Page:The Oriental Biographical Dictionary.djvu/47
'Ala-uddin
35
Al-Bukhari
his life-time near the Manihar Masjid in Old Dihli. Amir
Khusrau in that part of his Diwan, called " Bakiya-i-
Nakiya" says that he died on the 6th Sha'W'wal, 715 H., i. e.
about the 30th December 1315 A. D. After his death,
MaHk Naib Kafur, one of the eunuchs of the king, placed
his youngest son Sultan Shihab-uddin 'Umar, who was then
only seven years old, on the tkrone. After a short time,
however, the eunuch Kafiir was slain, and Shihab-uddin was
set aside, and his older brother Mubarak Khan under the
title of Mubarik Shah ascended the throne on the 1st April,
1316 A. D., 7th Muharram, 716 H. but according to Fi-
rishta in 1317. It was the boast of 'Ala-uddin, that he had
destroyed one thousand temples in Banaras alone. He is
best known now by the beautiful gateway to the Kutb
Mosque and the unfinished tower by which he hoped to
rival the Kutb Minar.
'Ala-uddin 'Imad Shah, ujJ'^-'t*^, succeeded to
the government of Barar in the Dakhin after the death
of his father Fath-uUah 'Imad Shah about the year 1513
A. D., and following the example of other chiefs of the
house of Bahmani, declared himself king of Barar, and
established his royal residence at Gawal. He contracted
an alliance by marriage with the sister of Isma'fl 'Adil
Shah, named Khadija, in 1528 A. D., 935 A. H., and
died some time about the year 1532 A. D., 939 A. H. He
was succeeded by his son Darya 'Imad Shah.
'Ala-uddin Kaikubad, (Sultan) a
prince of the Saljukian dynasty. When Sultan Malik-
Shah conquered Kum or Anatolia in Asiatic Turkey,
he conferred on Sulaiman the son of Kutlumish that
kingdom, whose descendants reigned there till the time of
Abaka Khan, the Tartar king of Persia. 'Ala-uddin
Kaikubad was a descendant of Sulaiman Shah and died
about the year 1239 A. D., 637 A. H. ; vide Sulaiman bin-
Kutlumish.
'Ala-uddin Majzub, VJ"^ i^.'^^^j^ i^, (Shah) a
Muhammadan saint of Agra, commonly called Shah 'Ala-
wal Balawal, son of Sayyid Sulaiman. He died in the
beginning of the reign of Islam Shah, son of Sher Shah
in the year 1646 A. D., 953 A. H. His tomb is in Agra
at a place called Nai-ki Mandi, where crowds of Musal-
mans assemble every year to worship it. The adjacent
mosque has sunk into the ground to the spring of the
arches.
'Ala-uddin Mas'ud, ^ri'^^ Sultan of Dihli,
was the son of Sultan Eukn-uddin Firuz, and grandson of
Shams-uddin Iltitmish, was raised to the throne of Dihli
after the murder of Bahram Shah in May, 1242 A. D.,
Zil-ka'da, 639 A. H. He died on the 10th June, 1246
A. i)., 23rd Muharram, 644 H., after a reign of four
years, and was succeeded by his brother (or uncle) Sultan
Nasir-uddin Mahmud.
'Ala-uddin Muhammad al-Samarkandi, LS'^^
_^} t^<>.;i <>*s*, (Shaikh) author of a compen-
dium of Al-Kuduri's Mukhtasir, which he entitled the
" Tuhfat-ul-Fukaha." This work was commented upon by
his pupil Abu-Bakr bin-Mas' ud al-Kashani, who died in
1191 A. D., 587 A. H. This comment is entitled al-Badai'
as-Sanai'.
'Ala-uddin Ali Shah, xLi^^)^ t^jjJl^Mc^ king of West-
ern Bengal. He usurped the government of that country
after defeating Fakhr-uddia Mubarak Shah and was assas-
sinated about 746 A. H. by the instigation of Khwaja
Hyas, who succeeded him Tinder the title of Shams-uddin
Ilyas Shah.]
