EUROPEAN RECORDS AND WORKS
English Factories in India, see chap.
English Factories in India, see chap.
Cambridge History of India - v4 - Mugul Period
Compiled by the same 'Inayat-ullah in 1719.
Very brief and
obscure précis, overloaded with Arabic texts; covers c. 1699-1704. MSS.
A. S. B. , O. P. L.
Kalimat-i-Aurangzib. By the same 'Inayat-ullah. Same style; covers c. 1703-6.
Complete copy in Rampur State Library; a fragment in I. O. L. 3301, ff.
33a-60b.
There are certain later and shorter collections of Aurangzib's letters,
mostly selected from 'Inayat-ullah and bearing various titles, e. g. Raqain-
i-Karaim (compiled by Sayyid Ashraf Khan Mir Muhammad Husaini bin
‘Abdul Karim), Dastur-ul-famal-i-Agahi and Rumuz-wa-Isharaha-i-
‘Alamgiri (both compiled by Raja Aya Mal, the diwan of Jay Singh Savai,
in 1738 and 1742 respectively). Several letters from these selections con-
stitute the lithographed Ruqʻat-i-Alamgiri. The MSS. are very numerous
and seldom exactly correspond in their contents or titles.
Other letters of Aurangzib are to be found in Jaipur State archives :
Paris Bib. Nat. MS. Persan Suppl. 476 (Blochet, no. 704).
Faiyyaz-ul-qawanin (11 letters).
Mirat-i-Ahmadi, vol. I (edicts only).
Khatut-i-Shivaji. R. A. S. MS. 71.
Zahir-ul-Insha, lithographed.
Bahar-i-Sakhun (completed 1663). I. O. L. MS. Ethé 2090, I. O. L. MS. 549, f. 50,
and numerous other volumes.
Letters of other historical personages :
Haft Anjuman. Compiled by Udiraj (afterwards Tala'-yar), the secretary of
Rustam Khan and of Mirza Raja Jay Singh. Paris Bib. Nat. no. 37, a frag-
ment; two complete MSS. in India.
1 For a suggestion that Khafi Khan borrowed from another writer, Abu-'l Fazl
Ma'muri, see Sri Ram Sharma, J. R. A. S. 1936, p. 279. [Ed. ]
## p. 585 (#625) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY
585
Ruq'at-i-Shah 'Abbas Sani.
Khatut-i-Shivaji. R. A. S. MS. 71. Containing letters of Shivaji, Aurangzib,
prince Akbar, Shambhuji, Shahu, etc. (Two of Akbar's letters are printed
in Zahir-ul-insha. )
Faiyyaz-ul-qawanin. 266 folios, containing 25 letters from Shah Jahan, 8 from
Dara, 6 from Shuja', 47 from Murad Bakhsh, 9 from vazir Ja'far Khan,
others from Shah 'Abbas II, 'Adil Shah, Qutb Shah, Jay Singh, etc.
Ruqʻat-i-Hamid-ud-din Khan (a servant of Aurangzib's mother-in-law Nauras
Banu and afterwards faujdar in Malwa). Two incomplete MSS. in India.
Rug‘at-i-Nawazish Khan (faujdar of Mandu, later governor of Kashmir).
Insha-i-Madhu Lal. Lithographed letters of Mu'izz-ud-din and others.
Karnama-i-waqai', being the letters of Maʻtabar Khan (faujdar of Kalyan) by
his secretary Jethmal (“Hindu”). I. O. L. MS. 2007.
Muraqa'at-i-Hasan. By Maulana Abu'l-Hasan, a civil officer in Bengal and
Orissa, 1655-67. Rampur State Library, Insha, no. 182.
Majmu'a-i-munshat-va-ghaira. Letters from and to Bidar Bakht, from Mukhlis
Khan Ruh-ullah Khan, Asad Khan, to Muhammad Murad Khan, etc.
Rampur State Library, Insha, no. 176.
I. O. L. MS. 150. Surat English Factory letters, 1695-6. English summary in
Proceedings of Indian Historical Records Commission, Calcutta session.
Insha-i-Raushan-Kalam. By Bhupat Ray, servant of Ra'dandaz Khan, faujdar
of Baiswara. Irvine MS. in l. O. L. Br. Mus. Add. 6600. Letters from 'Ab-
dulah Qutb Shah, etc.
Bahar-i-sakhun. I. O. L. Ethé 2090.
