A.

Aaron of Scriptnre, 348 n 8.
'Abbāsides, the, 397.
Abbott, 270 n 1.
Abdāl, the Forty—, holy men who
should always be on earth, 318
n 3.
Abdāl, the seven—, spirits which
hover round the world, 200 n 1,
374 n 3.
'Abdulawwal, Mīr,—a heretical
writer, 254.
'Abdul'azīz of Dihlī, Shaikh,—a Mu-
ḥammadan saint and religious
teacher, 109, 294, 386.
'Abdul Hādī, infant son of al-Badā-
onī, 259.
'Abdu-l-Ḥay Khawwās, son of Qāzī
Çadrn-d-dīn Sambhalī, 291.
'Abdu-l-Ḥayy, Mīr,—a learned man
in the Court of Akbar, 64.
'Abdu-l-Jabbār Hamadānī, Qāzī,—
a religious teacher, 266 and n 1.
Abd-ullāh Bakhshī, Mīr,—an officer
of Akbar's Court, 20.
'Abd-ullāh Khān Chogān Bēgī, Say-
yid. See under 'Abd-ullāh Khān,
Jokān Bēgī.
'Abd-ullāh Khān Chougān Bēgī, Say-
yid. See under 'Abd-ullāh Khān;
Jokān Bēgī.
'Abd-ullāh Khān Jokān Bēgī, Say-
yid,—Governor of Biyānah and
Bajūnah, 183, 197, 198, 243, 244,
245, 249, 250, 251, 380, 381.
'Abd-ullāh Khān, the Uzbek,—Gover-
nor of Kālpī, 6, 44, 48, 66, 67, 68,
75. See the next.
'Abd-ullāh Khān Uzbek, son of Si-
kandar Khān,—chief of the Uzbeks
in Transoxiana, 278, 302, 350, 357,
362, 363, 365, 366, 375, 383, 393.
See the above.
'Abd-ullāh, Khwājah, grandson of
Khwājah Aḥrār,—one of the gen-
erals of Akbar, 197, 235.
'Abd-ullāh Makhdūm-ul-Mulk, Mullā
—of Sulṭānpūr, 85. See also under
Makhdūm-ul-Mulk.
'Abd-ullāh Marwārīd of Hirāt, Khwā-
jah,—the Wazīr, 48.
'Abd-ullāh, son of Murād Bēg,—an
officer of the army, 103.
'Abd-ullāh Niyāzī, the Sarhindī,
Shaikh, 204.
'Abd-ullāh Sulṭānpūrī, Mullā,—the
Makhdūmu-l-Mulk, 13, 39, 154,
205. See also under Makhdūmu-l-
Mulk.
'Abd-ul-Laṭīf, son of the author
'Abd-ul-Qādir al-Badāonī, 130.
'Abd-ul-Laṭīf, Mīr,—one of the Sayfī
Sayyids of Qazwīn, 24, 32, 85, 235.
Abd-ul-Majīd Harawī, Khwājah,—
the Āçaf Khān, Governor of Dihlī,
38, 62. See also under Āçaf Khān.
'Abdu-l-Malik Khān,—a relative of
Mīr Muḥammad Atkah, the Khān
Kalān, 53.
'Abdu-l-Maṭlab Khān, son of Shāh
Budāgh Khān, 46, 80, 82, 83, 96,
151, 249, 368 and n 3.
'Abdu l-Muṭlab Khān. See the above.
'Abdul Nabī. See under 'Abdu-u-
Nabī.
'Abdu-l-Qādir Gīlānī Qādirī, Shaikh,
—a devotee of Uchh, 418.
'Abdu-l-Qādir Jīlānī, Shaikh Muḥi-
ud-dīn,—the celebrated Imām and
Shaikh, 200.
'Abdu-l-Qādir Tabrīzī, Moulānā,—
Akbar's tutor, 332.
'Abdu-l-Qudūs of Gangōh, Shaikh,—
one of the greatest Shaikhs of
Hind, 70.
'Abdu-l-Wāsi',—husband of a daugh-
ter-in-law of Shaikh Badah, Lord
of Āgra, 59, 60.
