[20] Thána (north latitude 19° 11′; east longitude 73° 6′), the head-quarters of the British district of that name, about twenty-four miles north-by-east of Bombay, was from the tenth to the sixteenth century a.d. the chief city in the Northern Konkan. [↑]

[21] Báglán, now called Satána, is the northern sub-division of the British district of Násik. In a.d. 1590 the chief commanded 8000 cavalry and 5000 infantry. The country was famous for fruit. Áin-i-Akbari (Gladwin), II. 73. The chief, a Ráthoḍ, was converted to Islám by Aurangzíb (a.d. 1656–1707). [↑]

[22] Dúngarpur (north latitude 23° 50′; east longitude 73° 50′) in Rájputána, 150 miles north-west of Mhow. [↑]

[23] Mirăt-i-Sikandari Persian Text, 45, 46. [↑]

[24] Godhra (north latitude 22° 45′; east longitude 73° 36′), the chief town of the sub-division of that name in the British district of the Panch Maháls. The Mirăt-i-Sikandari (Persian Text, 49) gives, probably rightly, Kothra a village of Sáunli or Savli about twenty miles north of Baroda. [↑]

[25] Sultánpur (north latitude 21° 43′; east longitude 74° 40′), in the north of the Sháháda sub-division of the British district of Khándesh, till a.d. 1804 a place of consequence and the head-quarters of a large district. [↑]

[26] Kapadvanj (north latitude 23° 2′; east longitude 73° 9′), the chief town of the sub-division of that name in the British district of Kaira. [↑]

[27] Dholka (north latitude 22° 42′; east longitude 72° 25′), the chief town of the sub-division of that name in the British district of Áhmedábád. [↑]

[28] Sámbhar (north latitude 26° 53′; east longitude 75° 13′), a town in the province of Ajmír, about fifty-one miles north-north-east from the city of Ajmír. [↑]

[29] Chitor (north latitude 24° 52′; east longitude 74° 4′), for several centuries before a.d. 1567 the capital of the principality of Udepur. [↑]