SABUR MIRZÁ, 307.
Sabásh (Shásh) Khán, 276.
Sádik Ispaháni, on situation of Bála- Sákun, 363 n.
Sadr-ud-Din, Mir, 396.
Sad-ud-Din Káshghari, Mauláná, 194.
Saghej, wells of, 23 n.
Sáhib Daulat Begum, 125, 344.
Said Kázaruni, Shaikh, 145 n.
Said Khán, son of Sultán Ahmad Khán, 56,* 109,* 122, 160; takes Mirzá Haidar into his service, 11,* 25*; 3, 4; invades Kashghar, 11*; expeditions against Balur and Ba- dakhshán, 12*; invades Ladak, Kash- mir, and Baltistan, 13,* 14*; death of, 14*; Sayyid Muhammad Mirzá and, 15,* 16*; Moghul invasions during reign of, 65,* 66*; the chiefs of his army, 66*; and the Uighurs of Kashghar, 98*; religious advisers of, 116*; expedition into Ladak, 120*; battle with Mansur Khán, 125, 131, 145; friendly meeting with Mansur Khán, 126; wounded at the battle of Akhsi, 130; taken to Samarkand by Sháhi Beg, 130; visits his brother in Moghulistan, 131; stays at Kábul with Bábar
Pádisháh, 131; sent to Andiján, 132; defeats Mirzá Abá Bakr at Tut-lugh, 132; defeated by Suyunj Khwája Khán near Táshkand, 133; captures Káshghar, 133; makes peace with his brother, Mansur Khán, 134; attacks Muhammad Kirghiz, 134; subdues the whole of Moghulistan, 134; invasions of Badakhshán, 135; holy war against Tibet, 135, 136, 143; and Baltistan, 136; and Mirzá Haidar's conquest of Kashmir, 136; his death, 137, 143; virtues and rare attainments of, 137-139; and Rashid Khán at Aksu, 143; his favourite wife, 146; birth and early days, 178; accompanies Sháhi Beg Khán on his expedition to Hisar and Kunduz, 178, 179; stays with Sultán Mahmud Khán at Yatikand, 181; wounded by Maksud Ali, 181, 182; his generosity, 182; defeated by Mansur Khán at Al- mátu, 182, 183; and Khwája Ali Bahádur, 183-188, 222-226; marri- age contracted with Makhtum, 187, 190; attacked by Mirzá Abá Bakr's men, 188, 189; decides to go to Shahi Beg Khán at Andiján, 190, 191, 222, 247-8, 264, 266, 268-9; flight to Moghulistan, 192, 195; Mauláná Kasim, his spiritual guide, 213; imprisoned at Andiján by Khwája Ali Bahádur, 222; sent to Jáni Beg Khán who orders his release, 222- 226; escapes to Mirza Khán at Badákhshan, 226; welcome by Em- peror Bábar at Kábul, 226; meets Mirzá Haidar at Kábul, 229; and Moghulistan, 240; and Bábar Pádi- sháh, 242; battle with, and defeat of Mirzá Abá Bakr, 249, 250, 254, 310, 312; kills Tubra, 265; attacks Suyunjuk Khán, 266, 270-271, 346; and Mirzá Haidar, 268-270; plunders Ahangarán, 275; proceeds to Akhsi, 276; meeting with Kásim Khán, 276; presented with horses by Kásim Khán, 276-7; his sisters, 280; quits Farghána and repairs to Káshghar, 284-6, 304, 321; review of his troops before Káshghar, 305-310; his march against Yárkand abandoned, 312- 313; sets out for Yángi-Hisár, 313- 314, 390, 394; visits Mir Ayub, 315; Yángi-Hisár besieged, 315- 319; Abá Bakr killed while on his way to see, 324-5; conquest of Káshghar, 325-7, 331; and Mirzá Jahángir, 330; his reception of Aiman Khwája Sultán, 333; Mansur Khán's treatment of, 334; sends sub- mission to Mansur Khán, 335; meeting with Mansur Khán on the plains of Arbát, 340, 343-5; health affected by excessive wine-drinking, 340, 369, 370; goes to Moghulistan, 341; returns to Káshghar, 343, 351; returns to Yárkand, 345; meeting with Bábáják Sultán, 346-8; holy war against Sárigh Uighur, 348-351; capture of Muhammad Kirghiz, 351; sends for Daulat Sultán Khánim, daughter of Yunus Khán, 351-2; marriage of his sister, 352; first invasion of Badakhshán, 354-5; his second meeting with Mansur Khán, 356; invasion of Moghulistan, 358-9, 368; Sayyid Muhammad Mirzá in attendance on, 371; birth of his son, Sultán Ibráhim, 375; second in- vasion of Andiján, 375-7; returns to Moghulistan, 377; goes to At-Báshi, 377; thence to Káshghar, 377, 379; and Bábá Sultán, 379-381; and Sháh Muhammad Sultán, 382-3; se- cond expedition into Badakhshán, 387-390; siege of Kala Zafar, 388; meets Khwája Nurá, 390, 401; rup- ture between Aiman Khwája Sultán and, 391-4; illness of, 394; places himself under the guidance of Khwája Nurá, 395, 398; invasion of Tibet, 403; holy war on Tibet, 417, 420, 421; attacked by dam-giri, 420, 421; pro- ceeds to Balti, 421, 422; and Mirzá Haidar, on return from the invasion of Kashmir, 443-445; goes to Yarkand, 445; death of, from the effects of dam-giri, 446; genealogy of, 446, 447; epitome of his life, 447, 448; burial of, 449.
