GABELENTZ, Professor von der, and the Hazáras, 80*.
Gadái Mirzá, 307.
Gadái Piri, 226.
Gakars, tribe of, 479 n., 480 n.
Gang (Ganges) River, 406.
Ganges, battle of, at Kanauj, 471-477.
Gauhar Shah Begum, 193.
Gauhar Shád Aghá, wife of Shah Rukh, 83 n.
Gaz (measure), 256 n., 286 n., 426 n.
Geta, the word: see ‘Jatah.’
Ghajdaván, fort of, 261, 270; battle of, 10,* 281.
Ghar-báligh: see Bála-Sakun.
Ghar-bálik: see Kara Khitai.
Ghayyás-ud-Din: see Barák Khán.
Ghazna, 356, 357; Sultán Násir Mirzá, governor of, 264.
Ghazni, taken by Davá, 36*; Jahángir Mirzá in, 196.
Ghiás-ud-Din Jamshidi, Mauláná, 60 n.
Ghor Khar (wild ass), 347 n.
Ghund, a district of Badakhshán, 353.
Ghuri, hills of, Bábar Pádisháh's flight to, 175, 176.
Ghuri Barlás, Mir, 140, 241, 247, 271, 452; death of, 280.
Girai Khán, 272 n.
Gmelin, the Russian savant, and the Mongol race in general, 81.*
Goës, Benedict (Portuguese mission- ary), travels of, in China, 1603-4, 109,* 111,* 122,* 123.*
Goláb Sing, the Dogra Rajah of Kashmir, 458 n.
Gold mines in the Champa districts of Tibet, 409 n., 411, 412 and n.
Grigorieff, Prof., uses the Tarikh-i- Rashidi, viii.; on the name Mongol (or Mogol), 74* n.; on the Kalmáks, 97.*
Grijmailo, the Russian traveller, 113.*
Guga (Gugeh), district of Tibet, 406 and n., 410 and n., 456-8, 457 n.; fort and villages in, 411, 412.
Gujarát (Gujaráb), 25.
Gujrát, invaded by Emperor Humáyun, 470.
Gulak, 24.
Gul Bágh, palace of, 346.
Guli-zindan, village called, 24 n.
Gulja Báshi, 304 n.
Gurgan (Gur Khán): see Kurkáni.
Gur Khán, 288-291; takes Bála-Sákun, 363.
Guzida, the, 293.
Guzrát, captured by Emperor Humá- yun, 402.