Page:History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic Vol. III.djvu/553

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525
525

INDEX. 525 Scholars employed in its compilation, 323, note. Its merits, 325. Destruc- tion of the manuscripts which formed the basis of it, 325. Pope, difference of the crown with the, i. 220. Makes a grant to Ferdinand and Isabella, 35G. See Alexander VI., Ju- lius II., Leo X., Pius III., and Sixtus IV. Population, augmentation of, in Spain, III. 485. Census of, in Castile, 435, note. Mode of estimating it, 485, note. Portugal, treaty of peace with, i. 171. Application of Columbus to the king of, II. 119. Treatment of Jews in, 144, 152, note. Jews banished from, 355. King and queen of, visit Spain, 359. Philip II.'s claim to the crown of, III. 487, note. See .llfonso. Portuguese, maritime enterprise of the, II. 112. Jealous of the Spanish mari- time enterprise, 175. Pragmdticas, issued, i. 8, iii. 435. Fre- quency of, in the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, 441, note. Collected and published, 448. Press, censorship of the, established, ii. 208. Priego. See Cordova, Pedro de. Printing, introduction of, into Spain, ii. 206. The queen encourages it, 20G. Its rapid diffusion, 207. Frequency of presses for, iii. 433. Provencjal literature, revives in Aragon, I. cxi.ic. Flourishes in Valencia, cxxiii; writers there, cx.xii. Abandoned, cxxiv. Puici, the Florentine poet, cited respect- ing the existence of land in the west, ii.°117. Pulgar, Fernando del, his account of the Swiss mercenaries, i. 396. Remarks respecting him, 409, note. Purgatory, exemption from, by papal bulls, I. 69, note. Q. Quincuagenas, account of this curious manuscript, I. 113, note. Quintanilla, his life of Xinienes, ii. 399. R. Rank, not a passport to honor, i. 200. Ravenna, battle of, iii. 339; its effects 342. Ravenstein, Philip, in. 19, 22. Ship wrecked, 27. Redondilla, remark on the, ii. 220, note. Reduan, i. 362, 3(;9. Reform, of the monasteries, ii. 383. In the diocese of Ximenes, 390. Of the monastic orders, 392; great excitement caused by it, 392 ; visit of the Fran- ciscan general, who insults the queen, 393. The pope's interference, and the queen's consent to a reform, 395. Its operation and effects, 396. Rene le Bon, of Anjou, crown of Cata- lonia offered to, i. 54. Repartimientos, the system of, iii. 473. Revenues, derived from the West Indies. III. 469, 481. Augmentation of the, 434. Richelieu, Cardinal, his declaration on his death-bed, in. 416. Parallel between him and Ximenes, 426. Riol, Santiago Agustin, on the various tribunals, under Ferdinand and Isabel- la, III. 452, note. Rivers, earl of, from Britain. See Scales Robertson, William, i. Ixxvii. note. Od the genuineness of Isabella's testa ment, in. 210, note. On Ferdinand's intention to oppose Philip's landing, 214, note. On Ferdinand's proposed union with Joanna Beltraneja, 214, note. On the queen's exaction of an oath from Ferdinand that he would not marry a second time, 223, note. His bias respecting Ferdinand's transac- tions with Philip, 234, note. On Xime- nes's objection to slavery, 409, note. Roderic, king of the Goths, fatal battle of, I. 273. Roger, Ponce, a reconciled heretic, his punishment, i. 234, note. Roman Catholic. See Church. Romances of chivalry, ii. 212. Their evil effects, 215. Rome, perfidious policy of, in regard to dispensations, I. 267. See Church,a.nd Pope.