Page:History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic Vol. III.djvu/548

520 620 INDEX. Manuel, Juan, ambassador at tlie court of Maximilian, iii. 209. His charac- ter, 310. His ascendency over Pliilip, 224. Estates and honors lavished on, 248. His flight to the court of Maxi- milian, 2ri7. Manufactures in Spain, i. 281. Laws respecting, in. 457. Extent of the finer, 459. ^lanuscripts, Greek, furnished to Xime- nesby the pope, in. 322. Their value, and destruction, 325. Marchena. See Perez. Margaret, daughter of Maximilian, her union with Prince John, u. 348, 352, 353. Incidents in the early life of, 352. Her voyage to Spain, and reception there, 353. Maria, daughter of Ferdinand and Isa- bella, her birth, ii. 343, note. Marina, notice of his works, i. Ixxix, note. Marineo, Lucio, an eminent scholar in Spain, n. 193. Notice of his writings, 194. Cited respecting the administra- tion of justice, 111. 438. Martel, Jerome, public historiographer, I. cxxiii., note. Martyr, Peter, d'Anghiera, notice of him, and his works, ii. 74, note, 507, note. His allusions to Columbus, 132, ItJG. Invited to the court to open a school for the young nobility, 192. His la- bors, 193. Cited respecting Isabella's sickness and deatli, iii. 172, 173, 182. Masterships, grand,annexed to the crown, i.21(!, 218. Maximilian, his embassy to Ferdinand and Isabella, ii. 48. Negotiations of the Spanish court with, in. 8. His truce with the king of Naples, 9. Partial to Spain, 114. Tampers with Gonsalvo de Cordova, 212. Shares the possession of Venice with Louis NIL, 330. Mazarqulvir, captured, in. 299. Xime- nes's e.xpedition arrives at, 301. Mechlin, treaty of, in. 358, note. Medina, coumicrcial importance of, in. 482. Mena, John de, a distinguished poet in the reign of John II., i. 18. His in- fluence on Castilian poetry, 19. Mendana, Pedro de, his grievous devas- tations, I. 179. Mendoza, Diego Hurtado de, facts re- specting, 1. 79, note. Marquis of Santillana, 118. Addresses a remon- strance to the king and queen respect- ing the hcrniandad, 205. His magnif icent train, 400. His bravery, 400. Opposed toXimenes, ni. 411. Mendoza, Diego de, his rout of the French rearguard, near Barleta, in. 53. Mendoza, Inigo Lopez de, marquis of Santillana, an illustrious wit of the reign of John II., i. 16. His death, 18. Mendoza Inigo Lopez de. See Tcndilla. Mendoza, Pedro Gonzales de, archbishop of Seville and cardinal of Spain, fa- vors Isabella, i. 126. His bravery at the battle of Toro, 162. Accompanies Isabella, to suppress the tumults at Segovia, 184. Prevails on Ferdinand and Isabella to open negotiations with the court of Rome, 222. Favors the Jews, 249. The successor of Carillo, archbishop of Toledo, 357. Sent for- ward to take possession of the Alham- bra, at the capitulation of Granada, II. 96, 97. Favors the project of Co- lumbus, 122. His death, 368. His early life, 369. His character, 370. His amours, 370. The queen his ex- ecutor, 372. Names Ximenes as his successor, 373. Mendoza, Saiazar de, justifies Ferdi- nand's treatment of Navarre, iii. 300, note. Merlo, Diego de, his expedition against Alhama, i. 319, 322. Metals, erroneous policy in regard to, i. 225. In the West Indies, ii. 499, iii. 477. Miguel, son of Emanuel of Portugal and Isabella, his birth, ii. 364. His recognition as heir to the throne, 365. His death, 366. Milan, conquered by the French, in. 5, 112.