Mubārakpūr, 398.
Mubārak Qaranqal, Malik, assumes
the title of Mubārak Shāh as ruler
of Jaunpūr, 360 and n 1.
Mubārak Shāh, son of Sulan ‘Alāu-d-
Dīn Khiljī. See under Sulān
Qubu-d-Dīn Khiljī.
Mubārak Shāh, son of Sulān Buhlūl
Lodī, 409.
Mubārak Shāh, son of Masnad-i-‘Ālī
Khiẓr Khān, of the Saiyyid dynasty
of Dihlī, 10 n 2, 307, 381 and n 3,
382, 383, 384, 385 and n 3, 386, 387,
388 and n 2, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393,
394, 395, 396, 398, 400 and n, 403.
Mubārak Shāh, Sulānu-sh-Sharq,
Qaranqal, ruler of Jaunpūr, 360 and
n 1, 361, 363.
Mubārak Shāhī
, an historical work by
Yaḥy ibn Aḥmad Sirhindī, 10 n 2,
67 and n 2. See under Tārīkh-i-
Mubārak Shāhī
.
Mubāriz Khān, one of the great Amīrs
of the Fīrūz Shāhī dynasty, 375.
Mubāriz, Malik, one of the Amīrs of
Mubārak Shāh of the Saiyyid dy-
nasty, 384.
Mubāriz Khān, son of Niām Khān
Sūr, ascends the throne with the
title of Muḥammad ‘Ādil or more
commonly ‘Adlī, 495 and n 4, 535
and nn 6 and 7, 536. See under
‘Adlī.
Mubashir Chap, Islām Khān, the
Vazīr, one of the Amīrs of the
Fīrūz Shāhī dynasty, 344, 345.
See also under Islām Khān.
Mubashshir, one of the Sirdars of
Sulān ‘Alān-d-Dīn Khiljī, 273.
Mubīn, a commentary by Shaikh
Zainu-d-Dīn on the Mubaiyyin
(q. v.
), 450 and n 7.
Mufarriḥ Sulānī, Malik, governor of
Gujrāt under Sulān Fīroz Shāh,
334 and n 3, 337, 346. See under
Farḥatu-l-Mulk.
Mufīẓ, Al-,—the man in charge of the
arrows in the game of maisir, 369
n 1.
Muftī
, a law officer who gives fatws
or legal decisions, 317 and n 6.
Mughailān
, for Ummu-ghailān, a
thorny tree, 550 and n 1, 624 n 1.
Mughaiyyir
, variable as applied to the
pulse, 533 n.
Mughals, the. See under the Mughūls.
Mughīrah ibn al-Aḥnaf Yezdibah or
Yezdezbah, ancestor of Imām
Bukhārī, 6 n 3.
Mughī of Hānsī, Qāẓī, one of the
most learned men of the time of
Sulān Jalāla-d-Dīn Khiljī, 245.
Mughnī fī-sharḥi-l-Mūjaz, Sadīdī's
commentary on the Mūjaz in Medi-
cine, 31 n, 320 n.
Mughul Road from Agra to Allahabad,
486 n 6.
Mughulpūr, popular name of the town
of Ghiyāpūr, 236.
Mughūls, the, 125 and n 3, 126 and n
1, 129 n 2, 132, 145 n 2, 186, 187,
188, 190 n
2, 192, 196 and n 1, 205
n
2, 207, 220, 222, 236, 249, 250 and
n 5, 251, 252, 254, 256, 258, 261,
264, 292, 293, 305 n 3, 323, 328,
335, 359, 365 n 8, 441, 454, 463, 464,
469, 471, 474, 486 n
6, 503, 543, 552,
556, 575 n 1, 592, 593 and n 9, 618
n
1.
Muhājirīn, the,—Mecean Muslims
who emigrated with Muḥammad,
215, 216 n.
Muḥammad, the Prophet, 2 n 5, 3 nn
4 and 6, 4, 12 n 1, 18 n 1, 46 n 5,
57, 59 and nn 2 and 4, 74 n 2, 97
n
4, 105 and n 2, 106 nn 1 and 5,
110 nn 1, 3 and 4, 111 n, 139 n 5,
147 n 3, 149 n, 156 n 5, 158 n 1,
194, 201 n 2, 207, 216 n, 254, 292
n 6, 303 n 4, 368 n 1, 369 n 3, 376,
412 n 1, 420 n 8, 446 n 5, 473, 474,
480, 488 n 5, 490 n 5, 505 n
6, 519
and n 4, 572, 577 n, 585 n 10,
589, 596, 602 n
7, 622 and n 3,
626 n
1, 627 and n 3, 631 n 1, 633,
636.
