204 Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. [May, 1912. 
Gaccares, and Gusarates, Moors these, and over many petty 
entoo kings, he added to it many lands. Anciently, Deli was 
the seat of the kingdom of Industan. He shifted it to Agra, 
but, as his children died there, he went to shget ak a city 
Lahor, Moltan, Mandhé, Patana, Junipair, Emadaba, some 
of which are as big as Lisbon.!. Mandho is nine leagues in 
circuit, and has a suburb of 3 leagues.” Its ruins attest that 
it was entirely populat ated. ote now its population must 
be like three times that of Evora. 
From afar these aed loth very pretty on account of 
their terraces, pinnacles and turrets. Within, the streets are 
rder. 
live in thatched mud-houses, so that, when one has seen one 
town, there is little to be seen in the res 
The lands which he governs are those which are situated 
between the River Indo, called Scind by the natives, and 
the River Ganga, commonly believed to be the Ganges. 
Apostle St. Bartholomew, as Perionio (?)* and others write in 
his life. To the north-east are certain mountains, called by 
the natives Cumaum, apparently the Imao,* which separates 
the Mogor’s dominions from Tartary. To the south is the 
sea, on the coast of which he has no other harbours than 
those of Cains [Cambay], viz., Currate [Surat], Baréche 
[Broach, Bharoch], Cambaiéte [Kambhayat] and Goga. To 
the south-west, he borders on the lands of certain sovereigns 
of the Decan, and of Ca anara, anciently the kingdom of Nar- 
singua [Nar Simha] and Bisnaga [Vijayanagar]. These parts 
the cool, and abound in groves and fruitage. They grow 
are sugarcane. In some parts there are grapes, peaches, mul- 

1 Kambhayat,. . . - Multan, Mandi, Patnah, Jaun Ahmada- 
bad.— We find further Amadaba instead of Fetelabe ba [Almada 
® Peruschi (p. 8) says: ‘‘ 30 miles i in circuit, ¢.e., leagues; some 
agues.” Monserrate’s Mong. Legat. Comm. (foll. 12 6. 4—14 6. 2) 
contains an mig god description of Mandi. We read there: ‘‘ muri 
enim circuitus, iis integri, a obiecto prerupto saxo muniuntur, 
viginti quatuor fere mnillia passu 
The only name among Mes rrate’s authorities in Mong. Legat.. 
