Page:History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic Vol. III.djvu/527

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INDEX. 499 Amadis de Gaula, remarks on the, ii. 212. Amboise, Cardinal d', his pretensions to the papal chair, ill. 117. Unsuccess- ful, 118. Ammunition, the kinds of, i. 386. Amposta, reduction of, i. 52. Ancient Inquisition, origin and history of the, 1. 231. See Modern Inquisi- tion. Andalusia, the theatre of savage warfare between the Guzmans and Ponces de Leon, I. 118, 189. Royal progress through, 190. Don Pedro Henriquez, adelantado of, 359. Loss of, at the rout in the Axarquia, 370. Andrada, iii. 125. The rear guard left under, 140, 143. Joins Gonsalvo, 143. Angevin lords, Gonsalvo's treatment of the, III. 148, note. Restoration of the, by Ferdinand, 265. Arabs. See Moors. Aragon, Alonso de, natural son of Fer- dinand, III. 398, note. Aragon, Juan de, proposition for the union of, with Elvira, iii. 292. Aragon, state of, in the middle of the fifteenth century, i. xxx. Its gradual expansion, xxxii. Its union with Catalonia, Ixxxiii.; with Valencia, Ixxxiii. Attention given to the navy of, Ixxsiv. Its extensive conquests, Ixxxv. Origin of the government of, Ixxxvi. Barons of, Ixxxvii. Meas- ures for reducing the authority of the nobles of, xc, xciii. Alfonso III. approves the Privileges of Union, xci. Anarchy in, xcii. Defeat of the army of the Union in, xciii. Full possession of constitutional liberty in, xciv. The cortes of, and its various branches, xcv. ; its mode of conduct- ing business, xcvii. Fidelity of the officers of government in, xcix. The General Privilege, xcix. Influence of the free institutions of, manifested by writers there, cxxiii., note. Condition of, during the minority of Ferdinand, 29. Reign of John II., 31. Treaty of with France, 50. Termination of the civil war in, 61. Union of, with Castile, by the marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella, 102, 176 Troubles there, 116. Treaty between, and France, 123. Introduction of the Ancient Inquisition into, 232. Oppo-1 sition there, to the introduction of the Inquisition by Ferdinand, 264. Liber- ation of Catalan serfs in, ii. 5. Fur- ther particulars respecting the Inqui- sition in, 6 ; remonstrance of the Cortes, 7; conspiracy, 8; assassina- tion of Arbues, 9. Cruel persecutions there, 10. Visited by Ferdinand and Isabella, in 1487, 45. The hermandad adopted there, 45. Its extensive com- merce in the middle ages. 111, note. Treatment of the Jews in, 142. Vis- ited by the sovereigns, in 1492, 155. Difficulties in, respecting female suc- cession to the crown, 360. Ferdi- nand's conduct in regard to the In- quisition in. III. 393, note; his treat- ment of the nobles in, 433. Population of, 480, note. Victims of the Inquisi tion in, 492, note. Arbues, Pedro, inquisitor in Saragossa, II. 7. Assassinated, 9. Honored as a martyr, 10. Architecture in Spain, iii. 482, 483, note. Aristotle, reverence for, among the Spanish Arabs, i. 303. Ximenes pro- jects an edition of, iii. 324, note. Army, Castilian, discipline of the, at Malaga, ii. 29. Numbers -of the, in 1488, 46. Houses erected for it, near Baza, 61. Strict discipline of the, 62. Their painful march from Baza, 70. Arrows, poisoned by the Moors, i. 389. Ars, Louis d', his gallantry, iii. 157. Artillery, early knowledge of, in Spain, I. 48, note. Remarks respecting the, 385. Difficulty of transporting it, 387. Comparison of the French and the Italian, ii.281. Astrolabe, invention of the, ii. 111. Ap- plication of the, to navigation, 112, note. Atar, Ali, the defender of Loja, i. 374 Killed at the battle of Lucena^ 376.