 360 and n 5.
Mubārak Khān Lūhānī, Malik,—one
of the Amīrs of Sulān Buhlūl Lodī,
409, 413 and n 12.
Mubārak Khān, son of Malik Rājū,
one of the Amīrs of the Fīrūz Shāhī
dynasty, 349.
Mubārak Khān, Governor of Sambal,
contemporary of Sulān Ḥusain
Sharqī of Jannpūr, 406 n 3.
Mubārak Kotwāl, one of the Amīrs of
the Saiyyid dynasty, 398.
Mubārak of Nāgor, Shaikh, father of
Shaikh Abu-l-Faẓl ‘Allāmī, 421,
516.