EARLE'S ‘Philology of the English Tongue,’ 91.*
Ebi Nor, Lake, 53.*
Ebuskun, Chaghatai's widow, 33.*
Eleuths, the, 97* n.
Elliot's ‘History of India;’ extract from the Tarikh-i-Rashidi in, viii.
Ellis, Mr. A. G., and the term Tájik, 90.*
Encampments of the Moghuls: see Aul.
Enigmas, introduced by Mauláná Sharaf-ud-Din Yazdi, 84.
Erdmann, Dr., on the Kuránas tribe (Ckaranut), 76,* 77*; the Mongol originally connected with the Turk, 78* n.; and Rashid-ud-Din's list of Mongol tribes, 16 n.; on the title Kurkáni, 278 n., 279 n.
Erskine, Mr. W., the historian, 2,* 89*; his partial translation of the Tarikh-i-Rashidi, v., vi., xi., 4* n., 479 n.; Mirzá Haidar wounded at Fattehpur Sikri, 17* n; date of the recovery of Kabul by Humayun, 25*; on Mirzá Haidar's personal characteristics, 26*; History of India, information regarding the Chaghatai, 29*; and Manlik (Mánselik), 7 n.; on the Jatah stone, 32 n., 33 n.; the Turah of the Moghul tribes, 22 n; and Kát, 45 n.; the twelve privileges granted by Chingiz Khán to the ancestors of Amir Khudáidád, 54, 55 n; the chief computers of the astronomical tables (Zik Kurkán), 59 n., 60 n.; on Shir Kuli, 60; and Masiki (Yangi), 79 n., 80 n.; on Muhammad Haidar Mirzá's rule, 98 n.; Sháhi Beg and the siege of Kelat, 192 n.; on Mirzá Sultán Husain, 193 n.; on Sivi (Sibi), 202 n.; on Shahrukhi coin, 202 n.; on the word Sardár, 203 n.; on the Kizil-básh, 214 n.; History of India, the Emperor Bábar and Sháh Ismail, 246 n., 247; on the gaz (measure), 256 n.; the Kazák and their Sultáns, 272 n.
Erskine's History of India under the
Moghuls; extracts and comments of, the Tarikh-i-Rashidi, vi., vii.; and the succession of the Moghul Kháns from the time of Isán Bughá, 40*- 47.*
European travellers; Central Asia im- penetrable to, during the period of Mirzá Haidar's history, 116*-118.*
Excavations (Kázik), by Mirzá Abá Bakr, 255 n., 256-7, 296.