Niāmu-d-Dīn, Malik, nephew of
Maliku-l-Umarā Kotwāl of Dihlī
(q. v.), 220 and n 3.
Niāmu-d-Dīn Aḥmad, father of
Maulānā ‘Abdu-r-Raḥmān Jāmī,
272 n 1.
Niāmu-d-Dīn Aḥmad, son of Khwāja
Muqīm Harawī, author of the
Ṭabaqāt-i-Akbarī, 9 n 2, 10 n, 45
n 1, 62, 63 n, 569 n 6, 580 n 5, 585
n 7.
Niāmu-d-Dīn Aḥmad Iliās ibn Abī
Yūsuf al-Muarrazī, name of the
celebrated poet Niāmī, 298 n 4.
Niāmu-d-Dīn ‘Alāqa, Malik, Wazīr
of Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn Kaiqubād
of the Balbanī dynasty, 220, 221,
222, 224. See also under Niāmu-l-
Mulk ‘Alāqa.
Niāmu-d-Dīn Auliyā, son of Aḥmad
Dānyāl,—the Prince of Holy men,
71 n 2, 236 and n 2, 266 and n 1,
267, 269 n 5, 270 and n 6, 271 nn 1
and 4, 284, 301, 610 and n 4, 611 n.
Niāmu-d-Dīn Beghū Malik Shāh, the
Turkomān, contemporary of Sulān
Mas‘ūd Ghaznawī, 39.
Niāmu-d-Dīn Malik Shāh, the Saljūq,
41. See under Malik Shāh Sal-
jūqī.
Niāmu-d-Dīn of Oudh, Malik, one of
the Amīrs of Sulān Fīroz Shāh
Tughlaq, 334.
Niāmu-l-Auliyā, 236 and n 2. Same
as Niāmu-d-Dīn Auliyā (q. v.).
Niāmu-l-Mulk ‘Alāqa, Wazīr of
Sulān Mu‘izzu-d-Dīn Kaiqubād of
the Balbanī dynasty, 222, 224, 226,
230 n 1. See also under Niāmu-d-
Dīn ‘Alāqa.
Niāmu-l-Mulk Baḥrī, King of the
Dakkan, 533, 534, 625 and n 3.
See also under Niām Shāh.
Niāmu-l-Mulk Ḥusain, son of Amīr
Mīran, one of the Amīrs of Sulān
Fīroz Shāh, 333 and n 2.
Niāmu-l-Mulk Jandī (Junaidī), Wazīr
of Sulān Shamsu-d-Dīn Iyal-
timish, 90, 98, 119, 120.
Niāmu-l-Mulk Jundī (Junaidī), 120.
See the above.
Niāmu-l-Mulk of Karra, Malik, one
of the Amīrs of Sulān Muḥammad
Tughlaq Shāh, 311.
Niāmu-l-Mulk Muhazzabu-d-Dīn,
Wazīr of the Shamsīyah Sulāns,
120, 122, 123 and n 3, 124.
Niāmu-t-Tawārīkh of Baiẓāwī, 10 n 3,
34 n 7, 51.
Niāmu-t-Tawārīkh of Niāmu-d-Dīn
Aḥmad, more commonly known as
the Ṭabaqāt-i-Akbarī, 10 and n 3.
Noah of the Scriptures, 61 n 5, 154
n 2, 198 n 1.
Nöldeke's Beiträge zur Kenntniss der
Poesie der alten Arabe, 99 n 6.
North-Western Provinces of India,
218 n 3, 377 n 3, 410 n 4, 486 n 6,
546 nn 3, 4 and 5.
Northern Asia, 191 n 2.
Northern India, 23 n 2.
Noshāba or Nūshāba, image of, 331,
332 n.
Nowshera (Naushahra), town of, 465
and n 2.
Nūda Bahādur Shāh, Governor of
Sunār Gānw, contemporary of Sul-
ān Ghiyāu-d-Dīn Tughlag Shāh,
299, 300.
Nūdiā,—or
Nūdiyā, old capital of Bengal, 82 and
n 4. Called also Nadiya (q. v.).
Nūh and Patal, name of a place, 359.
See also under Nūh Patal.
Nūḥ ibn Lamak, Noah of the Scrip-
tures, 154 and n 2, 556. See also
under Noah.
Nūḥ, son of Manṣūr, son of Nūḥ
Sāmānī, of the dynasty of the
Sāmānīs, the kings of Khorāsān
and Transoxiana, 14 n 1, 15 and
n 4.
Nūh Patal, a ford on the river Jamua,
386. See also Nūh and Patal.
Nuh Sipihr, one of the poetical works
of Mīr Khusrū, the famous poet of
Dihlī, 273 n 3, 274 n 1.
Nūhānī, for Lūhānī (q. v.), 413 n 3.
Nūhānī Afghāns of Baiāna, 549.
Nūkhānī, for Lūhānī (q. v.), 413 and
nn 3 and 12.
Nukhbatu-d-Dahr of Dimashqī, 147
n 3.
Numbers, the Book of, 302 n 2.
Nūru-d-Dīn ‘Abdu-r-Raḥmān Jāmī,
Mullā, 32 n 2, 272 n 1. See under
Jāmī.
Nūru-d-Dīn Muḥammad Ūfī of Merv,
33 n 1. See under Muḥammad Ūfī.
Nūshāba or Noshāba, image of, 331,
332 n.
Nuṣrat Jalīsarī, Malik, 247. See un-
der Nuṣrat Khān Jalīsarī.
Nuṣrat Khān, son of Fatḥ Khān, son
of Sulān Fīroz Shāh, 350. See
under Nuṣrat Shāh.
Nuṣrat Khān, son of Ghiyāu-d-Dīn
Tughlaq Shāh, 297.
Nuṣrat Khān Gurgandāz, one of the
Maliks of the Fīrūz Shāhī and
Saiyyid dynasties, 364 and n 1,
390, 391.
Nuṣrat Khān Jalīsarī, one of the
Maliks of Sulān ‘Alāu-d-Dīn
Khiljī, 247, 248, 249, 254, 256,
258.
Nuṣrat Khān Karkandāz, 364. See
under Nuṣrat Khān Gurgandāz.
Nuṣrat Khān Lūhānī, one of the
Generals of Sulān Ibrāhīm Lodī,
446 n 1. See under Naṣīr Khān.
Nuṣrat Khān Maliku-sh-Sharq Mar-
wān-i-Daulat, one of the Maliks of
Sulān Fīroz Shāh, 335 and n 1,
376.
Nuṣrat Khūkhar, Malik, one of the
Amīrs of Sulān Maḥmūd of the
Fīrūz Shāhī dynasty, 358 n 6.
Nuṣrat Shāh, Sulān, son of Fatḥ
Khān, son of Sulān Fīroz Shāh
Tughlaq, 350, 351, 352, 354, 359.