Br. Mus. Sloane MS. 3582, ff. 101-24. Letters and official papers relating to
the Karnatak.
I. O. L. MS. 2678, ff. 72-128.
I. O. L. MS. 549.
1. O. L. MS. Land orders.
Parasnis MS. Letters from Shivaji, Murad Bakhsh, etc. Marathi translation
published by Rajwade; an English translation (in MS. ) in Parasnis Col-
lection, Satara.
Secondary Persian Sources
Basatin-us-salatin, a history of Bijapur. By Mirza Ibrahim Zubairi. 1824. Very
valuable and accurate in spite of being a later compilation. Lithographed
at Hyderabad.
Qutb-numa-i-'Alam (Golkonda history). By Sayyid Muhammad Mir Abu
Turab. 1806.
Maasir-ul-Umara, a biographical dictionary of the peerage of the Mughul empire,
1742-79. Edited by 'Abdur-Rahim and Ashraf 'Ali and printed in Biblio-
theca Indica, 1887-95. Translation by H. Beveridge in progress from 1912.
Contains much valuable information from correct tradition and certain
works now lost.
MARATHI
Shiva-Chhatrapatichen Charitra. By Krishnaji Anant Sabhasad, edited by K.
N. Sane (3rd ed. 1912). Translated by Mankar (1884 and 1886) and by
S. N. Sen (2nd ed. 1925).
Jedheyanchi Shakavali. Text in Shiva-charitra-Pradip. Translation by Jadu-
nath Sarkar in Shivaji Souvenir, 1927.
## p. 586 (#626) ############################################
586
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Il-Qalmi Bakhar. By Dattaji (the chronicler of Shivaji) and transcribed (with
modifications) by Khandoji R. Malkare. Edited by Rajwade and Parasnis.
Rough translation by Frissel, as "the Raigarh Life" in Forrest's Selections
. . . Bombay Maratha Series. Expanded Persian version, Tarikh-i-
Shivaji (1. O. L. 1957, also Rieu, i, 327), by Jadunath Sarkar in Modern
Review, 1907 and 1910. (For a critical bibliography of early Maratha his-
tory, see Jadunath Sarkar's Shivaji, 3rd ed. )
HINDI
Chhatra-prakash. By Lal Kavi. Text edited by W. Price, Calcutta, 1829;
translated in Pogson's History of the Boondelahs, 1830.
ASSAMESE
Buranji from Khunlun and Khunlai. English translation in MS. from the
Ahom language, in Assam Government Secretariat.
Kamrupar Buranji. Edited by S. K. Bhuyan, Assamese text.
Purani Asam Buranji. Gauhati. 1930.
EUROPEAN RECORDS AND WORKS
English Factories in India, see chap. VI. (1651-4) 1915, (1655-60) 1921, (1660-4)
1923, (1665-7) 1925, (1668-9) 1927, thereafter in MS. at the India Office,
London,
Diary and Consultation Books of Fort St George, 1681-5. Edited by A. T. Pring. e.
5 vols. Madras, 1893-5.
Early Annals of the English in Bengal. By C. R. Wilson. 3 vols. Calcutta
1895-1917.
The Diary of W. Hedges. Edited by Colonel H. Yule. 2 vols. Hakluyt Society.
1887-9.
The Diaries of Streynsham Master, 1675-80. Edited By R. C. Temple. 2 vols.
Indian Records Series. 1911.
Storia do Mogor. By N. Manucci. Translated and edited with valuable notes
by W. Irvine. 4 vols. 1907-8.
The Dutch records are in Hague Transcripts (in the India Office Library) and
the Dagh Register, which covers the period 1624-93 and is still being
published at the Hague. The Portuguese records are in Biker's Collecçao
de Tratados, 14 vols. Lisbon, 1881-7, and the writings of Panduranga S.
Pissurlencar (Nova Goa).
2. MODERN SOURCES
BERNIER, F. Tr els. Edited by Constable. 2 vols. ed. 1914.
BHATTACHARYA, S. N. History of the Mughul N. E. Frontier Policy. A minutely
detailed study. Calcutta, 1928.
BIDDULPH, C. E. Afghan Poetry of the seventeenth century. 1890.
BIDDULPH, Col. J. Pirates of Malabar. 1907.
CARERI, GEMELLI, Travels of. In Churchill's Voyages, vol. IV.
