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site of jihad

Wahhabi

involvement, madrassahs

rise of Taliban

Afghans, radicalised

Afridis, Akahel

Agra

Ahl al-Kitab

Ahl-i-Hadith

Ahmad, Muhammad

Ahmad, Nizamuddin

Ahmadullah, Maulvi

becomes Wahhabi

leader, avoids arrest

arrest and trial, death

Ahmadzais

Akbar, Emperor

Akbari Ali

Akora Khattack

Al Mujaheed (The Holy Warrior)

Aleppo

Alexander the Great

Alexander, Mr

Algeria

Ali brothers, see Inayat

Ali; Wilayat Ali Ali Masjid

Ali Pasha

Ali, Caliph

Aligarh

Al-Ikhwan (The Brotherhood), extreme form of Wahhabism

Allahabad

Allen, George

Allenby, Lord

All-India Muslim League

al-Maqdisi, Sheikh Muhammad

al-Mukhtar, Hashiya radd

Al-Muwahhidun (Unitarians)

Al-Qaeda

al-Qahtani, Muhammad

al-Qayyim al-Jawziyah

al-Salaf al-Salih

al-Utabi, Juhaiman

al-Wahhab, Muhammad ibn Abd, and

ibn Saud family

resigns as imam, descendants, continuance of

his teachings

history of, Deobandi

view of, theology presented as

Protestantism, Taliban

conform to teachings

al-Wahhab, Sulayman ibn Abd

al-Zarqawi, Abu Musab

al-Zawahri, Ayman

Amanullah Ali

Amanullah, Amir

Amazais

Amb, Khan of

Amballa, and Wahhabi trials

Ambeyla Campaign

Ambeyla Pass

Eagle’s Nest, Crag

Picquet

Amir Khan, Nawab

Amir-ul-Momineen

Amritsar, Massacre

Andaman Islands

Aneiza tribe

Ansar-i-Islam, approvers

Arab League

Arab Revolt

Arabia

appearance of Al-Ikhwan, Syed

Ahmed’s followers arrive, map

spiritual conquest, divisions

within, assumes Arab identity

Muhammad Ishaq’s exile in

gripped by

Wahhabism, desert crossings

unification as Saudi

Arabia, British

involvement in, Indian links with, Wahhabi veterans in

Arabic

Arab-Israeli war (1973)

Arabs, ‘Arabs’

Arafat, Yasser

Aramco

Argyll, Duke of

Army of Retribution

Army of the Indus

Arrah

Artaiba

Artawiyyaa

Asar Mahshar (Signs of the Last Day)

Ataturk, Kemal

Attock

Aurangzeb, Emperor

Austria-Hungary

Austrians

Azimgargh

Azzam, Ibrahim

Azzam, Sheikh Abdullah

Babrhai Mullah

Badakshan

Badshah, Sahib Miangul Abdul Wadud

Badshah Shah Alam, Emperor

Baghdad

Bahadur, Khan

Bahadur Shah, Emperor

Bahrain

Baiat al-Imam

baiat

Bajour

Bajourees

Bakht Khan, Subedar Muhammad

Balakot, battle of

Baluchistan

Bamian

Bangladesh

Bannu

Barakat (Palgrave’s companion)

Bard, battle of

Bareilly

Barrackpore

Bashir Ahmad Khan

Basra

Batalvi, Maulvi Muhammad Husain

Bay of Bengal

Bazar

Becher, Major

Bedouin

Belgium

Bell, Gertrude

Bellew, Dr Henry, description of mullahs

Benares

Bengal, beginning of

British rule, Christian

missionaries in, Titu Mir’s

revolt, weavers join

Wahhabis, becomes province

during Sepoy Mutiny

Wahhabi networks

Bengal Civil Service

Bengal Native Infantry, and

Sepoy Mutiny

mutinous 55th

Regiment

Beni Temin tribe

Berar

Bharatpore

Bhopal

Bihar

Wahhabi networks

bin Baz, Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah

bin Hanbal, Ahmad

bin Laden, Muhammad

bin Laden, Osama

Wahhabism

turns against Wahhabi

establishment, alliance with

Taliban, assumes

leadership, interpretation of

Islam

bin Rahmatullah, Miskin

Binnori, Maulvi Mohammad Yusaf

Black Mountains

Blavatsky, Madame

Blood, General Bindon

Bokhara, Emir of

Bolan Pass

Bombay

Boyle (engineer)

British

consolidate rule

indigo planters, intervention in

Afghanistan, jihad

against

length

of dominion, opinions of

Muslims, failure against

dervishes, casualties

courage, and Ibn Saud

armed struggle

against, in Egypt

British Empire

British Iraq petroleum Company

Buddhists

Buner, tribes

topography, Syed Ahmad takes

refuge in, influence

of Akhund of Swat

appearance of ‘the Mad

Fakir’, map

Fanatics expelled

Bunerwals

Burckhardt, J. H.

Burden, Lieutenant

Burdwan

Burjan, Hajji Mullah

Burke, Edmund

Burke, Jason

Burma

Burrendo

Burton, Sir Richard

Bushire

Butcher, Flora

Buxar

Cairo, Al-Aqsa

mosque, Al-Azhar

University Calcutta

during Sepoy Mutiny

murder of Justice Norman

Sunni convocation

Canning, Lord

Carnac, Charles

Carnatic

Caroe, Sir Olaf

Cawnpore

Central Asian Society

Ceylon

Chakdara

Chamarkand

Chamberlain, Brigadier (later Major-General) Neville

Chamla valley

Chamlawals

Chechnya

China

Chitral

Christians

‘Nazarenes’

missionaries

hostility towards

Byzantine Christendom

fundamentalists, evangelical

waning power

Chuprah

Churchill, Winston

CIA

Civil and Military Gazette

Constantinople

Cotton, Major-General Sir Sydney

Cox, Sir Percy

Curzon, Lord

Dagestan

Daggar

Daily Telegraph

dak

Dalhousie, Lord

Damascus

dar ul-Islam, in Medina

in Mahabun Mountain

in Narkulbaria, in Delhi

in Thana Bhawan

and British rule, in

Swat, in Afghansistan, in

Sudan, outside Heart

Dar ul-Ulum Deoband Madrassah

Daran Pass

Dargai Heights, battle of

Dariyah

de Corancez, Louis Alexandre Olivier

Deane, Major Harold

Deccan

Deen Muhammad

Delhi

Madrassah-i-Rahimiya

Akbar-abadi mosque, Red Fort

sixteenth-century Sultans

‘Delhi-ites’

Jamma Masjid

Sunni mullahs, Delhi

College, British Resident

during Sepoy Mutiny

fatwa signed, dar ul-Islam, and Wahhabi trials

Sunni convocation, heir to throne

Delhi Durbar

Delhi Mail

Delhi Ridge

Deoband movement

see also Dar ul-Ulum

Deoband Madrassah

Deobandi, Mullah Mahmood

Dher

Dinapore

Dir

Dogras

Doughty, Charles

Durand Line

Dutch East India Company

East Africa

East Bengal

East India Company

establishes rule in India