GHAZNI (gRz'ne or guz'nE), a town of Afghanistan, below a spur of a range of hills, at an elevation of 7,729 feet, 84 miles S. W. of Kabul, on the road to Kandahar and at the head of the Gomal route to India. It is a place of consid erable commercial importance. The cli mate is cold, snow often lying for three months in the year. Nevertheless, wheat, barley, and madder are grown in the vicinity. From the 10th to the 12th century Ghazni was the capital of the empire of the Ghaznevids (see below) ; it then fell into the hands of the Sultan of Ghat.; and afterward captured by the Mongols. It remained subject to the Mongol rulers of Delhi and Agra till 1738, when it was taken by Nadir Shah of Persia, and at his death was incor porated in the kingdom of Afghanistan. During the 19th century it figured in the British wars against the Afghans, hav ing been stormed by Lord Keane in 1839, and again in 1842 by the Afghans, but retaken the same year by General Nutt. In the neighborhood of Ghazni there are several ruins and monuments of its former greatness, such as the tomb of Mahmud, Mahmud's dam in the Ghazni river, and many Mohammedan shrines. The celebrated gates of Somnath were kept at Ghazni from 1024 to 1842.
Ghaznevid Dynasty.—About the mid
dle of the 10th century a lieutenant of the Samanid ruler of Bokhara seized on Ghazni, and, dying in 977, left it to his son-in-law, Sebuktagin, who during a reign of 20 years extended his sway over all modern Afghanistan and the Punjab. But it was under his son Mahmud (997 1030) that the Ghaznevids reached their highest point of splendor and renown. This prince repeatedly invaded India, and carried his conquering arms as far as Kurdistan and the Caspian on the W. and to Samarkand on the N. He was the first monarch in Asia to assume the title of sultan. His descendants had a keen struggle to maintain themselves against the Seljuks, who had seized on Khorasan, Balkh, Kharezm, and Irak during the reign of Mahmud's son Mas aud (1030-1042), and against their jeal ous rivals the princes of Giiiirt (q. v.). Bahram Shah, ruler of Ghazni from 1118 to 1152, was at length driven from his capital by the latter, and retired to the Punjab. There his grandson, Khos rau Malek, the last of the dynasty, made Lahore his capital. This town was, however, taken by the Prince of Ghur in 1186, and with this the Ghaznevid dy nasty came to an end.