GAIT, E. A. History of Assam. 2nd ed.
KAEPPELIN, P. La Compagnie Indes Orientales et François Martin. Paris, 1908.
The best guide to the French records and history of the French in India
in the seventeenth century.
## p. 587 (#627) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY
587
SARKAR, JADUNATH. History of Aurangzib. Based on original sources. 5 vols.
Vols. I and II (1st ed. 1912, 2nd ed. 1925), vol. III (1st ed. 1916, 3rd ed. 1928),
vol. IV (1st ed. 1919, 2nd ed. 1930), vol. v (1925).
Shivaji and His Times. 1st ed. 1919, 3rd ed. 1929.
Mughul Administration. 2nd ed. 1924.
Studies in Mughul India. 1919, being the 2nd ed. of Historical Essays
published in 1913.
Anecdotes of Aurangzib. 2nd ed. 1925.
India of Aurangzib : Statistics, topography and roads. 1901.
WRIGHT, ARNOLD. Annesley of Surat. 1918.
CHAPTER IX
THE KINGDOMS OF THE DECCAN
OF THE DECCAN DURING THE REIGN
OF JAHANGIR, SHAH JAHAN AND AURANGZIB, AND THE
RISE OF THE MARATHAS
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
Tarikh-i-Firishta, see chaps. iv and v. For the reigns of Ibrahim 'Adil Shah II
and the history of the Deccan generally, to the fall of Ahmadnagar,
Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri, see chap. VII. For an account of Jahangir's dealings with
the Deccan.
Iqbal-nama-i-Jahangiri, see chap. VII.
Padshah-nama. By 'Abdul-Hamid Lahauri, see chap. VII. For the affairs of
the Deccan during the reign of Shah Jahan.
Muntakhab-ul-Lubab, see chap. vi. For the affairs of the Deccan during the
reigns of Jahangir, Shah Jahan, and Aurangzib and the history of the
independent kingdoms of the Deccan.
Basatin-us-Salatin. By Mirza Ibrahim. Hyderabad lithographed edition. A
history of the 'Adil Shahi kings of Bijapur.
Tarikh-i-Muhammad Qutb Shahi. MS. in author's possession. A history of the
Sultans of Golconda to A. D. 1617.
Hadiqat-us-Salatin. A history of the reign of 'Abdullah Qutb Shah of Golconda.
MS. in India Office Library.
Hadiqat-ul-'Alam. By Mir Abu-'l-Qasim, Mir 'Alam. Hyderabad lithographed
edition of A. H. 1309. A history of the Sultans of Golconda.
History of the Mahrattas. By James Grant Duff. Bombay reprint of 1878. The
leading authority on the history of the Marathas.
The Portuguese in India. By F. C. Danvers. 1894. For the relations between
the Portuguese and the native powers in the Deccan.
Bernier's Travels, see chaps. Vin and x. Deals with Aurangzib's relations with
the independent kingdoms of the Deccan and the Marathas.
Tavernier's Travels. Edited, by V. Ball. 1889. Ditto.
Storia do Mogor, see chaps. VIII and x. Treats in considerable detail of Aurang-
zib's relations and dealings with the independent kingdoms of the Deccan
and the Marathas. A most valuable work.
Relations of Golconda in the early seventeenth century. Edited by W. H.
Moreland. Hakluyt Society. 1930. Contains valuable descriptions of the
cou ry in the early seventeenth century.
## p. 588 (#628) ############################################
588
BIBLIOGRAPHY
2. MODERN WORKS
HAIG, Major T. W. Historic Landmarks of the Deccan. Allahabad, 1907. Treats
of episodes in the history of the Deccan. Drawn exclusively from original
sources.
SAYYID NUH-ULLAH QADIRI, Tarikh-i-'Ali 'Adil Shahi. An exceedingly turgid
and bombastic history of the reign of 'Ali `Adil Shah II. Of slight value.
MS. in author's possession.
CHAPTER
XI
BAHADUR SHAH, JAHANDAR SHAH, FARRUKH-SIYAR,
RAFI-UD-DARAJAT AND RAFI-UD-DAULA
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
PERSIAN
Bahadur Shah-nama. By Danishmand Khan (Ni'mat Khan 'Ali). Covering
1707-9. I. O. L. 1 MS. Ethé 385.
Muntakhab-ul-Lubab, see chap. VI.
Nushka-i-Dilkusha, see chap. VIII.