Said (Shahid) Khán, 56; date of death, 57 n.
Saifuddin, Amir, 26, 31, 32, 48.
Sairám, town of, 53,* 40, 41; laid waste by Isán Bughá Khán, 79; given to Yunus Khán, 112, 113; Mahmud Sultán's advance on, 171; in charge of Kitta Beg, 271, 274; Kitta Beg and, 313; plundered by the Kirghiz, 358.
Sáki Ali, Khwája, 311.
Sakju (Su-chow), 406.
Sakkáki, Mauláná, tomb of, 365.
Sákri, pass of, 445 and n.
Saláh-ud-Din Musa, Mauláná, 59 n.
“Salái Begum,” battle called, 75.
Salar, group of villages, 404 n., 405 n.
Sálibari, Khwája, 26.
Sálik, Khwája, 225, 226.
Sálinkái, 360.
Salim, son of Shir Sháh, 480 n.
Salim Khán: see Islam Sháh.
Salim Sultán, defeats Sháh Ismail, 281.
Sáli-Sarái, Amir Husain's residence, 24, 31, 35, 37.
Salsalat-ul-Arifin, work by Hazrat Mauláná, 113, 212, 213, 342 and n.
Salt Range, the, 479 n.
Samarkand, Baber's advance on, 10*; Tughluk Timur Khán at, 22, 23; at- tacked by Amir Chágu in 1363, 29; siege of, by the army of Jatah, 37; return of Amir Timur to, 47, 50; buildings, etc., erected by Ulugh Beg, 60 n.; Hiyát-i-Khán at, 72; taken by Sultán Abu Said, 83; Sultán Mahmud Khán and Sháhi Beg Khán attempt to take, 119, 120; Bábar Pádisháh marches on, 132, 133; wars in, 154; conquered by Sháhi Beg Khán, 158, 166; attacked by Bábar Padisháh, 174, 175; falls again into hands of Sháhi Beg Khán, 175, 196; Emperor Bábar at, 246, 260, 266, 268; famous kiosks in, 429, 430; Emperor Bábar on the throne of, 484.
Sámgaz (Sam Seirak), 8 n.
Samku, place in Tibet, 457 n.
Sám Mirzá, besieges Kandahar, 16,* 468.
Sand, advance of, as seen by Sir D. Forsyth and Dr. Bellew, 12 n.
Sand-buried ruins, 67,* 68*; exploita- tion of, by Abá Bakr, 70.*
Sand-storms in Eastern Turkistan, 303 n.
Sangarigháj, place called, 40.
Sang Zighaj, fight with Kamar-ud-Din at, 47.
Sanju, 323, 328-9; pass of, 405.
Sánka Rána of Chitur, 402 and n.
Sániz Mirzá, son of Amir Sayyid Ali, 251; his rule in Káshghar, 87, 88; joins Yunus Khán, 90; death of, 98, 99.
Sarai, village of, 24 n.
Sarai Chuk, 274 and n.
Sarai Mulk Khánim, Timur's favourite wife, 40, 278 n., 279 n.
