Page:History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic Vol. III.djvu/544

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516 JiNDEX. Italian militarj' tactics, ii. 1273. Italy, tiie school of politics at the close of the fifteenth century, ii. 259. Her most powerful states, 260. Character of the politics of, 2G3. Its internal prosperity, 2C4. Intrigues of Sforza in, 264. Alarmed at the invasion of Charles VIII., 272. Military tactics in, 278. Effects of the news of the league of Venice on, 291. Influence of the war there, on Spain, 339. Louis XII. 's designs on, in. 4. Politics of, 4. Conquests in, 5. Astonishment of, at the partition of Naples, 20. Wars there, be- tween the French and Spaniards, 37. Favors the Spaniards, 38. Chivalrous character of the war there, 45. Melan- choly condition of, 108. Views of the states of, 112. Anxious expectation of, during the battle of the Gariglia- no, 127. Invaded by Louis XII., 333. Abandoned by the French, 344. Jealousy, the cause of the revolution in Granada, i. 348. Jews, retrospective view of, in Spain, i. 235. Condition of, under the Arabs, 236; under the Castilians, 238. Per- secution of, 239, 240, 251. Legis- lative enactments respecting, 241. Their state at the accession of Is- abella, 242. Charges brought against them, 243. Proofs admitted against, 251. Excitement against them, ii. 135. Clergy foment the excitement, 136. Various offences urged against, 137. Torquemada's violent conduct respecting, 137. Isabella's feelings towards them, 139. Edict for their expulsion, 139, 150; its severe opera- tion, 140. Their constancy, 142. Their departure, 143. Treatment of them in Portugal, 144. Their sufferings in Africa, 144 ; in Italy, 146. Eminent and learned men among the exiled, 147, note. Whole number of exiled, 148. Disastrous results of their ex])ul- eion, 14!). Motives of the edict, 150. Contemporar}' judgments on them else- vphere, IGl. Banisiied from Portugal, 356. Prohibited from going to the New World, 438. Joan, her marriage with John of Aragon, I. 31. Her deportment towards Carlos, 32, 38. Is besieged at Estella, 33. Gives birth to Ferdinand the Catholic, 33. Forbidden to enter Barcelona, 41. Seeks refuge in Gerona, 48. Besieges Rosas, and joins Prince Ferdinand, be- fore Gerona, 56. Her death, 57. Joanna, a Portuguese princess, sister of Alfonso v., married to Henry IV., of Castile, i. 67. Her gayety ; the conse- quent suspicions, 67, 139, note. The mother of Joanna, commonly called Bcltraneja, 75. To be divorced, 94. Her death ; remarks on her character, 140, 7wtc. Joanna Beltraneja, daughter of Joanna, wife of Henry IV., of Castile, i. 75. Supported by a fraction of the royal party, 98. Affianced to the duke of Guienne, 115. Guienne dies, and other negotiations take place, 125. Foun- dation of the popular belief of her ille- gitimacy, 139, note. Her pretensions to the crown, considered, 140. Parti- sans of, 145. Supported by Alfonso of Portugal, 146; measures in regard to her marrying him, 149. The veil taken by her, 172, 173. Her proposed marriage with Francis Phcebus, 353. Further remarks respecting her, ii, 344. Her death, 345, 710I.C. The re- port respecting Ferdinand's proposed union with, iii. 215, note. Joanna, daughter of Ferdinand and Isa- bella, and mother of Charles V., i. 354. Proposition for the marriage of, with Francis Phcebus, king of Navarre, 354. Her birth, 11. 343. Her marriage into the flimily of Austria, 348, 352. Her embarkation, 350. Iler arrival in Flanders, 352. Her nuptials celebrated with uncommon pomp, 352. Charles v., son of, IM.6I. Iler despondency, 92. Birth of her second son, 93. In- sane, 94, 170. Visited by Isabella, 94. Her mad conduct, 171. Her incapa-