Muhammad Ghawth

The book mentioning the life and miracles of Gaus named " Heaven's witness" was written by Kugle.

[7] Ghawth translated the Amrtakunda from Sanskrit to Persian as the Bahr al-Hayat (The Ocean of Life), introducing to Sufism a set of yoga practices.

According to the scholar Carl W. Ernst, in this "translation", Ghawth intentionally reframed these practices with great subtlety to identify "points of contact between the terminologies of Yoga and Sufism".

[15] Ghawth's tomb, in Gwalior (a city in Madhya Pradesh in India), which was built in his honour by Akbar,[15] is a well-known tourist attraction and regarded as an excellent example of Mughal Architecture.

[16] The entire structure is enclosed on all sides by the elaborately and delicately carved stone lattice work.