ʿIzzat K., ruler Ūrganj, [165]
J
Jadrūp Gosain, J.’s interviews with at Ujjain, [49], [52];
at Mathurā, [104], [105], [108]
Jagat Singh, s. Raja Bāso, made Raja of Kāngṛa, [75] and note, [154];
rebels, [287];
pardoned at instance of Nūr-Jahān, [289]
Jagat Singh, s. Rānā Karan, [191];
joins J., [261];
receives a string of pearls, [270]
Jahanda village, [28]
Jahāngīr, Emperor, eldest s. Akbar, celebrates thirteenth year of reign at Doḥad in Gujarat, [1];
fifty first lunar birthday, [1];
makes gifts and appointments, [1]–4;
goes elephant-hunting, [4]–5;
proceeds Aḥmadābād, [6];
Zodiacal coinage, [6]–7;
entertainment on bank Māhī, [7];
fishes and distributes charity, [8];
sends inscribed diamond to S. ʿAbbās, [8]–9;
enters Aḥmadābād, [9];
sickness in camp, [10];
appointments, [10]–12;
abuses Aḥmadābād and gives it nicknames, [13];
in spite of illness attends in jharoka, [14];
impromptu couplet, [15];
pairing of Sāras, [16]–18;
describes some elephants, [18];
frontispiece Jahāngīr-nāma, [20];
violent rain, [21];
about diamonds, [21]–22;
refers again to Sāras, [23], [25], [32], [39], [42];
elephant-catch, [24];
leaves for Agra, [25];
copies of Vol. I. Jahāngīr-nāma, [26];
orders executions postponed till sunset, [28];
an impromptu, [30], [31];
recites verse at meeting of S͟haik͟hs, [32];
bids a Sayyid translate Qorān, [34]–35;
resolves to give up shooting at end of fiftieth year, [36];
sends portrait and quatrain Bījāpūr, [37];
copies Jahāngīr-nāma given Iʿtimāda-d-daula and Āṣaf K., [37];
hunting, [39];
anecdote of Akbar, [41];
ʿInāyat’s death, [43];
illness of Prince Shujāʾ, [45];
anecdote of Akbar, [45]–46;
Aurangzīb born at Doḥad, [47];
three days’ halt, [47];
comet (?), [48];
interviews Jadrūp, S͟hāh-Jahān presents his child (Aurangzīb) and fifty elephants, [50];
story of gardener’s daughter, [50]–52;
interviews Jadrūp, [52]–53;
inspects hawks, [54];
crosses Ghāṭī Chānḍā, [57];
duck-shooting, [58];
gives his pūstīn to K͟hān K͟hānān, [58];
visits Rantambūr, [58];
describes Akbar’s siege of it, [58]–59;
releases many prisoners and gives them gratuities, [59];
enjoys hawking, [60];
Hindaun quatrain (Umar K͟hayyām’s) at, [62];
visits Bayānā, [63];
his mother’s well and garden, [64];
arrives Fatḥpūr, [64];
plague at Agra, [65]–67;
has S. Jahān weighed, [68];
J.’s mother arrives, [68];
Salīm Chis͟htī’s tomb, [70];
hunting, [70];
Fatḥpūr mosque, [71];
Amānābād, [73];
Nūr Jahān’s necklace, [74];
Nūr Manzil Garden, [76];
fourteenth year, [78];
Amānābād, [83];
S. Jahān’s mother (Jodh Bāʾī) dies, [84];
enters Agra, [84];
death of S͟hāh Nawāz, [87];
honours K͟hān-k͟hānān’s other sons, [88];
Mārk͟hūr goats, [88]–89;
account of S͟haik͟h Aḥmad, [91];
Sultan Parwīz arrives, [93];
fine specimen of fish teeth (? walrus tooth), [94];
arranges visit to Kashmīr, [97];
plants avenues, [100];
visits Akbar’s tomb, [101];
Brindāban, [103];
visits Jadrūp at Mathurā, [104]–06, [108];
gets Nūr-Jahān to shoot tiger, [105];
releases K͟husrau, [107];
orders painting of a falcon, [108];
visits Delhi and Humāyūn’s tomb with children and ladies, [109];
hunts at Pālam, [109];
