Places.

Sābarmatī, r., Gujarāt, 74, 611.
Ṣafā (Bāgh), garden near Jalālābād, Afghānistān, 529, 543.
Saḥatpūr, properly Ṣiḥḥatpūr, place near Tānda, where K. Jahān died, 378, 381; name means Abode of Health, probably gone into r. long since.
Sāknī (?), r., which joined Ganges and Jamnā at Tīrmohinī. It seems to be the Saraswatī, and perhaps proper name is Shaktī, 693 and n. 5.
Sambal, d. Morādābād, 51, 53, 512, 587, 600, 625, Qulīj's fief, 817, given Moaffar H. in lieu Qanda­hār, 1031.
Sāngāuīr, 54.
Sāpān, high hill, Deccan, 1153, 1163.
Sāran, d., Bihar, 115, 586. Sentence omitted in my translation at p. 115. The P.T. has statement that Ḥasan Patnī or Batanī* had, for his good conduct,
been given by Mun'im Sirkār Sāran in fief. See P.T., top line, p. 82. Ḥasan was an Afghān and was killed by the Yūsufzais of Chakdara, not in Khaibar as stated by B., in 1586. He is highly praised by A. F. for two things, 1st for pressing that the dam on the Pūnpūn should be broken down, 2nd for urging the capture of Ḥājīpūr. But surely Pūnpūn is a mistake for Gandak. Pūnpūn is a small r. and on s. side Ganges and joins Ganges at Fatwa, several miles below Patna. So unimportant is it that the I.G. does not separately notice it though it is described in article “Patna.” Why should breaking of dam help siege Patna Fort? And if it could, what harm would ensue to Imperialists? The dam did not exist when A. crossed the Pūnpūn! The abaqāt A. says nothing on subject, and it may here be remarked that Niāmu-d-dīn's account of the siege of Patna is fuller and better than A. F.'s and has been well translated in Elliot, V.
Sārangarh, fort, Orissa, 941.
Sārangpūr Dewās State, C.I, 94, 310, 1192.
Sarnāl, town, Gujarāt, 18, 19 and n. 2, etc.
Sātgāon, mart in Bengal, 153, 169, 171, 327-28.
Serais. Many are mentioned in P.T. Index, pp. 81-82. One in Bihār called Serāi-i-Rānī, p. 472 and n. 1.
Seraikot Kachwa, Ambāla d. Here Manṣūr Khwāja hanged. See 500 and n. 504. Alexander the Great quoted, 501.
Shādī, route, Afghānistān, 783.
Shadīwāl, vill., Gujarāt, Panjāb. A. encamps at, his thoughts, 332-33.
Shāhdara, near Lahore, 818 and n. 1.
Shāhgarha, Deccan, wonderful nīm tree, 1138-39, 1143.
Shāhpūr, Deccan, city founded by P. Murād, 1052, 1070, 1074, 1116, 1126, 1128, 1141, P.T. 864, his womankind sent Court.
Shahrārā (Bāgh), Kābul city, 539, 542, 858.
Shāhzādī, 983.
Shāhzādpūr, 674 and n. 8.
Sherpūr, in Bihār, 146. 479. Sherpūr in Mymensingh Atā, 600 and n. 1. Sherpūr in Bograh, 622 and n. 3, 660 and n. 3, 698. Sherpūr on Jamnā, the Sherpūr Feringhī of n. 2, 673, and 674.
Shihābu-d-dīnpūr, beautiful spot, Kashmīr, 829 and n. 1.
Sihrind or Sirhind, 360, gardens of, 546 and 705, great flood at, 761.
Sind and Sīwistān, 776, 917-21, 925, 929-31, 938, plague, 939. At p. 939, line 10, for “comage” read coinage, 941-42, 971-79, 1013.
Srīnagar, cap. Kashmīr, 770, 827 and n. 1, 840, 955-56, 1085, lunar rainbow, 1090.
Stars, 300 little ones (? Meteors), 616.
Sūrat, 16, 24-27, Christians appear at, 37 and n. 1, fort taken, 39-41.
Swāt or Swād, tract in Chitral Agency, N.W. Frontier, see Vol. III, A.N., pp. 216, 166, where for “tracts of Bajaur” read “Swād and Bajaur,” 715, 717, Birbar sent to, 719, 727, Zain K. conquers, 726-27, again sent to, 802, Swād conquered, 810-12, 828, 957.