Hasan Dihlawi
Amir Hasan Ala Sijzi Dehlavi (Urdu: امیر حسن علا سجزی دہلوی; 1254 – 1337) was an Indian Muslim poet, scholar and Sufi living in the Delhi Sultanate. He was a disciple of the Chishti master Nizamuddin Auliya, and the compiler of the Persian Sufi manual Fawa'id al Fu'ad (Morals for the Heart) in which the discourses of Nizamuddin have been recorded. He was a contemporary of the Sufi poet Amir Khusrau and is regarded as the originator of the Indo-Persian ghazal. He is buried in the Khuldabad near Aurangabad, Maharashtra. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hasan_Sijzi
https://fa.wikipedia.org/wiki/امیرحسن_دهلوی
https://tg.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ҳасани_Деҳлавӣ
Hasan Dihlawi (1251 or 1252-1336 or 1337), Indian mystic and poet versifying his works in Persian with the nom de plume Hasan. Well-known as the Sa’di of India, he composed poetry in the style of Amir Khusraw Dihlawi, his companion. https://www.golha.co.uk/en/people/436/hasan-dilhavi
Amīr Nad̲j̲m al-Dīn, styled the Saʿdī of Hindustān (Baranī, p. 360), was born in 651 (= 1253) at Dihlī, where his father ʿAlā al-Dīn Sīstānī, known as ʿAlā-i-Sand̲j̲arī, had settled. (...) In 714 (= 1314) he completed his Dīwān, which is said to contain about 10,000 verses; he also wrote prose works (e. g. Siyar al-Awliyā), which appear to have been lost. When Muḥammad b. Tag̲h̲laḳ moved the population of Dihlī to Dawlatābād Ḥasan accompanied the Sulṭān to his new capital and is said to have died there in 727 (= 1327); but the date of his death is variously given by different authorities. https://referenceworks.brill.com/display/entries/EI1O/SIM-2743.xml