'Abdu-n-Nabī, Shaikh, grandson of
Shaikh 'Abdu-l-Qudūs of Gangōh,
—the Shaikhu-l-Islām and chief
Çadr of Hind, 70, 85 and n 5, 102
n 1, 123, 128, 176, 201, 206, 210,
211, 213, 233, 234, 243, 244, 258,
261, 262, 275, 278, 281, 282, 283,
284, 321.
'Abdu-r-Raḥīm of Lak'hnou, Shaikh,
359, 364 and n 4, 387, 396.
'Abdu-r-Raḥīm, Mīrzā, 34. Same as
Mīrzā Khān, son of Bairām Khān,
the Khān Khānān.
'Abdu-r-Raḥmān Bēg. See under
'Abdu-r-Raḥmān, son of Mu'ayyad
Bēg.
'Abdu-r-Raḥmān Bēg, son of Jalālu-
d-dīn Bēg,—a military comman-
der, 249.
'Abdu-r-Raḥmān Jāmī, Maulānā, 207.
See also under Jāmī.
'Abdu-r-Raḥmān, son of Mu'ayyad
Bēg—a military Commander, 15,
16, 17, 249.
'Abdu-r-Raḥmān, son of Sulṭān Sikan-
dar, the Afghān, 11.
'Abdu-r-Rasūl, Sayyid,—head-man
of 'Abdu-n-Nabī the Shaikhu-l-
Islām, 208, 233.
'Abdu-sh-Shahīd, Khwājah, grand-
son of Khwājah Aḥrār,—one of
the saints of Hind, 166, 174, 187.
'Abdu-sh-Shukur Gūldār, Mullā,—
Qāzī of Jounpūr, 285.
'Abdu-s-Sami' of Miyānkāl of Tran-
soxiana,—the Qāzi-l-Quzāt of
Hind, 324.
Ābōth, (Mishna), 287 n 2, 400 n 1.
Abu 'Abd-ullāh Muḥammad Sharafu-
d-dīn,—author of Qaçīdah-e-bor-
dah, 397 n 1.
Abu Bakr,—the first of the four early
Khalīfahs, 36 n 2.
Abū Ḥanīfah an-Na'mān ibn Thābit,
Imām, 212 and n 2.
Abu Isḥāq Ibn Adham. See under
Ibn Adham.
Abu Isḥāq, Mīr, son of Mīr Sayyid
Rafī'ud-dīn Muḥaddis, 289.
Abu Isḥāq, Sayyid,—a jāgīr-holder
of Bengal, 333.
Abu Lahab,—the infidel uncle of the
Arabian prophet Muḥammad, 23
and n 6, 281.
Abu-l-Fatḥ Bēg, son of Fazā'il Beg,
the lieutenant of Māh Jūjak
Bēgum, 54, 55.
Abu-l Fatḥ of Gīlān, Ḥakīm,—Çadr
of the metropolis of Hind, 214,
271, 276, 286, 289, 290, 294, 304,
313, 325, 326, 328, 359, 361, 362,
364, 365, 376, 379, 382.
Abu-l-Fatḥ Jalālu-d-dīn Muḥammad
Akbar Pādshāh Ghāzī, 279. See
under Akbar.
Abu-l-Fatḥ, Shaikh, son of Shaikh
Badah,—one of the nobles of the
Court of Akbar, 102.
Abu-l-Fazl 'Allāmī, Shaikh, son of
Shaikh Mubārak of Nāgor,—Wazīr
of Akbar and author of the Āīn-i-
Akbarī, 25 n 2, 38 n 5, 46 n 1, 49
n 4, 57 n 4, 94 n 6, 176, 200, 201,
202, 205, 207 and n 3, 209, 212, 214,
267, 268, 269, 270, 271 n 1, 273 n 4,
280, 283, 286, 299, 305, 309, 314
n 4, 316, 326, 328, 331, 333, 334,
349 n 5, 377, 384, 389, 396, 400,
402 n 1, 406, 413, 415, 416, 419, 421.
See also under 'Allāmī Shaikh Abu-
l-Fazl.
Abu-l-Fazl Naqshbandī, Khwājah,—
an attendant of Mīrzā Muḥammad
Ḥakīm, 302.
Abu-l-Fazl, Sayyid, son of Mīr Say-
yid Muḥammad Mīr'adal,—gover-
nor of Bhakkar, 252.
Abu-l-Ghais Bokhārī. See the next.
