132 W. Irvine— 27/e Bangash Naicdbs of FarrulcMbdd. [No. 2, 



8. Bare Sahib. 



Bare Sahib was Kamr-ud-din Khan Wazir's sister and Chote Sahib 

 was his widow. They had a house in Nawab 'Abd-ul-Majid Khan's garhi. 

 They received jointly Es. 500 a month. Once a year Nawab Ahmad Khan 

 visited them, when they presented him with trays of jewels. Miyan La'l, 

 guardian (atdlik) to Muzaffar Jang was their eunuch (khojd). They both 

 died in Farrukhabad, and their graves are behind Pandit Daya Ram's house, 

 in Muhalla Chaoni, within the bdgh of Shuja't Khan, Khansdmdn to Nawab 

 Ahmad Khan. The place is called the Iladrassa. Miyan La'l is buried at 

 their feet. Mir Bahadur 'Ali is careful to point out that their names never 

 received the feminine termination in long i. 



9. Hakim Sayyad Imdm-ud-din Khan. 



Son of Sayyad Gharib-ullah, son of Shah Ghulam Muhi-ud-din, a native 

 of Newatni,* Bangarmau Mohani. The Hakim lived in Mohalla Lohai 

 and received Rs 500 a month. 



10. Hakim Shafde Khan. 



They say that Jan 'Ali Khan, chela, who built the masjid at the gate 

 of the fort, had a great affection for this Hakim, with whom he exchanged 

 turbans. When the Hakim went away to Delhi, Jan 'Ali Khan asked him 

 for a prescription by which his strength would remain unimpaired. 

 The Hakim answered, that the following was the essence Qatr) of all 

 his books. " At the morning meal, take one quarter seer of kid's flesh and 

 " one chitak ghi, eat it cooked as you are used to ; then in the evening pre- 

 " pare washed mash ddl and the same quantity of ghi," Jan 'Ali Khan eat 

 this food all his life, and his strength did not diminish. 

 11. Nawab Ndsir Khan. 



He had been Subahdar of Kabul at the time of Nadir Shah's invasion 

 (1151 H.=1739). He lived in Mohalla Kandhai, where Niiroz 'Ali Khan, 

 son of Sarfaraz Mahal, lived in 1839. His allowance was Rs. 3000 a month. 

 He died in Farrukhabad and was buried in the Haiyat Bagh, near the 

 tomb of Nawab Muhammad Khan Ghazanfar Jang. He died before 1771. 



They say that the eldest son of Nawab Nasir Khan was in the service 

 of Shuja'-ud-daula and received a large sum monthly. One day Shuja'-ud- 

 daula told him to send to Farrukhabad for his father, as he wished to ap- 

 point him his ndib. Nasir Khan refused the offer. He held the three thousand 

 rupees he received from Ahmad Khan to be equal to three lakhs ; for Ahmad 

 Khan, when he went to visit him, rose to his feet to receive him. But if he 

 became ndib to Shuja'-ud-daula, some day when he rode up to his gateway, the 



* A small town, two miles south-west of Mohan in the Unao district.— Oudh 

 Gaz. III. 16, II. 500, and I. 224. 