Sárang Sultán, 479 n., 480 n., 483.
Sár Bughá, Amir, 32; revolt of, 44, 45; pardoned by Amir Timur, 49.
Sárigh Chupán, a district of Badakh- shán, 292, 353, 354, 355 n., 386, 388.
Sárigh-Kul, district of, 54,* 297; hills of, 312.
Sárigh Uighur (Yellow Uighur), country of, 9 n., 52, 64, 349 n., 404 n., 405 n.; Said Khán's holy war against, 348-351.
Sárik Mirzá, 333.
Sarman, village called, 310; stream called, 311.
Sart, the word; definition of, 87* n.
Sasser Pass, 446 n.
Satlej River, 406 n.
Sataghni Buka (Sanghoy Boca), 14.
Sátilmish Khátun, wife of Isan Bughá Khán, 6.
Sátlik, 325.
Sátuk Kara Khán, a Karlughi Uighur, 94*.
Sátuk Bughrá Khán, 286, 287 n.; tomb of, in Káshghar, 300.
Sátuk Khán, 71; Vais Khán and, 73.
Sayyádi (or Siádi), of the tribe of Chálish, 51.
Sayyid Ali, Amir, 61; expedition to Káshghar, 75-77; and Isán Bughá, 78; hunting parties of, 76, 77; a proof of his justice, 77; makes Isán Bughá governor of Aksu, 78; defeats Yunus Khán with the aid of Isán Bughá Khán, 86; death of, 87; his distinguished generals and captains, 99, 104.
Sayyid Ali Kurkán, Amir, 56.
Sayyid Ali, Mir, in the service of Shaikh Habib, 194; his two sons, 251.
Sayyid Ali Aghá, 307.
Sayyid Ali Hamadáni (Amir Kabir Ali), 432; death of, 433 n.
Sayyid Ahmad, Mir, 60, 61, 75; stories relating to, 61-64; saves Vais Khán, 65-67.
Sayyid Ahmad Mirza, 100.
Sáyyidátái, the, 239 and n.
Sayyid Dáud, Amir, 42.
Sayyid Hádi, the, 239.
Sayyid Husaini, Amir, mausoleum of, 209.
Sayyidim Kukildásh, 278-9.
Sayyid Mahmud Mirzá, 75.
Sayyid Muhammad Mirzá, uncle of Mirzá Haidar, 56, 102, 111, 133, 203 n., 252; put to death, 15*, 57 n., 143, 144, 450, 451; invades Andiján, 131, 132, 144; attacks Fargháná, 140; and battle of Tutluk, 132, 249, 250; Jáni Beg Sultán and, 241; conquest of Fárghana, 239-241; sent to Turfán, 240; sends from Andiján for help, 242; drowns Khalil Sultán by order of Jáni Beg Khán, 183, 240, 264-5; Said Khán and, 265-6; fortifies Andiján, 271; advises Said Khán to leave Farghána, 284-5; in charge of the Dughlát army before Kash- ghar, 305; at the siege of Yangi- Hisar, 316, 318-19; and Mir Vali, 320; goes to fetch Mirzá Jahángir, 329; in attendance on Said Khán, 369, 371; a disciple of, the order of Yasavvi Shaikhs, 369, 371; taken ill, and healed by Khwája Nurá, 389, 397; Said Khán and, 392-4.
Sayyid Muhammad Nurbakhshi, Amir, 435.
Sayyid Ná Mahdumi Mauláná: see Muhammad Kazi.
Sayyid Sháh Buzurg Arhangi, 108.
Sayyids of Khorasán, the, called Mughols, 89.*
Schuyler, E., on the observatory at Samarkánd, 60 n.; the ancient Tá- ráz, 63 n.; account of Lake Issigh- Kul, 78 n.; on city of Chi-gu, 79 n.; on city of Bála-Sákun, 362 n., 363 n.; and Shaikh Ahmad, 369 n.
Seeland, Dr. N.; rest-house constructed by Muhammad Khán, 58 n., 59 n.
Shabán, 309.
Sháh Badágh Sultán, son of Abulkhair Khán, 92 n.
Sháh Báz Mirzá, 393.
Sháh Beg, defeated near Kandahar by Bábar Padishah, 202; son of Zulnun Arghun, 357, 483 n.
