S͟hankar, Rānā, son of Udai Singh, cousin of the Rānā, [16];
promoted, 112;
given 12,000 and 30,000 rupees, [49], [58];
his son promoted, [178];
temple destroyed, [254];
tank, [268].

S͟hāpūr, son of K͟hwājagī K͟hwāja, [218];
perhaps a nephew of G͟hiyās̤, but Maʾās̤ir, i, [180], calls him son of Iʿtimādu-d-daula, and it may be another name for Iʿtiqād.

S͟harafu-d-dīn Kās͟hg͟harī promoted, [372];
sent to Bangash, [408].

S͟harīf, son of Iʿtimādu-d-daula, plots with K͟husrau, [122];
put to death, [123].

S͟harīf Āmulī, account of, [47]–8;
receives 2,000 rupees, [61];
9,000 rupees, [81];
and 12,000 rupees, [101].

S͟harīf K͟hān, Amīru-l-umarā, son of ʿAbdu-ṣ-Ṣamad, couplet by, [11];
account of, [14] and n. 2, [15];
seal entrusted to, [18];
remark of, [25]–6;
employed to quell riot, [29];
directed to pursue K͟husrau, [52];
recalled, [53];
left ill at Lahore, [82];
at Attock, [101];
gets worse, [103];
recovers, [121];
waits on Jahāngīr at Chandālah, [130];
sent to Deccan, [156];
verse by, [228];
death in Deccan, [231].

S͟hauqī, mandolin-player, [331].

S͟hihābu-d-dīn Aḥmad K͟hān, officer of Akbar, [430]–1.

S͟hīr K͟hān, ruler of Bengal, [367].

S͟hīr-afgan, title given by Jahāngīr to ʿAlī Qulī Istājlū, husband of Nūr-Jahān, [113];
account of him and of his killing Qut̤bu-d-dīn, [113]–15.