[43] Rashīd al-Dīn, pp. 173–4, 188. [↑]

[44] Abu’l-G͟hāzī, tome ii. p. 159. [↑]

[45] Ibn Baṭūṭah, tome iii. p. 47. [↑]

[46] Abu’l-G͟hāzī, tome ii. pp. 166–8. Muḥammad Ḥaydar, pp. 13–15. [↑]

[47] When the power of the Chag͟hatāy K͟hāns declined, a portion of the eastern division of their realm became practically independent under the name of Mug͟halistān, a pastoral country suited to the habits of nomad herdsmen, in what is now known as Chinese Turkistan. [↑]

[48] Muḥammad Ḥaydar, pp. 57–8. [↑]

[49] In the reign of ʻAbd al-Karīm, who was K͟hān of Kāshgar from A.H. 983 to 1003 (A.D. 1575–1594). [↑]

[50] Martin Hartmann: Der Islamische Orient, vol. i. p. 203. (Berlin, 1899.) [↑]

[51] Id. p. 202. [↑]

[52] Assemani, tome iii. pars. ii. p. cxvi. [↑]