Sháh Begum, 108, 135, 180, 195, 196, 258; attempt to seize Kabul, 199, 200; lays claim to Badakhshán, 203; captured by Abá Bakr's army, 203; sent into Khorásán, 204.
Sháh Hasan, conquest of Tatta, 483 n.
Sháh Ismail, sons of, 16,* 132; finally defeats Sháhi Beg Khán, 131; in- vades Irák, 154.
Sháh Khán, son of Marsur Khán, 105,* 123,* 124,* 129.
Sháh Mirák, 185.
Sháh Muhammad, a Kukildásh, 459, 461.
Sháh Muhammad Diván, Khwája, 449.
Sháh Muhammad Sultán, son of Sultán Muhammad Sultán, 142, 161, 163, 452.
Sháh Nazar Mirzá, 241, 247.
Sháh Rukh, Mirzá, 43,* 59, 62, 84; Hazáras the posterity of an army of, 80* n.; his mother, 40 n.; founds Bágh-i-Zaghán, 83 n.; the Zafar- Náma dedicated to, 85 n.
Sháh Shaikh Muhammad Sultán, son of Sultán Ahmád Khán, 160.
Sháh Sultán Muhammad Badakhshi, 107.
Sháh Tahmásp; besieges Kandahar, 16,* 24.*
Shaháb-ud-Din, a holy Shaikh, 8*; description of Moghulistan in the Masálak-al-Absár, 57.*
Shahbáz Mirzá, 308, 316.
Sháhi Beg Khán, 56,* 57,* 56, 116; puts Mirza Haidar's father to death, 9*; defeat and death of, 10*; his grandfather, Abulkhair Khán, 79 n.; Turkistán given to, 118; takes Samarkand, 119, 120; murders Sultán Mahmud Khán, 120; defeats Sultán Mahmud Khán and Sultán Ahmad Khán at Akhsi, 122, 123, 159; cam- paigns against Farghána, Hisár, and Kunduz, 130; the Mangit tribe fol- lowers of, 134 n., 154; conquers Samarkand and Bokhárá, 158, 166; forms three marriage alliances, 160; and Sultán Mahmud Khán, 163, 167; and Khusrau Sháh, 164-166, 169; beheads Mir Vali, 165 n.; and Tam- bal's revolt in Andiján, 167-9; mar- ries Khánzáda Begum, 175, 196, 239; advance on Hisar, 176, 178; puts Tambal to death, 178; and the death of Sultán Mahmud Khán, 179, 208-9; invades Khwárizm, 180, 191, 195, 204; Said Khán decides to go to, at Andiján, 190, 191; and Habiba Sultán Khanish, 192; besieges Ko- lat, 192 n., 209; marries Mihr Nigár Khánim, 196; besieges Bábar Padi- sháh in Samarkand, 196; conquest of Khorásán, 201, 205; captures Balkh, 204-5; receives Muhammad Husain Kurkan, 205-6, 208-9; and afterwards puts him to death, 209; orders Ubaid Sultán to drown Mirzá Haidar, 210, 211; and Sultán Said Khán, 221-225; killed by Sháh Ismail, 226, 234; expedition against Kazák, 230, 231; hostilities with Sháh Ismail, 232-7; followers of, in Mávará-un-Nahr, 274, 282-3; takes Tashkand, 336; defeats Khusrau Sháh, 353; conquers province of Farghána, 447.
Sháhnáz, 103; pass of, 398 and n.; river, 296.
Shahr-i-Sabz, town of, 171, 191-93.
Shahrukhi, coin, 202 n., 469 n.
Sháhrukhia (Finákand), town of, 53,* 112, 289 and n.
Shaibáni Khán: see Sháhi Beg Khán.
Shaibán Uzbegs, Said Khán and the, 120*; in Mávará-un-Nahr, 282-3; take the province of Farghána, 284.
Shaikham Mirzá, 216 n., 260.
Shaikh-i-Daulat, Amir, 38, 51.
Shaikh-ul-Islám, 235, 236.
Shaká Muni, religion of, 414-16.
Shakával, 309, 315.
Sham-i-Jahán Khán, 57, 68.
Shamlu tribe, 214 n.
Shammási, or sun-worshippers in Kash- mir, 436.
Shams Abdál: see Dust Muhammad Khán.
Shams-ud-Din, Amir, 38; at the battle of the Mire, 34, 35, 51 n.; and his sect of ‘Nurbakhshi,’ 435-437.