Abu-l-Ghays Bokhārī of Dihlī, Mīr,
—a Saint and a soldier, 14, 252,
313 [see page xi], 358, 359, 374.
Abu-l-Jahl,—a nickname given to
Abu-l-Fazl 'Allāmī, 350.
Abu-l-Ma'ālī. See under Shāh Abu-l-
Ma'ālī.
Abu-l-Ma'ālī, Qāzī, the son-in-law of
the Prince of Bukhārā,—a learned
doctor, 45.
Abu-l-Muzaffar, Mīr, son of Ashraf
Khān,—a jāgīr-holder of Bengal,
333.
Abu-l-Qāsim,—the twelfth of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 36 n 2.
Abu-l-Qāsim, Mīr Sayyid, son of Mīr
Sayyid Çafālī, of Bhakkar, 252.
Abu-l-Qāsim Mīrzā, son of Kamrān
Mīrzā, son of Bābar the Emperor
of Hindustān, 5.
Abu-l-Qāsim Tabrīzī,—brother of
Maulāna 'Abdu-l-Qādir Akbar's
tutor,—Dīwān of Bengal, 332.
Abu-l-Qāsim, Tamkīn, Mīrzā,—an
officer of the Army, 196.
Abu Muslim,—hero of a story of
adventures, 329.
Abu Naçr of Farāh,—author of the
Niçābu-ç-çibyān, 316 n 1.
Abu Sa'īd Moghūl, Sulṭān,—of the
House of Hulākū, 31, 60.
Abu Sa'īd, Mullā, nephew of Mīyān
Pānipātī,—an author, 286.
Abn Turāb. See under Shāh Abu
Turāb.
Abyssinia, 352.
Abyssinians, the, 168, 170, 171.
Āçaf Khān,—title of Khwājah 'Abdu-
l-Majīd of Harāt, the Governor of
Dihlī, 38, 62, 65, 66, 76, 77, 78, 86,
87, 89 and n 2, 94 and n 4, 97, 98,
105, 107, 169.
Āçaf Khān Mīr Bakhshī Sānī,—title
of Mīrzā Ghiyāsu d-dīn 'Alī Qaz-
wīnī,— Dīwān of Gujrāt, 173, 205,
233, 236, 237, 238, 241, 246, 247,
249, 251, 252, 270, 296, 322, 351.
Āçaf Khān Sālis,—title of Mīrzā Ja'far
or Ja'far Bēg, nephew of Mīrzā
Ghiyāsn-d-dīn 'Alī Qazwīnī, 322,
328, 329, 393, 401, 406, 409 and n 4,
410.
'Adalī, Muḥammad Shāh Sūr 'Ādil,—
the nominal Emperor of India at
the time of Humāyūn's invasion,
5 and n 8, 6, 10, 25 and nn 1 and 2,
26, 28, 41, 62, 65, 159.
Adam of Scripture, 184, 329, 347,
397.
Ādam G'hakkar,—Sulṭān of the
G'hakkars, 3, 13 and n 3, 52 and
n 3.
Ādampūr, 192.
Aden, 217.
Adham Khān, son of Māhum Ankah,
the nurse of Akbar,—one of the
Amīrs of the Empire, ii, 29, 42, 43,
46, 49 and n 4, 50, 51, 59, 64, 101,
351.
Adham, Mīr,—colleague of Rāī Patr
Dās, Dīwān of Bengal, 276.
Adhan of Jounpūr, Shaikh,—Saint
and religious teacher, 273, 309.
Adhem, more correctly Adham. See
under Ibn Adham.
'Ādil Khān,—ruler of the Dak'hin,
and reigning prince of Bījāpūr, 257
and n 2, 276, 325, 390.
'Ādil Muḥammad Khān, son of Shāh
Muḥammad Khān Qandahārī, 108.
'Ādil Shāh,—title of Shāh Walī Bēg
Atkah, 55.
Afghān Tarbanī, or Tarbatī, 157 n 1.
See under Shaikh Fatḥ-ullāh Tarīn.
Afghāns, the, 8, 12, 17, 18, 23, 37,
77, 80, 89, 105, 139, 144, 145, 167,
168, 170, 181, 183, 184, 195, 196,
197, 198, 199, 217, 232, 235, 245,
274, 342, 360, 361, 362, 364, 366,
8, 396, 401.
Afrāsiyāb,—an ancient King of
Tūrān, 47 and n 4, 137.