visits old female servant, [110];
Kairāna Garden, [112];
hawking, [112];
Sirhind Garden, [113];
S͟hāh-Jahān’s son, [112], [113];
Kalānaur, [114];
Tīmūr’s portrait, [116];
verses, [118];
visit of a Lahore saint (Miyān S.) (This was the teacher of Mullah S͟hāh, known as Mīyān Mīr, after whom Meean Mīr was named), [119];
ring-hunt made, [120];
on way to Kashmīr, [123], etc.;
fifteenth year, [130];
account of Kashmīr and Kis͟htwār, [130]–151;
S͟hujā’s accident, [151];
death of J.’s wife, Pāds͟hāh Bānū Begam (also known as Ṣāliḥa Bānū), [159];
defeat at Bangāsh, [160];
S. Aḥmad pardoned, [161];
picture gallery, [162];
appointments made, [162], [164], [165];
gets parti-coloured fish-tooth from Transoxiana, [166];
list of birds and beasts not found in Kashmīr, [168], [170];
visits Vīrnāg, the source of Jhelam, [170];
visits Inch, [172];
visits Achval, [173];
suffers from shortness of breath, [176];
visits Lār Valley, [176];
returns India, [177];
arrives Lahore, [183];
Delhi, [194];
Humāyūn’s tomb, [196];
hunting, [197];
Agra, [197];
punishes murderer, reflections thereon, [211];
tragical fate of blacksmith, [211];
illness, [212];
bad conduct of physicians, [213];
Nūr-Jahān prescribes for him, [214];
Parwīz arrives, [215];
death of Nūr-Jahān’s mother, [216];
leaves Agra, [217];
Hardwār, [218];
Sirhind, [220];
Kāngṛa, [222];
death of Nūr-Jahān’s father, [222];
inspects Kāngṛa fort, [223];
has bullocks slaughtered on top, [223];
describes jungle-fowl, [226];
experiments on a Sannyāsī, [227];
entrusts Nūr-Jahān with her father’s power, [228];
hunting, [229];
in Kashmīr, [232];
abolishes faujdāri cess, [232];
leaves Kashmīr, [237];
correspondence with S͟hāh-Abbās about Qandahar, [240]–45;
gives up journal, [246];
bad news about S͟hāh-Jahān’s disloyalty, [246]–48;
styles him henceforth Bīdaulat (wretch), [248];
a conspiracy detected and punished, [249];
near Delhi, [252];
eighteenth year, [253];
sends his quiver to ʿAbdullah Fīrūz Jang, who suddenly joins the rebels, [255];
death of Sundar (Bikramājīt), [256];
victory over Bīdaulat (S͟hāh-Jahān) and Laʿnatu-llah (ʿAbdu-llah), [256];
rewards to faithful servants, [256];
Manṣūr Farangī and brother join J., [258];
Badīʿu-z-Zamān murdered by his brothers, [259];
Parwīz starts with large force to pursue Bīdaulat, [260];
death of J’.s mother, [261];
Ṣafī K.’s victory over Laʿnatu-llah, [261]–67;
J. kills four tigers, [269];
death of Manṣūr Farangī, [271];
flight of Bīdaulat, [273];
birth of S͟hahriyār’s daughter, [276];
Bīdaulat at Āsīr, [278];
J. sets out for Kashmīr, [282];
a remarkably fine tiger, [284];
ʿAbdu-llah, s. Ḥakīm Nūru-d-dīn, executed for disrespectful language, [286];
J. arrives Delhi, [287];
Bīdaulat takes refuge in Qut̤bu-l-Mulk’s territory, and proceeds towards Orissa and Bengal, [289];
nineteenth year, [294];
orders that the blind and mutilated should be kept away from his presence, [294];
Parwīz ordered to proceed towards Allahabad and Bihār, [296];
Bīdaulat at Rājmaḥal, [299]
Jahāngīrābād, hunting lodge, [182]
Jahāngīr Qulī, s. ʿAzīzkoka, removed from Bihār, [38];
pays his respects, [113];
receives dress of honour, [117]