Muḥammad ibn ‘Abdu-llah ibn al-
Ḥasan ibn al-Ḥasan ibn ‘Alī ibn
Abī Ṭālib, 74 n 2.
Muḥammad ibn ‘Abdu-ṣ-Ṣamad, one
of the Amīrs of the Ghaznivide
dynasty, 44.
Muḥammad ‘Ādil, commonly known
as ‘Adlī, of the Afghān Sūr dynasty
of Dihlī, 495, 536. See under
Mubāriz Khān, son of Niām Khān
Sūr and also under ‘Adlī.
Muḥammad ‘Ādil, of the Tughlaq
Shāhī dynasty, 274. See under
Muḥammad ibn Tughlaq Shāh and
also under Malik Fakhru-d-Dīn
Jūnā.
Muḥammad ‘Aufī, author of the
Jāmi‘u-l-Ḥikāyāt and Taẕkiratu-sh-
Shu‘arā
, 220. See Muḥammad Ūfī.
Muḥammad ‘Azīz, Mullā, one of the
Amīrs of Humāyūn, 460 and n 1.
Muḥammad of Badāon, Saiyyid, one
of the Maliks of Sulān Fīroz Shāh,
335 and n 6.
Muḥammad Bahādur, Sulān of Kor,
556 and n 3. See Khiẓr Khān, son
of Muḥammad Khān Gauria.
Muḥammad Bakhtyār Ghūrī, Malik,
one of the Generals and slaves of
Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn Muḥammad
Sām, 81 and n 2, 82, 83 and nn 2
and 3, 84 and n 85 and n 1, 86.
See the next.
Muḥammad Bakhtyār Khiljī, Malik,
81 n 2. Same as the above (q. v.).
Muḥammad Bāqī Majlisī, author of
the Ḥayātu-l-Qulūb, 110 n 3.
Muḥammad, son of Bihār Khān, Sulān
of Qanauj and the eastern districts,
contemporary of Sulān Ibrāhīm
Lodī, 443. Same as the next (q. v.).
Muḥammad, son of Daryā Khān
Lūhānī, Sulān of Bihār, originally
called Bihār Khān or Bahādur
Khān, 435 and n 7, 436, 468, 469.
Same as the above (q. v.).
Muḥammad Farmalī, Shaikh, known
as Kālā Bhār, nephew of Sulān
Buhlūl Lodī, 411 n 2, 413 n 13,
414.
Muḥammad Ghan of Gwāliār, Shaikh,
contemporary of Bābar, 445, 459.
Muḥammad, son of Sulān Ghiyāu-d-
Dīn Balban, 187, 190 n 2, 205 and
n 2, 213. Called the Khān-i-
Buzurg, the Khān-i-Ghāzī, the
Khān-i-Shahīd and Qāān-i-Mulk.
Muḥammad Ghorī, popular name of
Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn Muḥammad
Sām, who is also known as Shihā-
bu-d-Dīn Ghorī, 65 n 2.
Muḥammad Gokultāsh, one of the
Amīrs of Bābar, 441.
Muḥammad ibnu-l-Ḥasan, the famous
jurisconsult, 30 n 1.
Muḥammad Ḥasan of Iṣpahān, Mīrzā,
—the poet known as arīf, 582 n.
Muḥammad Humāyūn Mīrzā, son of
Bābar, 439, 442, 444, 445. See
under Humāyūn.
Muḥammad Humāyūn Pādishāh,
Emperor of Hindūstān, 450, 451,
453, 454, 472, 500, 503, 529, 559,
596, 608 and n 5. See the above
and also under Humāyūn.
Muḥammad, son of Ildighiz and his
successor as Atābak of Āẕarbaijān,
158 n 3.
Muḥammad Khān Auḥadī, ruler of
Baiāna, contemporary of Mubārak
Shāh of the dynasty of the Saiyyids,
386, 387 and n 4.
Muḥammad Khān, son of Sulān Fīroz
Shāh Tughlaq, 324, 336, 337. See
Nāṣiru-d-Dīn Muḥammad Shāh, and
also Muḥammad Shāh.
Muḥammad Khān Gauria, the ruler of
Kor, contemporary of ‘Adlī, 555,
556.
Muḥammad Khān Kūkī, Ḥājī, one of
the Amīrs of Humāyūn, 578, 581,
586.
Muḥammad Khān of Nāgor, contem-
porary of Sulān Sikandar Lodī, 423
and n 11.
Muḥammad Khān, grandson of Sulān
Nāṣiru-d-Dīn of Mālwa, contempor-
ary of Sulān Sikandar Lodī, 423,
424 and n 6.
Muḥammad Khān Sālū, one of the
Amīrs of Humāyūn, 618 and n 7, 619.