Maasir-ul Umara, see chap. VIII.
Tazkira or Tarikh.
obscure précis, overloaded with Arabic texts; covers c. 1699-1704. MSS.
A. S. B. , O. P. L.
Kalimat-i-Aurangzib. By the same 'Inayat-ullah. Same style; covers c. 1703-6.
Complete copy in Rampur State Library; a fragment in I. O. L. 3301, ff.
33a-60b.
There are certain later and shorter collections of Aurangzib's letters,
mostly selected from 'Inayat-ullah and bearing various titles, e. g. Raqain-
i-Karaim (compiled by Sayyid Ashraf Khan Mir Muhammad Husaini bin
‘Abdul Karim), Dastur-ul-famal-i-Agahi and Rumuz-wa-Isharaha-i-
‘Alamgiri (both compiled by Raja Aya Mal, the diwan of Jay Singh Savai,
in 1738 and 1742 respectively). Several letters from these selections con-
stitute the lithographed Ruqʻat-i-Alamgiri. The MSS. are very numerous
and seldom exactly correspond in their contents or titles.
Other letters of Aurangzib are to be found in Jaipur State archives :
Paris Bib. Nat. MS. Persan Suppl. 476 (Blochet, no. 704).
Faiyyaz-ul-qawanin (11 letters).
Mirat-i-Ahmadi, vol. I (edicts only).
Khatut-i-Shivaji. R. A. S. MS. 71.
Zahir-ul-Insha, lithographed.
Bahar-i-Sakhun (completed 1663). I. O. L. MS. Ethé 2090, I. O. L. MS. 549, f. 50,
and numerous other volumes.
Letters of other historical personages :
Haft Anjuman. Compiled by Udiraj (afterwards Tala'-yar), the secretary of
Rustam Khan and of Mirza Raja Jay Singh. Paris Bib. Nat. no. 37, a frag-
ment; two complete MSS. in India.
1 For a suggestion that Khafi Khan borrowed from another writer, Abu-'l Fazl
Ma'muri, see Sri Ram Sharma, J. R. A. S. 1936, p. 279. [Ed. ]
## p. 585 (#625) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY
585
Ruq'at-i-Shah 'Abbas Sani.
Khatut-i-Shivaji. R. A. S. MS. 71. Containing letters of Shivaji, Aurangzib,
prince Akbar, Shambhuji, Shahu, etc. (Two of Akbar's letters are printed
in Zahir-ul-insha. )
Faiyyaz-ul-qawanin. 266 folios, containing 25 letters from Shah Jahan, 8 from
Dara, 6 from Shuja', 47 from Murad Bakhsh, 9 from vazir Ja'far Khan,
others from Shah 'Abbas II, 'Adil Shah, Qutb Shah, Jay Singh, etc.
Ruqʻat-i-Hamid-ud-din Khan (a servant of Aurangzib's mother-in-law Nauras
Banu and afterwards faujdar in Malwa). Two incomplete MSS. in India.
Rug‘at-i-Nawazish Khan (faujdar of Mandu, later governor of Kashmir).
Insha-i-Madhu Lal. Lithographed letters of Mu'izz-ud-din and others.
Karnama-i-waqai', being the letters of Maʻtabar Khan (faujdar of Kalyan) by
his secretary Jethmal (“Hindu”). I. O. L. MS. 2007.
Muraqa'at-i-Hasan. By Maulana Abu'l-Hasan, a civil officer in Bengal and
Orissa, 1655-67. Rampur State Library, Insha, no. 182.
Majmu'a-i-munshat-va-ghaira. Letters from and to Bidar Bakht, from Mukhlis
Khan Ruh-ullah Khan, Asad Khan, to Muhammad Murad Khan, etc.
Rampur State Library, Insha, no. 176.
I. O. L. MS. 150. Surat English Factory letters, 1695-6. English summary in
Proceedings of Indian Historical Records Commission, Calcutta session.
Insha-i-Raushan-Kalam. By Bhupat Ray, servant of Ra'dandaz Khan, faujdar
of Baiswara. Irvine MS. in l. O. L. Br. Mus. Add. 6600. Letters from 'Ab-
dulah Qutb Shah, etc.
Bahar-i-sakhun. I. O. L. Ethé 2090.
Br. Mus. Sloane MS. 3582, ff. 101-24. Letters and official papers relating to
the Karnatak.
