I
Ibachkiān, [188].
Ibrāhīm, S͟haik͟h, son of Qut̤bu-d-dīn Koka, promoted and styled Kis͟hwar K͟hān, [76];
governor of Rohtas, [144];
faujdār of Uch, [170];
joins army against ʿUs̤mān, [209];
killed in battle, [210].
See also Kis͟hwar K͟hān.
Ibrāhīm Bābā, S͟haik͟h, the Afghan, confined in Chunar, [77].
Ibrāhīm Ḥusain, Mīr Baḥr, bak͟hs͟hī of ahadis, [149];
sent to ʿAzīz Koka, [257]–8.
Ibrāhīm Ḥusain, Mīrzā, rebel, [40].
Ibrāhīm K͟hān, promoted and made joint-paymaster of household, [260];
his offering, [281];
sent to Behar, [284];
conquers Khokharā, [315];
sent to Bengal, [373];
sends diamonds, [379].
Ibrāhīm K͟hān Kākar, [29].
See Dilāwar K͟hān.
Ibrāhīm Lodī, Sult̤ān, son of Sikandar Lodī, killed, [4], [58];
tyranny of, [87].
Iftik͟hār K͟hān, father of Muʿtaqid K͟hān, sends rare elephant, [170];
promoted for good service in Bengal, [177];
joins army against ʿUs̤mān, [209];
killed in battle, [210].
Ihtimām K͟hān (Kotwāl), sent to bring Badīʿu-z-zamān to Court, [127];
promoted and appointed to the charge of the Bengal fleet, [144];
in expedition against ʿUs̤mān, [209]. According to the Iqbāl-nāma he had charge of Mīr Ḥasan, son of S͟hāhruk͟h.
Ik͟htiyāru-l-mulk, thrown from his horse and killed, [44].
Ikrām K͟hān, son of Islām K͟hān, [433].
Ilf K͟hān, promoted, [143], [298].
Imām Qulī, ruler of Transoxiana, puts Mīrzā Ḥusain, or at least the pretended Mīrzā Ḥusain, to death, [127].
ʿInāyat Beg, mistake for G͟hiyās̤ Beg, [22].
ʿInāyat K͟hān (text has G͟hiyās̤), promoted, [158] and n. 1, [199];
made ʿInāyat K͟hān, [160].
Injū, see Jamālu-d-dīn Ḥusain.
Iqbāl-nāma quoted, passim.
Irādat K͟hān, brother of Āṣaf K͟hān (Jaʿfar), made bak͟hs͟hī of Patna and Ḥājīpūr, [117];
promoted, [300], [372].
Īraj, eldest son of K͟hānk͟hānān, dress of honour sent to, [21];
obtains leave from Parwīz, [180];
waits on Jahāngīr, [190];
given jewelled dagger, [192];
styled S͟hāh-nawāz K͟hān, [197];
given sword, [204];
sent again to Deccan, [221];
promoted, [222];
comes to Court, [234];
sent back to Deccan, [243];
offering of, [295];
defeats Malik ʿAmbar, [313], etc.
Irvine, W., quoted, [22] n. 3, etc.
ʿĪsā Tark͟hān, Mīrzā, promoted, [225], [296];
came from Sambhal and honoured, [301].
Islām, K͟hān, original name ʿAlāʾu-d-dīn, [31];
letters from, [113], [199];
sword sent to, [117], [248];
promoted, [144], [171];
he and his brother Qāsim could not agree, [147];
presented with a lakh of rupees collected by him, [180];
sent to Behar and to Bengal, in spite of objections about his youth, [208];
made Dacca his headquarters, [209];
sends [160] elephants, [227];
sends the elephant Bansībadan, [237];
sends elephants and fifty eunuchs, [247];
made officer of 6,000, [256];
death and character, [257].
Ismāʿīl, son of Muḥammad G͟haus̤, [439].
Iʿtibār K͟hān, given Gwalior in fief, [113];
offering of, [282], [319];
promoted, [372].
Iʿtimād K͟hān, of Gujarat, [429], [430].
Iʿtimādu-d-daula, [22].
See G͟hiyās̤ Beg.
Iʿtiqād K͟hān, title of Āṣaf K͟hān, the father of Nūr-Jahān, and the Āṣaf No. iv of Blochmann, [260].
See Abū-l-ḥasan.
Iʿtiqād K͟hān, a younger brother (?) of Āṣaf No. iv, and also known as S͟hāpūr, [218] n. 3;
he became governor of Kashmir, [319];
his presents, [319];
promoted, [320];
censured for allowing prisoners to escape, [373].
(For this Iʿtiqād see Maas̤iru-l-Umarā, i, [180].)