Afrāsiyāb, son of Mīrzā Muḥammad
Ḥakīm, son of Humāyūn the em-
peror of Hindustān, 359.
Africa, 227 n 3, 421 n 3.
Afrīdūn, or Farīdūn,—an ancient
King of Irān, 199.
Aghā Khān,—the treasurer of Akbar,
218.
Aghnagh, signification of the word,
15.
Āg-Maḥall,—name of a place be-
tween the Ganges and the moun-
tains, 235.
Āgra, 4, 6, 15, 19, 20, 25, 26, 28, 29
and n 5, 31, 39, 44 and n 3, 46, 51,
52, 53, 56, 57, 59 and n 1, 60 and
n 5, 61, 62, 69, 74, 84, 86, 88, 89,
92, 94, 96, 102 [see page iii], 103,
104, 108, 111, 114, 118, 119, 122,
124, 127, 139, 150, 153, 155, 172,
173, 175, 176, 178, 182, 185, 187,
195, 204, 213, 216, 218 and n 3,
224, 225, 230, 244, 285, 293, 310,
324, 344, 391.
Aḥadīs, the, [Monotheists] followers
of the religion of Akbar, 336, 407.
Aḥadīs, the,—one of the classes into
which Akbar divided his army,
194, 303, 353, 362, 367, 369.
Aḥādī, or the Traditions of the Pro-
phet, 207 and n 1, 262.
Ahār,—a parganna on the bank of
the Ganges, 157, 158, 424.
Ahl-i-Jamā'at, the,—signification of
the term, 267.
Ahl-i-Kitāb, the,—signification of the
term, 265 and n 1.
Aḥmad, little, 251.
Aḥmad, another name of the Arabian
prophet Muḥammad, 35 n 4, 324.
Aḥmad Bēg,—a relative of Ḥusain
Qulī Khān, 56 and n 2, 58 and n 4.
Aḥmad Bikrī of Egypt, Shaikh,—a
religious leader, 419.
Aḥmad, the Çūfī,—musician of the
Masnad-i-Çād of Dihlī, 418, 419.
See also under Aḥmad Suflī.
Aḥmad Khān Bārha, Sayyid,—gover-
nor of the fortress of Patan, 144,
151, 152, 233, 236, 237 n 4, 240.
Aḥmad-i-Razawī, Mīr,—father of
Yūsuf Khān Mashhadī, governor of
Kashmīr, 96 n 1.
Aḥmad, Sayyid,—editor of the text
of the Tūzuk-i-Jahāngīrī, 398 n 3.
Aḥmad, Shaikh,— one of the chief
men of Lāhor, 387.
Aḥmad, the Shī'ah, Mullā, 376. See
under Aḥmad of Tat'hah.
Aḥmad Suflī,—a title of contempt
given to Aḥmad the Çūfī, 420 and n 1.
Aḥmad of Tat'hah, Mullā,—a bigoted
Shī'ah, 327, 328, 352, 376, 406.
Aḥmadābād, capital of Gujrāt, 110,
144, 145, 146 and n 1, 150, 151,
152 and n 4, 153, 167, 168, 169, 173,
174, 188, 249, 256, 321, 337, 338
and n 1, 339, 340, 342, 344, 355,
356, 370, 371, 372, 373, 385, 424.
Aḥmadnagar, 145, 147, 152 n 4, 167,
334 n 1, 354. 372, 390, 403 n 1.
Aḥrār, Khwājah,—a Muḥammadan
Saint, 57, 166, 174, 235, 275, 366.
Ahrīmān,—the Evil One of the Par-
sis, 334 n 4, 356 and n 1.
Aimah-dārān, the, 207 n 4. See under
the Aimahs.
Aimahdārs, the, 354, 394. See under
the Aimahs.
Aimahs, the, or holders of grant-
lands, 207 and n 4, 208.
Āīn-i-Akbarī, the,—of Abu-l-Fazl
'Allāmī, 2 n 3, 7 n 5, 22 n 4, 24 nn 2
and 3, 54 n 1, 63 n 4, 65 n 3, 79 n 1,
85 n 3, 176 n 3, 219 n 2, 233 n, 241
n 2, 280 n 2, 315 n 1, 405 n 1, 424.
