INDEX. 
843 
F. 
Fair of St. Demetry, i. 24. 
Faiths, early, in the East, ii. 50. 
Faky, village of, ii. 771, 772. 
Fall, a. See Bibliomancy. 
Fars, Pars, or Persis, province of, i. 458. 
Fars, the ancient city of, ii. 46- 
Fatality, evil effects of Turkish superstition con¬ 
cerning, ii. 44.746. 
Fatima, mosque of, i. 376. 
Feet, uncovering of, in Persia, i. 240. 
Feilly, plundering tribe of, ii. 9. 
Felugiah, inundation of the Euphrates at, ii. 404, 
405. 
Feodor, the author’s servant, death of, ii. 264, 
265. 
Ferhaud, the sculptor, ii. 168. 184. 
-, anecdote of, ii. 185. 
Ferwer, the, or second self, the supposed spiri¬ 
tual prototype of the ancient Persian kings, i. 
657,658. 668, 669. 
Festival of the Nowroose, or new year, i. 316. 
F&tes at Bagdad, ii. 270.272. 
Fever, the author attacked by, i. 678.688. 
Fire, why introduced as an object of worship in¬ 
stead of the sun, ii. 497. 
Fire, eternal, at Yezd, ii. 46,47. 
Fire-places, called the Kourcy, their dangerous 
effects, i. 274. 
Fire-Temple at Mourg-Aub, i. 488. 
■ ■ — at Nakshi-lloustam, i. 562, 563. 
.-of the Guebres, as described by 
Mr. Kinnier, ii. 515, 516. 
-— --, Jonas Hanway’s account of, ii. 516, 
517. 
Fire-worship, the first corruption of the ancient 
faith of Persia, ii. 50. 
Fire-worshippers, mounds of the, i. 298. 
Firoze, King, coin of, ii. 131, 132. 
Flattery to princes, often improperly suspected, 
i. 38. 
Flattery, Persian, i. 294, 295. 
Flavianopolis. See Garidi. 
Fleas swarm in all caravansaries, ii. 210. 
Fleet, the Turkish, ii. 741. 
Forests near Koyla-Hissar, ii. 698. 
-on fire in the Vale of Boli, ii. 725. 
Fort of Abbas-abad, ii. 616. 
Fortifications, ancient, of the city of Rhey, i. 
359. 
Fortress, remains of an extensive one, near Ta- 
breez, i. 223, 224, 225. 
-of Kala Bender, ruins of, i. 698. 
-of Rose Water, ii. 2, 3. 
--, ruins of an ancient, at Kesra-Shirene, 
ii. 213, 214. 
-of Guzloo, ii. 570. 
■ -Rock in the lake of Ouroomia, ii. 
595. 
-of Mazengutt, ii. 654, 655. 
-of Kara-Hissar, ii. 688. 
-, Genoese, near Constantinople, ii. 745. 
Fortune-telling of the Persian Gypsies, ii. 529. 
Forty Pillars, Palace of, i. 412—416, et seq. 
-. See Chehel-Minar and Bas-re¬ 
lief. 
Foundery at Shiraz, i. 715. 
Fountain of Shirene, ii. 182. 
Four Calendars, sculpture of the, at Tackt-i-Bos- 
tan, ii. 192. 
Fox, Persian, i. 462. 
Fragments, architectural, in the castle of Tiri- 
dates, ii. 627. 
Frangy, illegitimate children of the, i. 427. 
Focksham, town of, ii. 794. 
Frontier line of Russia, on the Persian territories, 
ii. 512,513. 
Frontiers of Azerbijan, ii. 492. 
Fruit, Persian, i. 57. 
Fulling-mill at Koig, ii. 507. 
Funeral of Dr. Drummond Campbell, i. 330. 
Futteh Ali Shah, King of Persia, probable con¬ 
sequences of his death, ii. 507.508. 
-, number of his children, ii. 
508. 
-, the author’s audience with on 
his return to Teheran, ii. 522, 523. 
■ -, confers on the author the 
order of the Lion apd Sun, ii. 523. 
. .. , public revenue of, ii. 527. 
• -, his attendance at the Fes¬ 
tival of the Nowroose, i. 320, et seq. 
- f his great magnificence and 
dress, i. 325. 
• -, his royal jewels, i. 326. 
-, his throne, i. 327. 
5 P 2 