'Ala-uddin Husain Shah, ^^rJC>.)^^^ king
of Bengal. He was the son of Sayyid Ashraf, and after
defeating Muzaffar Shah at Gaur in 899 A. H., ascended
the throne of Bengal. He reigned with justice for a
considerably longer period than any of his predecessors
until the year 1521 A. D., 927 A. H. when he died a
natural death, after a reign of 28 years. His son Nusrat
Shah succeeded him.
'Ala-uddin (Sultan), t5W""* i^f^Aj'^J^ a king
of the race of Saljuk, who reigned in Iconium, and died in
the year 1301 A. D., 700 A. H.
'Ala-uddin (Sultan), slljj ^^_oJfj)j£ ^^lkL,^
the last king of Dihli of the Sayyid djmasty, succeeded his
father Sultan Muhammad Shah to the throne in January
1446 A. D., Shawwal, 849 A. H. Bahlol Lodi in 1451, 8.55
A. H., at the instigation of Hamid Khan wazir, took
possession of Dihli during the absence of the king who
was then at Badaon. 'Ala-uddin continued to reside at
Badaon unmolested till his death, which happened in the
year 1478 A. D., 883 A. H. His reign at Dihli being
about six years, and his government of Badaon 28 years.
'Ala-uddin (Sayyid), of Oudh, whose poetical name was
Wasili, is the author of a Tarji'band, commonly called
" Miimukiman," with which word it commences. He was
a native of Ivhurdsan, came to India about the year 1300
A. D., became a disciple of Nizam-uddin Auliya and fixed
his residence in Oudh.
'Ala-uddin Takash, ^Ji>3 ^^^ji^.'I^^/*^ a Sultan of Khwa-
rizm, vide Takash.
'Ala-ul-mulk Kotwal, Ji^j^S'iJU.lJiyj^ tXLo^ (MaUk).
He served under Sultan 'Ala-uddin Khilji, king of Dihlf,
and was the uncle of Ziya-uddin Bami, the author of the
" Tarikh Firuz-Shahi." He was then very old and so fat
that he was not able to attend the com-t more than once
a month. He was living in A. D. 1300, 699 A. H.
'Al-AzizBillah Abu-al-Mansur Tarar, (
Arabic characters), son of Mu'izz-ud-din-allah, second khalifa of
Egypt of the Fatimite dynasty, succeeded his father
in A. D. 976, and committed the management of affairs
entirely to the care of Jauhar or Ja'far, his father's
long-experienced general and prime-minister. This famous
warrior after several battles with Al-Aftakfn, the amir
of Damascus and the Karmatians, died in 990 A. D.,
381 A. H. 'Al-Aziz died in his way to Syria in the 21st
year of his reign and 42nd of his age and was succeeded
by his son Abul-Mansur.
Al-Baghawi, f^^*-^^, vide Abul-Faraj-al-Baghawi and
Abu-Muhammad Farrai ibn-Mas'ud al-Baghawf.
Al-Batani, commonly called by European writers.
Albategnius, was an Arabian astronomer who wrote a
treatise on the knowledge and the obliquity of the Zodiac
of the stars. He died in 929. He greatly reformed
astronomy, comparing his own observations with those of
Ptolemy. This book was printed at Niiremberg, in 1537,
4to., and at Bologna in 1545. He died A. D. 929.
Al-Biruni, cr^ir'^'? an Arabian author whose original work,
entitled " Tarikh Hind", was compiled in India in about
A. D. 1030-33. See Abu-Eaihan.
Al-Bukhari, {^j^^h, who received this name from Bu-
khara, the place of his birth or his chief residence, was a
famous law3'or by name of Muhammad Isma'il. His collec-
tion of traditions on the Muhammadan religion, commonly
called .Sahih-ul-Bukhari, is of the greatest authority of all
that have ever been made ; he called it " iU-Sahih," i. e.
genuine, because he separated the spirrious ones from those
that were authentic. He says, he has selected 7,275 of the
most authentic traditions out of 10,000, all of which he
looked upon to be true, having rejected 200,000 as false.
He died at Bukhara in the year 870 A. D., 256 A. H.
Vide Muhammad Isma'il Bukhari.