'Ain-ul-mulk Shīrāzī, Ḥakīm,—an
officer of the Imperial Court, 175,
224, 257, 286 [see page x], 322,
370, 377, 397, 402, 416, 417.
'Āishah, favourite wife of the Ara-
bian prophet Muḥammad, 318 n 2,
349 n 4.
Ajmīr, 46, 57 and n 2, 108, 127, 129,
137, 143, 153, 162, 168, 173, 174,
175, 176, 188, 200, 203 n 2, 215,
232 [see page viii], 233, 236, 245,
246 and n 2, 258, 262, 275, 280, 281,
283, 291, 297, 309, 320, 414, 415.
Ajodhan,—generally known as Patna,
which also see, 137, 265.
Akbar, 1, 2 and n 4, 5 and n 1, 9, 11
and n 1, 12, 24 n 3, 49 n 4, 54 n 2,
61 n 3, 70 n 4, 79 n 2, 88 n 2, 94 n 2,
96 n 1, 100 n 3, 108 and n 2, 125,
127, 136, 149, 166, 175 n 1, 180, 201
n 3, 202 n 1, 217 n 3, 218 n 1, 227
n 1, 241 n 2, 255 n 2, 281, 314, 371
n 4, 382, 394 n 4.
Akbarnāmah, the,—of Shaikh Abu-l
Faẓl 'Allāmī, 12 n 6, 32 n 3, 34 n 5,
52 n 5, 57 n 2, 58 n 1, 68, 78 n 2, 301
n 3, 388, 398, 406.
Ākhtah-bēgī,—the officer in charge
of the geldings, 54 and n 1.
Alāhābād, 100 and n 3, 103. See also
under Illāhābād.
Alāhābās. See the above.
'Alam-ul-hadā ['Alam-ul-Hud?] of
Baghdād,—author of the Nahju-l-
balāghat, 64.
'Alā-ud-daulah Qazwīnī, Mīr,—author
of a Biography of the Poets, 108
and n 2.
'Alā-ud-dīn Khiljī, Sulṭān, 193.
'Alā-ud-dīn Lārī, Maulānā, 53.
Alexander the Great, 137, 178 n 2,
189, 382.
Alfī, 327. See also under the Tārīkh-
i-Alfī.
Alhādī. See under Hādī.
'Alī, son of Abi Ṭālib,—the first of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 11 n 4,
36 n 2, 102 n 2, 172, 255, 274, 295,
374 n 2.
'Alī 'Ālam Shāhī, Mīrzā,—an army
officer, 197.
'Alī Baghdādī, Qāzī, grandson of Mīr
Qāzī Ḥusain Maibazī,—Dīwān of
Kashmīr, 261, 282, 283, 296, 394
and n 4, 395.
'Alī Bēg Sildūz,—Governor of the for-
tress of Chītor, 26. See also under
Mihr 'Alī Bēg Sildūz.
'Alī of Gīlān, Ḥakīm,—a relative of
Ḥakīm-ul-mulk of Gīlān, 273, 276,
328, 381, 420.
'Alī Hazin, Belfour's translation of,
35 n 3, 402 n 6.
'Alī Khān, Governor of Kashmīr, 276.
See the next.
'Alī Khān, Mīrzādah, 365, 380. See
the above.
'Alī Khān, Rājah,—Governor of Āsīr
and Burhānpūr, 251, 257, 260, 274,
354, 372, 373, 390, 417.
'Alī, Mihr. See under Mihr 'Alī.
'Alī Muḥammad Asp,—one of the
Emperor's Courtiers, 55, 303.
'Alī Murād Uzbek,—an army officer,
236, 247, 251.
'Alī Mūsā Rizā,—the eighth of the
twelve Imāms of the Shī'ahs, 36 n
2, 80 n 3. See also under Rizā.
'Alī Qāzī, 233 n 3. See also under
Qāzī 'Alī Mīr Bakhshī.
'Alī Qulī Khān,—commandant of the
town of Harī or Hirāt, 375. See
the next.
'Alī Qulī Khān Uzbek, the Khān Za-
mān, son of Ḥaidar Sulṭān Uzbek-
i-Shaibānī, 4, 5, 12 n 3, 44 n 4, 76
n 2, 84 n 1, 95 n 2, 101. See the
above.
'Alī Rāī,—ruler of Little Tibet, 388.
