In 1903, Mr. William Irvine, I.C.S. (retired), the
historian of the Later Mughals, in his usual spirit of
help to younger men engaged in research, lent me a
work (numbered by him 252) from his private collection
of Persian MSS. which was not known to exist in any
other library of Europe or India and which no historian
had yet used. It was the Ahkam-i-Alamgiri, attributed
to the pen of Hamid-ud-din Khan (surnamed Nimchah-
On the basis of these four MSS. (viz., Irvine No. 252 collated with 340, I. O. L. No. 3388, and the longer Rampur copy), I have edited the Persian text and made the following English translation of it. The division of the book and the arrangement of the anecdotes are my own. The passages printed in thick type are in Arabic in the original, and have been translated with the kind help of Prof. Abdul Hai of Patna College.