Page:History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic Vol. III.djvu/532

504 504 INDEX. residence to, 156. Attempt to assas- sinate Ferdinand in, 156. Loyalty of the people of, 158. See Catalans. Catharine of Lancaster, union of Hen- ry III. with, I. 4. Catharine, succeeds Francis Phcebus, of Navarre, i. 354. Proposition for the union of, with John, son of Ferdinand and Isabella, 354. Her marriage with Jean d'Albret, ii. 5. See Alhrct. Catharine of Aragon, her birth, ii. 5, note, 343, note. Her early education, 189, note. Her union with the house of England, 348. Catholic, the title of, conferred on Ferdi- nand and Isabella, ii. 284. Celestina, the tragi-comedy of, ii. 233. Criticized, 234. Opened the way to dramatic writing, 235. Numerous edi- tions of it, 237. Cell, Medina, Duke of, Columbus's ap- plication to, II. 123. Centurion, Domingo, sent as a legate by pope Sixtus IV. to the court of Cas- tile, I. 221. Cerdagne, pledged to the king of France, I. 50. Revolt there, 120. Cerignola, Gonsalvo encamps at, in. 73. Battle of, 76, 113, 119. Loss at, 78. Charles VIII., of France, his early edu- cation, 11. 2C5. His pretensions to Naples, 266. His negotiations respect- ing Roussillon, 268. Counsellors of, in the pay of Ferdinand, 269. His meas- ures for invading Italy, 272. Sends an envoy to the Spanish court, 274. Ferdinand's special mission to him, 275. His dissatisfaction, 276. Crosses the Alps with a formidable army, 277. Enters Rome, 278. Second mission to, from Ferdinand, 285. His dissat- isfaction, 2S6. Enters Naples, 289. General hostility to him, 289. His indiscretion after the league of Ven- ice, 294. His general conduct, 295. Plunders works of art, 296. Goes through the ceremony of coronation, 297. II is retreat, 297. His disregard for Italy, 317. His death, iii. 3. Cause of his failure in Italy, 158. Charles V., (ihe First of Spain,) birth of, III. 61. Proposal for the union of, with the princess Claude, 63. Named king by Isabella, 176. Made to as- sume the title of king of Castile, 273. Regards himself as e.xcluded by Fer- dinand from his rightful possession, 369. Adrian, of Utrecht, preceptor of, and envoy to Ferdinand, 383. Erects a marble mausoleum over the remains of Ferdinand and Isabella, 389. Pro- claimed king, 405. Prepares to era- bark for his Spanish dominions, 413. His proposed union with the daughter of Francis I., 413. Lands in Spain, 414. His ungrateful letter to Ximenes, 415 Indebted to the reign of Ferdi- nand and Isabella, 493. Charles of Bourbon, his generous con duct to the heirs of Giannone, iii. 469, note. Chivalry, circumstances favorable to, in Spain, I. xliii. Romances of, 212. Con- tinuance of, in Spain, lu. 488. See Military orders. Christians, sold as slaves, i. 70, 357. Treatment of, by the Spanish Arabs, 274. Liberation of, 405. Release of, at Malaga, ii. 37; at Oran, in. 308. Church of Rome, measures for prevent- ing usurpations by the, i. 218. Re- sisted by the cortes of Castile, 219. Treatment of the, by the sovereigns, III. 435. See Pope. Church plate, appropriation of, for the support of the royal treasury, i. 155. Cicero, his country-seat, iii. 120, note. Cid, remarks on the, i. xli. Cifuentes, Don Juan de Silva, count of, I. 359. Cisneros, Francisco Ximenez de. See Ximenes. Classical literature, in Spain, ti. 198. Claude, the princess, daughter of Louis XII., 111.63. Clemencin, Diego, author of the sixth volume of the " Blemoirs of the Royal Spanisli Academy of History," i. 228, jiote. Clergy, on the education of the, in Spain, II. 204. Their habits, 397. Their opposition to Talavera's mild