Shams-ud-Din Juvaini, 35.*
Shams-ud-Din, Sultán, 432; tomb of, 26 n.
Sharaf-ud-Din, author of the Zafar- Náma, 7,* 118,* 119*; on the suc- cession of the Moghul Kháns, 41*- 46,* 74, 84, 85 n., 151, 155.
Sharáwal, 34.
Shariat, the (Muhammadan law), 70.
Sharif, Khwája of Káshghar, 61, 75, 76, 90.
Sharim, Mir, 241, 308.
Shásh (Táshkand), province of, 52,* 53*; invaded by the Moghuls, 54,* 68; Isán Bughá Khán and, 85; country of, 153, 154; reign of Sultán Mah- mud, 155; plundered by the Kirghiz, 367.
Shaw, Mr. R. B., geography of Eastern Turkistan gathered from the Tarikh- i-Rashidi, viii. 10 n., 417 n.; death of, 10; and the word Tájik, 87*; definition of Sart, 87* n.; on the word Alách, 121 n.; and the sons of Rashid Sultán, 121* n., 123*; and the word ghalcha, 220 n.; on Artush, 295 n., situation of town of Kash- ghar, 295 n.; meaning of Tázghun, 295 n.; and Suget Bulák, 296 n; paper entitled ‘A Prince of Kásh- ghar on the Geography of Eastern Turkistan,’ 296 n.; on Káshtásh, 298 n; Chitral called Pálor, 385 n.; on idioms used by Mirzá Haidar, 405 n., 406 n.; on the word Drok, 409.
Shaya (Sheh), castle of, 460 and n.
Sheep as beasts of burden in Tibet, 407 and n.
Sheep traders, the Champa, of Tibet, 407 and n., 408 n.
Sheh, town of, 410 n.
Sheh (or Shay), a village in Tibet (Ladak), 460 n.
Shenkummuyán, brother of Amir Hamid, 34.
Shiahs, sect of (the Muláhida), 218 n., 247 n.; use of the word Mujtahid, 10 n.; sect in Kashmir, 435-7.
Shibarghán; Bayán Timur, governor of, 40.
Shibartu, place called: see Shibr.
Shibr Pass (or Shibartu), the, 36 n.
Shidarku, name borne by the King of Tangut, 360 and n., 361 n.
Shigár, fort of, 422.
Shighnan, 54.*
Shir Ali Oghlán, son of Muhammad Khán, 60.
Shir Bahrám, 24, 26, 29, 32, 34.
Shir Khán defeats Emperor Humáyun at Chausa, 470, 471; battle of the Ganges, 471-477.
Shir Muhammad Khán, son of Mu- hammad Khán, 60, 63, 68; hostility between Vais Khán and, 43,* 64, 65.
Shir Sháh Sur, 480 n.; defeats Huma- yun in Bengal, 16*; battle of Kanauj, viii., 17*, 18*; battle in Kashmir against Mirzá Haidar, 20.*
Shiram Chahra, 169.
Shiram, Mir, 356, 357.
Shiráz, residence of Yunus Khán, 85.
Shirun Taghái, 228.
Shiva-i-Shignán, 353.
Shulkárchi tribe, 309.
Shun-Chi, Emperor of China and Tur- fán, 107,* 108,* 114*.
Shuruya, kills Khusrau, his father, 329 n.
Shujá-ud-Din, Mauláná, 10, 13, 14.
Sihpáyah, place called, 44.
Sihun River, battle of Lai on the bank of, 31-36.
Si-liao (Kara-Khitai), kings of the, 279 n.
Sikandar Zulkarnain, 107.
Sind, ravaged by Davá, 36.*
Sind (Tatta) conquered by Shah Hasan, 483 n., 484 n.
Sind River, the, 423 n., 431 and n.
Sind, rivers of, their source, 406.
Singá, Raná (Sanka), defeated by Bábar Pádisháh, 402.
Si-Ngan-fu, 404 n.
Singim, 113.*
Sir River, the, 53,* 54.*
‘Six Cities’ of Eastern Turkistan: see Alti-Shahr.
Skardu (Skardo), pass of, 405 n.
Snake stone, the (called Jadah), 33 n.
So-fei (Sufi) sends an embassy to China, 124.*
Spiti, 406 n.
