Page:History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic Vol. I.djvu/132

This page needs to be proofread.
cxiv
INTRODUCTION.

INTROD.

the latter with the executive functions of administration. A large proportion of these bodies were selected from the merchants, tradesmen, and mechanics of the city. They were invested, not merely with municipal authority, but with many of the rights of sovereignty. They entered into commercial treaties with foreign powers; superintended the defence of the city in time of war; provided for the security of trade; granted letters of reprisal against any nation who might violate it; and raised and appropriated the public moneys for the construction of useful works, or the encouragement of such commercial adventures as were too hazardous or expensive for individual enterprise.[1]

The counsellors, who presided over the municipality, were complimented with certain honorary privileges, not even accorded to the nobility. They were addressed by the title of magníficos; were seated, with their heads covered, in the presence of royalty; were preceded by mace-bearers, or lictors, in their progress through the country; and deputies from their body to the court were admitted on the footing, and received the honors, of foreign ambassadors.[2] These it will be recollected, were plebeians,—merchants and mechanics. Trade never was esteemed a degradation in Catalonia, as it came to be in Castile.[3] The professors of the different

  1. Capmany, Mem. de Barcelona, Apend. no. 24.—The senate or great council, though styled the "one hundred," seems to have fluctuated at different times between that number and double its part.amount.
  2. Corbera, Cutaluria Illustrada, p. 84.—Capmany, Mem. de Barcelona, torn. ii. Apend. no. 29.
  3. Capmany, Mem. de Barcelona, tom. i. part. 3, p. 40, tom. iii. 2, pp. 317, 318.