A
ʿAbbās I., S͟hāh of Persia, his letter to J., [2];
favours Mīr Jumla Muḥ. Amīn, [3];
letters to J., [24], [94], [96], [240];
friendship for K͟hān ʿĀlam, [115], [116], [162];
sends presents, [195];
birds sent to, [221];
besieges Qandahār, [233];
describes its capture, [241];
J.’s reply, [242]
ʿAbdu-l-ʿAzīz Naqs͟hbandī promoted and sent to take Kāngṛa, [73];
promoted, [155], [166];
faujdār Kāngṛa, [186];
gov. Qandahār, [192], [244], [250], [257]
ʿAbdu-l-ʿAzīz, s. K͟hān Damān, [255]–57
ʿAbdu-l-Ḥayy, Armenian, [194]
ʿAbdu-l-Karīm of Gīlān, presents S͟hāh’s letter, [24]
ʿAbdu-l-Wahhāb, s. Ḥakīm ʿAlī, his false bond, [157]
ʿAbdu-l-Wahhāb Bārha, styled Dilīr K., [73], [269]
ʿAbdu-r-Raḥīm K͟hān-K͟hānān Ātālīq sends army Gondwāna, [21];
does homage, [57];
J. gives him his own pūstīn and seven horses, [58];
appointed Deccan, [70];
reports against ʿAmbar, Abyssinian, [155];
misconduct of, [250], etc.
See also under K͟hān-K͟hānān.
ʿAbdu-s-Sattār (associated with Father Jerome Xavier) presents a manuscript of Humāyūn’s, [82] and note
ʿAbdu-llah, s. K͟hān Āʿz̤am ʿAzīz Koka, [66]
(also called Sarfarāz K., see Blochmann, 492);
gets gift of drums, [232];
does homage, [239] (?);
chained and placed on elephant at battle in Gujarāt, but escapes, [267]
ʿAbdu-llah K. Fīrūz Jang given elephant, [94], [239] (?);
his treachery, [251];
joins rebels, [255];
styled Laʿnatu-llah (accursed of God) henceforth, [255], [257], [262]–265;
defeated in Gujarāt, [266]–267, [289], [299]
ʿAbdu-llah Uzbeg ruler in Central Asia, [30]
ʿAbdu-llah, s. Ḥakīm Nūru-d-dīn, executed for disrespect, [286]
ʿĀbid K., Bak͟hs͟hī of Bangas͟h, made director of buildings, [47];
sent Deccan, [60], [61]
Abū-l-Faẓl, author, mistake about Kashmīr, [140] note, [141]
Abū-l-Ḥasan, s. Āqā Riẓāʾī, painter, draws frontispiece to Jahāngīr-nāma, styled Nādiru-z-zamān, [20]
Abū-l-Ḥasan, K͟hwāja, Bak͟hs͟hī, [5], [82], [127];
bridges the Māhī, [155], [163];
sent Deccan, [193], [220], [251], [254]\.
Abū-l-Qāsim Gīlānī blinded by S͟hāh ʿAbbās, [69]
Abū-l-Qāsim Namakīn promoted, [155]
Abū Saʿīd promoted, [228]
Abū-ṣ-Ṣāliḥ does homage, [11];
styled Riẓawī K., [15], [296]
Achbal fountain, [237]
Āchhī, drink used in Paklī, [126]
Adhar, or Ashar, waterfall in Kashmir, [238]
ʿĀdil K. Bījāpūrī, J.’s portrait sent to, [36], [37], [288], [290], [296], [297]
Afẓal K., S͟hāh Jahān’s Dīwān, brings report of victory, [206], [208];
refused an audience, [238];
given dress of honour, [239];
his son killed, [289], [290];
visits ʿAmbar Abyssinian and ʿĀdil Bījāpūrī, [290]
Agra, plague at, [65]
Aḥmadābād, unhealthy, [6], [10];
J.’s nickname for, [13];
heavy rains at, [21], [33];
bad climate, [35]
Aḥmad Beg of Kabul, gov. Kashmīr, [5];
death, [16]
Aḥmad Beg, nephew Ibrāhīm Fatḥ Jang, made gov. Orissa, [210], [298]
Aḥmad S͟haik͟h of Sirhind, impostor, [91], [93];
pardoned, [161];
gets present, [276]
Aḥmad Sultan’s son killed, [267]
Ahmadnagar, accident at siege of, [163]
Aḥsanu-llah, s. K͟h. Abū-l-Ḥasan, promoted, [294]
ʿAis͟hābād garden, [153]
Ajmīr, J.’s illness at, and Islām K.’s devotion, [102]–103
Akbar, emperor, largest elephant Durjan Sāl, [18];
