Machine summary:
D. enison Ross edited the introductory portion of a unique Persian MS Babr-al-Ansab1 and called it Tarikh-i• Fahhr-ud-Din Mubarakshdh al-Marvar-rudhi', This title does not seem to be correct as to all evidence the real author is Fakhr-i• Mudabbir, and Sir Edward has erroneously confused the two different personalities,namelyFakhr-ud-DinMubarakshahandFakhr-i-Mudabbir.
C. While at Lahore, Fakhr-i-Mudabbir is busy with the compilation of his work, and so he proceeds for a short visit to Ghazna in search of I.
The martyred Sultan Mu'izz-ud-Din Muhammad bin Sam raided Lahore and conquered it and took away its ruler Khusru Malik along with him to.
when he was four• teen years old, in the harem of Princess Mah Malik, the daughter of Sultan Ghiyath-ud-Din. The statement of Minhaj-i-Siraj as to the Nisbat Namolv being in verse is supported by other evidence.
C. ) states: "Fakhr-ud-Dln was a good poet both in Persian and Arabic and had a high position in Sultan Ghiyath-ud-Din's court.
(1) In his early days Fakhr-i-Mudabbir heard from a certain Khwajah 'Ali Kaznabadt, the account of a battle (in which the narrator himself had taken part) fought between Sultan Halim Khusru Shah and 'Ala• ud-Din Ghori.
(2) Again, Fakhr-i-Muddabir is found at Peshawar when Sultan Mu'izz-ud-Din Muhammad bin Sam goes on a lion-hunting excursion.
and Sultan Mu'izz-ud-Din Muhammad bin Sam was made the ruler of Ghazna.
(11) The author says: "When the martyred Sultan Mu'izz-ud-Din Muhammad bin Sam came to Lahore in 602 A.