I. O. L. MS. 2678, ff. 72-128.
I. O. L. MS. 549.
1. O. L. MS. Land orders.
Parasnis MS. Letters from Shivaji, Murad Bakhsh, etc. Marathi translation
published by Rajwade; an English translation (in MS. ) in Parasnis Col-
lection, Satara.
Secondary Persian Sources
Basatin-us-salatin, a history of Bijapur. By Mirza Ibrahim Zubairi. 1824. Very
valuable and accurate in spite of being a later compilation. Lithographed
at Hyderabad.
Qutb-numa-i-'Alam (Golkonda history). By Sayyid Muhammad Mir Abu
Turab. 1806.
Maasir-ul-Umara, a biographical dictionary of the peerage of the Mughul empire,
1742-79. Edited by 'Abdur-Rahim and Ashraf 'Ali and printed in Biblio-
theca Indica, 1887-95. Translation by H. Beveridge in progress from 1912.
Contains much valuable information from correct tradition and certain
works now lost.
MARATHI
Shiva-Chhatrapatichen Charitra. By Krishnaji Anant Sabhasad, edited by K.
N. Sane (3rd ed. 1912). Translated by Mankar (1884 and 1886) and by
S. N. Sen (2nd ed. 1925).
Jedheyanchi Shakavali. Text in Shiva-charitra-Pradip. Translation by Jadu-
nath Sarkar in Shivaji Souvenir, 1927.
## p. 586 (#626) ############################################
586
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Il-Qalmi Bakhar. By Dattaji (the chronicler of Shivaji) and transcribed (with
modifications) by Khandoji R. Malkare. Edited by Rajwade and Parasnis.
Rough translation by Frissel, as "the Raigarh Life" in Forrest's Selections
. . . Bombay Maratha Series. Expanded Persian version, Tarikh-i-
Shivaji (1. O. L. 1957, also Rieu, i, 327), by Jadunath Sarkar in Modern
Review, 1907 and 1910. (For a critical bibliography of early Maratha his-
tory, see Jadunath Sarkar's Shivaji, 3rd ed. )
HINDI
Chhatra-prakash. By Lal Kavi. Text edited by W. Price, Calcutta, 1829;
translated in Pogson's History of the Boondelahs, 1830.
ASSAMESE
Buranji from Khunlun and Khunlai. English translation in MS. from the
Ahom language, in Assam Government Secretariat.
Kamrupar Buranji. Edited by S. K. Bhuyan, Assamese text.
Purani Asam Buranji. Gauhati. 1930.
EUROPEAN RECORDS AND WORKS
English Factories in India, see chap. VI. (1651-4) 1915, (1655-60) 1921, (1660-4)
1923, (1665-7) 1925, (1668-9) 1927, thereafter in MS. at the India Office,
London,
Diary and Consultation Books of Fort St George, 1681-5. Edited by A. T. Pring. e.
5 vols. Madras, 1893-5.
Early Annals of the English in Bengal. By C. R. Wilson. 3 vols. Calcutta
1895-1917.
The Diary of W. Hedges. Edited by Colonel H. Yule. 2 vols. Hakluyt Society.
1887-9.
The Diaries of Streynsham Master, 1675-80. Edited By R. C. Temple. 2 vols.
Indian Records Series. 1911.
Storia do Mogor. By N. Manucci. Translated and edited with valuable notes
by W. Irvine. 4 vols. 1907-8.
The Dutch records are in Hague Transcripts (in the India Office Library) and
the Dagh Register, which covers the period 1624-93 and is still being
published at the Hague. The Portuguese records are in Biker's Collecçao
de Tratados, 14 vols. Lisbon, 1881-7, and the writings of Panduranga S.
Pissurlencar (Nova Goa).
2. MODERN SOURCES
BERNIER, F. Tr els. Edited by Constable. 2 vols. ed. 1914.
BHATTACHARYA, S. N. History of the Mughul N. E. Frontier Policy. A minutely
detailed study. Calcutta, 1928.
BIDDULPH, C. E. Afghan Poetry of the seventeenth century. 1890.
BIDDULPH, Col. J. Pirates of Malabar. 1907.
CARERI, GEMELLI, Travels of. In Churchill's Voyages, vol. IV.
GAIT, E. A. History of Assam. 2nd ed.
KAEPPELIN, P. La Compagnie Indes Orientales et François Martin. Paris, 1908.