tells story of adventure with elephant, [41];
vows not to hunt with leopards on Fridays, [46];
took Ranthambūr, [58];
orders that Salīm should not be taught any recitation, [70];
recognizes him as his successor, [71];
his Fatḥpūr mosque described, [71];
his anniversary, [90];
tomb visited by J. and Begams, [101], [110], [111], [125];
ordered translation Rāja-tarang, [140];
built Srinagar Fort, [150];
used to sit in garden there, [150], [155], [194];
promotes Nāhir K., [268]
Akbarnagar (Rājmaḥal), Shah Jahān at, [299]
Akbar-nāma, [155]
Akbarqulī Gakkar, s. Jalāl K., [161];
given elephant, [230]
Album (jung), [92];
Alf. K. Qiyām-K͟hānī made gov. Kāngṛa, [282]
ʿAlī Akbar, surgeon, [77]
ʿAlī Muḥ., s. ʿAlī Rāy, of Tibet, [288]
ʿAlī Qulī Darman promoted, [10], [245]
Aligarh, J. hunts wolves in, [270]
Alkah (?), Cap. Kis͟htwār, [135]
Allāh-dād, s. Jalālā Tārīkī, rebels, [85];
repents, [120];
pardoned, [153];
sent Deccan, [215];
does homage, [245]
Alms to the poor, [198]
Amānābād village, [65], [70], [73], [83]
Amānat K., superintendent branding, [82];
promoted, [164]
Amānu-llah, s. Mahābat, promoted, [44], [87], [94], [99], [231], [239];
styled K͟hān-zād K., [257];
promoted, [275]
Amar Singh, Rānā, his death, [123];
his son Bhīm, [162]
ʿAmbar. Malik, Abyssinian, misconduct of, [155]–156;
defeated, [207]–208, [290], [296]
Amīrī, old servant of ʿAbdu-llah K. Uzbeg, [30], [31]
Amru-llah, s. K͟hān-k͟hānān, sent Gondwāna, [21]
Andha Nāg (Blind Fountain), [174]
Anīrāʾī Singh-dalan gets present, [2];
promoted, [81];
Aḥmad S͟haik͟h, made over to, [93];
appointed Bangash, [155]
Antelopes, [42], [43], [70], [109];
1,500 caught, [83], [84]
Apples from Bangash, [101];
of Kashmīr, [146]
Apricots [161]
Āqā Āqāyān, old female servant, account of, [110]–111
Āqā Beg, Persian envoy, [195]
Āqā Riẓāʾī, painter, [20]
ʿAqīdat K. Bak͟hs͟hī, title of K͟hwāja Ibrāhīm, [63], [232], [282], [295]
Archers made horsemen, [237] and note
ʿĀrif, s. Zāhid, executed, [297]
Armenians, [194]
Āṣaf K. III. (of Blochmann)—that is, Jaʿfar—story told by his daughter’s wife, ʿAbdu-llah, s. ʿAzīzkoka, about mouse and plague, [66], [67]
Āṣaf K. IV., brother Nūr-Jahān, orig. name ʿAbū-l-Ḥasan, styled by S͟hāh-Jahān Yamīnu-d-daulah, promoted, [1], [24];
gets early copy Jahāngīr-nāma, [37];
procures camel’s milk for J., [46];
entertains J., [81];
J. visits him at Agra, taking ladies with him, [81], [90], [100], [131];
investigates forgery case, [158], [168];
gov. Gujarāt, [175];
J. and his ladies visit him, [200];
promoted, [230];
sent to Agra to bring treasure, [245], [247], [250], [254], [262];
gov. Bengal, [282]
Aṣālat K., s. K͟hān Jahān, promoted, [245], [259];
sent to assist Dāwar-Bak͟hs͟h, [269];
comes from Gujarāt, [282];
given a horse and dress, [295]
Ass, wild, [201]
Aurangzīb, birth of at Doḥad, [47], [50]
Avenue from Agra to Attock and to Bengal, [100]
ʿAẓudu-d-daula, or Jamālu-d-dīn Ḥusain Injū, author, presented offerings and made tutor to S͟hāh S͟hujāʾ, [82], [90];
pensioned, [200];
presents dictionary, [257]
Azīz Koka, Akbar’s foster-brother. See K͟hān Aʿz̤am.