Sprenger, on situation of Bála-Sákun, 362 n.
Square silver coins of the Kashmir Sultans, Mr. C. J. Rodgers on, 487- 491.
Srinagar (Kashmir) town of, 410 n.; described in the Zafar-Náma, 431-2, 433 n.; attack on, in 1543…20*.
Stak-brak, meaning of, 458 n.: see Askábrak.
Steppes, nomads and inhabitants of the, called Turks, 83.*
Stewart, Major C., on Amir Timur (Sahib-i-Kirán), 17 n.
Stone Bridge, the, Amir Timur at, 24-26.
Strachey, General, on Maryul, 410 n.
Strachey, Capt. H., on Samku, 457 n.
Sufi Mirzá, killed at the battle of Arish, 127, 128.
Sui (Sibi), 202.
Suchou, town of, in Kansu, 109.*
Sufi Sultán: see Adham Sultán.
Sufis, the, sect in Kashmir, 436, 437; Said Khán and, 448.
Suget Bulák, hamlet of, 296 n.
Suget Pass, 446 n.
Sughunluk, place called, 310.
Sukár, 187.
Sukár Káluchi, 309.
Sukár Ukhsi, 309.
Sukát, village of, 313, 314 n.
Sulaimán, son of Mirzá Khán, 156.
Sulaimán Barlás, 26.
Sulaimán Sháh Mirzá, 373 and n., 387, 467; reigns in Badakhshán, 388, 389.
Sulát-Kand, 222.
Sulduzi tribe, 55 n.
Su-li, ancient name for Kashghar, 8 n.
Sultákár Tufta Kuli, 309.
Sultán Ahmad, uncle of Mirzá Haidar, 11.*
Sultán Ahmad Tambal, revolts in Andiján, 158, 159; Sháhi Beg Khán and, 167-169, 174, 178.
Sultán Ali Jarás, Amir, 121.
Sultán Ali Mirzá, son of Sultán Ahmad Khán, 154, 174, 175, 183, 196, 265, 308, 326.
Sultán Avais, Amir, 387.
Sultán Husain Mirzá, in Khorásán, 154, 193; and Muhammad Husain Kurkan, 195; death of, 196, 210.
Sultán Khatun, mother of Vais Khan, 67.
Sultán Khalil Sultán, brother of Man- sur Khán, 125, 131, 139, 161; his death, 125, 126, 131.
Sultán Mahmud Mirzá, 93, 103; mar- ries Sultán Nigár Khánim, 117, 118.
Sultán Muhammad Mirzá, 450.
Sultán Muhammad Sultán, son of Mahmud Khán, 158, 159, 162, 163.
Sultán Nigár Khánim, daughter of Yunus Khán, 108, 117, 156, 373, 377, 378; death of, 386; taken to wife by Kásim Khán, 273.
Sultánpur, city of, 405.
Sultán Sanjar, 108.
Sultán Valad Mirzá, 112.
Sultánim Begum, daughter of Sultán Ahmad Mirzá, 164, 170, 193.
Sultáns of Kashmir, 433 n., 434 n.
Sultán Vais Mirzá: see Mirzá Khán.
Sungtásh, 345.
Sunnis, the, sect in Kashmir, 247 n., 262 n., 435-7; and use of the word Mujtahid, 10 n.
Sun-worshippers (Shammási) in Kash- mir, 436.
Superstition: the Jadah stone, 32 n., 33 n.
Surkháb River, 263.
Suru, a district of Ladak, 15*; depart- ment of Balti, 461, 462.
Sut, Tangi Sakab's home, 462 and n.
Sut Im Bahádur, 121.
Suvar-i-Akálim, the, 359, 361.
Suyah, the word, 7 n., 8 n.
Su-Yeh (or Su-Sa), the name, 8 n.; city of: see Bála-Sákun.
Suyunj Khwája Khán defeats Sultán Said Khán near Táshkand, 133.
Suyunjuk Khán puts Said Khán to rout, 266, 268, 271, 274, 283; at- tacked by Kasim Khán, 275; ad- vances against Andiján, 284-5; and Bustangir Mirzá, 330; at Akhsi, 342; Said Khán makes war on, 346; death of, 375, 376.
Suyunjuk Sultán, 159, 243, 248.
Suyurghátmish Khán, 72 n., 83.