The best guide to the French records and history of the French in India
in the seventeenth century.
## p. 587 (#627) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHY
587
SARKAR, JADUNATH. History of Aurangzib. Based on original sources. 5 vols.
Vols. I and II (1st ed. 1912, 2nd ed. 1925), vol. III (1st ed. 1916, 3rd ed. 1928),
vol. IV (1st ed. 1919, 2nd ed. 1930), vol. v (1925).
Shivaji and His Times. 1st ed. 1919, 3rd ed. 1929.
Mughul Administration. 2nd ed. 1924.
Studies in Mughul India. 1919, being the 2nd ed. of Historical Essays
published in 1913.
Anecdotes of Aurangzib. 2nd ed. 1925.
India of Aurangzib : Statistics, topography and roads. 1901.
WRIGHT, ARNOLD. Annesley of Surat. 1918.
CHAPTER IX
THE KINGDOMS OF THE DECCAN
OF THE DECCAN DURING THE REIGN
OF JAHANGIR, SHAH JAHAN AND AURANGZIB, AND THE
RISE OF THE MARATHAS
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
Tarikh-i-Firishta, see chaps. iv and v. For the reigns of Ibrahim 'Adil Shah II
and the history of the Deccan generally, to the fall of Ahmadnagar,
Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri, see chap. VII. For an account of Jahangir's dealings with
the Deccan.
Iqbal-nama-i-Jahangiri, see chap. VII.
Padshah-nama. By 'Abdul-Hamid Lahauri, see chap. VII. For the affairs of
the Deccan during the reign of Shah Jahan.
Muntakhab-ul-Lubab, see chap. vi. For the affairs of the Deccan during the
reigns of Jahangir, Shah Jahan, and Aurangzib and the history of the
independent kingdoms of the Deccan.
Basatin-us-Salatin. By Mirza Ibrahim. Hyderabad lithographed edition. A
history of the 'Adil Shahi kings of Bijapur.
Tarikh-i-Muhammad Qutb Shahi. MS. in author's possession. A history of the
Sultans of Golconda to A. D. 1617.
Hadiqat-us-Salatin. A history of the reign of 'Abdullah Qutb Shah of Golconda.
MS. in India Office Library.
Hadiqat-ul-'Alam. By Mir Abu-'l-Qasim, Mir 'Alam. Hyderabad lithographed
edition of A. H. 1309. A history of the Sultans of Golconda.
History of the Mahrattas. By James Grant Duff. Bombay reprint of 1878. The
leading authority on the history of the Marathas.
The Portuguese in India. By F. C. Danvers. 1894. For the relations between
the Portuguese and the native powers in the Deccan.
Bernier's Travels, see chaps. Vin and x. Deals with Aurangzib's relations with
the independent kingdoms of the Deccan and the Marathas.
Tavernier's Travels. Edited, by V. Ball. 1889. Ditto.
Storia do Mogor, see chaps. VIII and x. Treats in considerable detail of Aurang-
zib's relations and dealings with the independent kingdoms of the Deccan
and the Marathas. A most valuable work.
Relations of Golconda in the early seventeenth century. Edited by W. H.
Moreland. Hakluyt Society. 1930. Contains valuable descriptions of the
cou ry in the early seventeenth century.
## p. 588 (#628) ############################################
588
BIBLIOGRAPHY
2. MODERN WORKS
HAIG, Major T. W. Historic Landmarks of the Deccan. Allahabad, 1907. Treats
of episodes in the history of the Deccan. Drawn exclusively from original
sources.
SAYYID NUH-ULLAH QADIRI, Tarikh-i-'Ali 'Adil Shahi. An exceedingly turgid
and bombastic history of the reign of 'Ali `Adil Shah II. Of slight value.
MS. in author's possession.
CHAPTER
XI
BAHADUR SHAH, JAHANDAR SHAH, FARRUKH-SIYAR,
RAFI-UD-DARAJAT AND RAFI-UD-DAULA
1. ORIGINAL SOURCES
PERSIAN
Bahadur Shah-nama. By Danishmand Khan (Ni'mat Khan 'Ali). Covering
1707-9. I. O. L. 1 MS. Ethé 385.
Muntakhab-ul-Lubab, see chap. VI.
Nushka-i-Dilkusha, see chap. VIII.
Maasir-ul Umara, see chap. VIII.
Tazkira or Tarikh.