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