ʿAbdu-s-Salām, son of Muʿaz̤z̤am K͟hān, arrives opportunely with reinforcements, [212].

ʿAbdu-s-Sattār, Mullā, [389].

ʿAbdu-s-Subḥān K͟hān, brother of K͟hān ʿĀlam, released and promoted,177, [319];
killed in Afghanistan, [323].

Abhay Rām, son of Akhayrāj, makes riot and is slain, [29]–30.

ʿĀbid, son of Niz̤āmu-d-dīn, historian, ill-treated, [331];
appointed to Kabul, [346];
quarrel with ʿAbdu-llah, [420].

ʿĀbidīn K͟hwāja, promoted, [60].
See also Addenda.

Abjad, [11], n. 3;
of words Allah Akbar and Jahāngīr, [253].

Āb-pās͟hī, festival of, [265], [295].

Abū-l-bī Ūzbeg, sent to Qandahar, [224];
(qu. perhaps should be Abū-n-nabī?), [234] and n. 1;
governor of Qandahar and sends presents, [235].

Abū-l-fatḥ, of Bijapur, also called Dekhanī, [180];
dagger presented to, [192];
waits on Jahāngīr, [228], [257];
obtains fief in Nagpur, [229].