N

Nād ʿAlī Maidānī, [198];
promoted, [303], [317];
offerings, [321] (the entry here should be dāna kis͟h, marten-skins);
death, [348].

Nagīna garden, Ahmadabad, [435].

Najību-n-nisā or Fak͟hru-n-nisā, sister of Muḥammad Ḥakīm and aunt of Jahāngīr, death of, [144].

Nakodar, [135], [136] and n. 1.

Nandanah, red deer of, [129].
See I.G., xviii, [349].

Nannū or Nabū, styled Muz̤affar K͟hān, [429].

Naqīb K͟hān, of Qazwīn, son of ʿAbdu-l-Lat̤īf, original name G͟hiyās̤u-d-dīn, death of, [264];
buried beside his wife, [265].

Naryād, parganah in Gujarat, [415].

Nāṣiru-d-dīn, K͟haljī, buildings made by, [354];
evil behaviour, [365]–7, [408], [409].

Naṣru-llah, given rank of 700 with [400] horse, [153].

Nathu Māl, Rāja of Manjholi, [79] and n. 4;
promoted, [296].

Nauras, musical compositions of ʿĀdil K͟hān, [272] and n. 1.

Naus͟hahr, fort on the Kāma, [102].

Nawāzis͟h K͟hān, title of Saʿdu-llah, son of Saʿīd K͟hān, [197];
promoted, [237], [444];
leave to depart, [287], [443].

Naz̤ar-jīvī, brought Akbar news of Humāyūn’s death, [38] (‘jīvī’ should be ‘chūlī’).

Naz̤īrī of Nīshāpūr, poet, [188] (Rieu, ii. 817b).

New Year Feasts, [48], [85], [138], [154], [165], [191], [206], [235], [259], [280], [317], [370].

News-writers, [247].

Nīlāb, river (Indus), [101].

Nīlgaw, Jahāngīr’s cruelty in connection with hunt of, [164];
incident about shooting one, [189].

Niʿmatu-llah, married to Jānish Begam, sister of T̤ahmāsp, [131].

Niz̤ām, Humāyūn’s librarian, [21].

Niz̤ām, K͟hwāja, brings pomegranates, [391].

Niz̤ām, of Shiraz, story-teller, receives 3,000 rupees, [77].

Niz̤ām Thaneswari, dismissed to Mecca, [60].

Niz̤āmu-d-dīn, historian, [420].

Niz̤āmu-d-dīn Auliyā, saint, [169].

Niz̤āmu-d-dīn K͟hān, [311];
promoted, [320].

Nūr-bak͟ht elephant, [396], [410], [418].

Nūr Gaj, name of elephant and its description, [47]

Nūr-Jahān, [192] note;
name first mentioned in Tūzuk, [266];
makes presents to Karan, [278];
name changed from Nūr-maḥall to Nūr-Jahān, [319];
Rāmsar belongs to, [342];
shoots a bird, [348];
shoots four tigers, [375];
given parganah of Ṭoḍā, [380];
gives a feast, [385];
entertains S͟hāh Jahān, [397];
receives presents from S͟hāh Jahān, [401].

Nūr-nāma, poem, [222].

Nūru-d-dīn, son of G͟hiyās̤u-d-dīn ʿAlī Āṣaf-K͟hān (No. ii), plots with K͟husrau and is put to death, [122]–3.

Nūru-d-dīn Jahāngīr Pāds͟hāh, title assumed, [3].

Nūru-d-dīn Muḥammad, Naqs͟hbandī, father of Salīma Sult̤ān Begam, [232].

Nūru-d-dīn Qulī, promoted, [418].