Alīm of Kābul, Mullā,—author of the
Fawātiḥ-ul-wilāyat, 348.
Allāhābās. See under Alāhābād.
'Allāmī Shaikh Abu-l-Fazl, 397, 398,
412 and n 3. See also under Abu-l-
Fazl 'Allāmī.
Almuzill. See under Muzill.
Alqāhirah. See under Qāhirah.
Altamsh-corps,—explanation of the
term, 197 and n 2.
Alwar,—a town about sixty cosses
S.S. W. of Dihlī, 6 and n 5, 9, 40, 108.
'Amād-ul-mulk ['Imād-ul-mulk?], ma-
ternal grandfather of Amīr Khusrū
the poet, 38 n 4.
Amān-ullāh Sarhindī, Miyān,—one of
the learned of Akbar's time, 407.
Ambēr or Jaipur,—one of the three
great Rājpūt States, 45 and n 8,
242 and n 2.
Ambīr,—a town in the district of
Multān, 258.
Ambit'hī,—a town in the confines of
Lak'hnou, 167 n 1.
Amīn Diwāna. See under Muḥam-
mad Amīn Dīwānah.
Amīn Khān Ghorī,—Governor of
Jūnāgaṛh or Chūnāgaṛh, 152, 355,
370, 371, 384, 392.
Amīnā, Khwājah. See under Khwājah
Amīnā.
Amīn-ud-dīn, formerly called Muḥam-
mad Amīn,—one of the confiden-
tial servants of the Court, 390.
Amīn-ud-dīn Maḥmūd of Harat,
Khwājah, known as Khwājah Amī-
nā, 20 n 3, 232 [see page viii]. See
also under Khwājah Amīnā.
Amīr Khān Ghorī, 152, an error for
Amīn Khān Ghorī, which see.
Amīr-ul-umarā,—title of Rājah Bagh-
wān Dās, 383.
Amm Kulsūn, 328,—an error for
Umm Kulsūm, which see.
Amrār-i-sānī, the,—by Shaikh Faizī,
the poet, 407.
Amrohah,—in the neighbourhood of
Lakh'nou, 156, 158, 284, 304, 346,
355, 358. See the next.
Amrūhah, 224 [see page viii]. See
the above.
Āmul,—a town on the Jīḥūn [Oxus],
252, 295 n 1.
Anagah,—signification of the word,
49 n 4.
Andarī, town of, 29.
Andarī-Karnāl, town of, 70.
Ānjū, town of, 209.
'Anqā,—a fabulous bird said to dwell
in the mountain of Qāf, 272 and
n 3, 411.
Anka or Ankah, signification of the
word, 49 n 4.
Antichrist, 189 and n 2, 253, 268, 323,
Anūptalao,—name of a tank and a
palace in the capital, 204 and n 3,
212, 219.
Anwār-ul-mashkūt [Mishkāt?], the,
—name of a book, 205.
Anwār-i-Sohailī, the,—of Mullā
Ḥusain ibn 'Alī al-Wā iz al-Kāshifī,
59 and n 5, 369 n 1.
'Aqā'id-i-Nasafī, the,—name of a
book, 53.
'Aqīl Ḥusain Mīrzā, son of Muḥam-
mad Sulṭān Mīrzā,—of the family
of Taimūr, 87 n 1.
Āra, town of, 242 n 1, 244.
'Arab Bahādur,—one of the Amīrs
of Bihār, 284, 289, 292, 293, 298,
364 [see page xii].
'Arab, Khwājah. See under Khwā-
jah 'Arab.
Arabia, 210.
Arabia deserta, 32 n 1.
Arabia felix, 32 n 1.
Arabia petræa, 32 n 1.
Arabs, the, 269.
Arail, parganna of,—in Allāhābād, on
the bank of the Jumna, 124.
Ārām Jān,—name of a dancing-girl
of Jounpūr, 15, 16, 17.
Arash,—signification of the word,
398.
'Ārif Çafawī Ḥusainī, 68.
Aristotle, 21 n 2, 325 n 2.
Arrian, 178 n 2.
'Arsh,—signification of the word,
74 n.
Asad-ullāh, or Lion of God,—title
of Ḥamzah, the uncle of Muḥam-
mad, 347 n 4.
Asālū,—name of a village, 355.
Asfīd Shāh Sulṭān, 307.
