Sar-farāz K͟hān, grandson of Muṣāhib Beg (apparently should be Sar-āfrāz), [413].

Sarkhej, [428].

Sati, custom of, referred to, [142].

Sayyid Muḥammad, descendant of S͟hāh ʿĀlam, [422].

Sayyids of Bārha, bearing of, [64].

Sensitive plant, [443].

S͟hādmān, son of ʿAzīz Koka, made K͟hān, [203].

S͟hāh ʿĀlam, saint, raises the dead, [421].

S͟hāh Beg K͟hān, governor of Qandahar, promoted to 5,000, [49];
reports intended Persian attack on fort, [70];
bravery of, [71];
defends fort and makes it over to Sardār K͟hān, [86];
comes to S͟hor, [111] and n. 2;
recovers from illness, [121];
account of, [126];
styled K͟hān-daurān, [128];
offering of, [206], [287]–8;
originally sent to Qandahar by Akbar, [262];
present to, [295];
defeats Aḥdād, Afghan, [311];
transferred to Sind, [397].

S͟hāh Begam, title given to K͟husrau’s mother, daughter of Bhagwān Dās, takes poison, [56].