Āsh-i-ḥayat,—explanation of the
term, 315.
'Ashqī Khān, Mullā,—Vakīl of Qāzī
Çadru-d-dīn of Lāhor, 276.
Ashraf Khān, Mīr Munshī,—a
Courtier and an army officer, 5, 7,
75, 76, 84, 85, 110, 113, 149.
Asia, wife of Pharaoh, 59 n 4.
Asiatic Society of Bengal, 212 n 1,
302 n 2, 314 n 2.
Asīr,—a town in Khāndesh, 46 and
n 4, 251, 257, 372, 390.
'Askar Khān, Mīr Bakhshī, also called
Lashkar Khān, and Astar Khān,
196. See also under Lashkar
Khān.
Aslīm Shāh, Sūr,—of the Afghān
dynasty of Dihlī, 10, 37, 63. Va-
riously called Islām, Islem and
Salīm Shāh, which see.
Asniyah,—a place on the bank of
the Sārbarmatī, 371.
Asp Julāb Sīstānī,—Governor of the
parganna of Sarūt, in the Doāb, 52.
Assam, 166 n 5.
Astar Khān, Mīr Bakhshī, also called
'Askar Khān and Lashkar Khān,
196. See also under Lashkar Khān.
Atak or Attak, town of, 360, 362, 363,
364, 373, 382, 383, 426. See also
the next.
Atak Banāras, 301, 353, 357, 360, 373,
426. See also the above and the
next.
Atak Katak,—another name of Atak
Banāras, 373 and n 1, 426. See
also the two above.
Atāwa, or
Atāwah, town of, 6, 346.
Ātbēgi,—name of a title, 54 n 1.
Atgah,—signification of the word, 49
n 4.
Atgah-clan, the. See under the
Atkah-clan.
Atgah family, the, 94. See also the
Atkah-clan.
At'harban, the,—name of one of the
sacred books of the Hindūs, 216.
See the next.
Atharva Veda, the, 424. See the
above.
Atka or Atkah,—signification of the
word, 49 n 4.
Atka Khān or Atkah Khān, Shamsu-
d-dīn Muḥammad, surnamed A'zam
Khān, 5 and n 5, 12, 13, 35, 36,
38, 49 and n 4, 52 n 2, 72 and n 2.
See also under A'zam Khān and
Shamsu-d-dīn Muḥammad Atkah
Khān.
Atkah-clan, the, 72, 109, 153. See
also the Atgah family.
Atkah Khāns, the, 92 and n 4, 98.
Atkinson's Shāhnāmah, 339 n 1.
Attak. See under Atak.
Auhand, town of, 366.
Aukāf. See under Auqāf.
Auqāf,—signification of the term, 22
n 4, 49.
Avecenna, 382 n 3.
Awēsar, Rājah,—a brigand and rebel,
155.
Aymah, or grant lands, 261.
'Aynu-l-mulk, Ḥakīm. See under
'Ainu-l-mulk Shīrāzī.
Ayodhya, the Sanskrit name of Oudh,
75 n 7.
Ayyūbpūr, 192 [see page vi].
A'zam Khān, Mīrzā 'Azīz Kokah, son
of Atgah Khān, 98, 137, 145, 151,
152 and n 1, 153, 167, 218, 307, 309,
320, 332, 345, 350, 372, 373, 383,
384, 385, 392, 399, 400, 412. See
also under Khān-i-A'zam and Mīrzā
Kokah.
A'zam Khān, Shamsu-d-dīn Muḥam-
mad Atkah Khān, 49, 50, 52 n 2.
See also under Atkah Khān, and
Shamsu-d-dīn Muḥammad Atkah-
Khān.
A'zampūr, Parganna of, 87, 93, 154.
'Azdu-d-daulah,—title of Shāh or Mīr
Fatḥ-ullāh Shīrāzī, the Çadr and
Chief of Hindūstān, 354, 358, 370,
372, 373, 379. See also under
Shāh Fatḥullāh and Fatḥullāh of
Shīrāz.
'Azīz Kokah, Mīrzā, son of Atgah
Khān, 218 n 1. See also under the
A'zam Khān, Khān-i-A'zam and
Mīrzā Kokah.
'Azīz-i-Miçr,—title of the Kings of
Egypt, 45 n 3.
'Azīz-ullāh of Mashhad, Mīrzā, 110.