Page:History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic Vol. III.djvu/554

526 526 INDEX. Ronda, prisoners taken at, liberated, i. 405. Hamet ZelJ, the defender of, ii. 17. Rendezvous at, 432, 441. Roussillon, pledged to the French king, I. 50. Revolt there, 120. Second French invasion of, 130. Siege and reduction of; perfidy of Louis XL, 133. Negotiations respecting, ii. 2fiS. Restored to Aragon, 27]. Invaded by the French, iii. 98. Ruvo, captured, iir. 5G ; the important consequences, 59. S. St. Angel, Louis de, intercedes with Is- abella for Columbus, ii. 127. St. Dominic, remarks on, i. 232, note. Act of, for a penitent heretic, 234, note. St. George, the storming of, in. 17. St. James, grand master of, i, 114. Mil- itary order of, 210. See Cardenas and VUlena. Salamanca, literary character of, ii. 203. The concord of, iii. 220, 224. Univer- sity of, 327, 433. Salsas, siege of, iii. 99. Saluzzo, marquis of, sent to the relief of Gaeta, in. 115, 119. Succeeds the marquis of Mantua as commander of the French army in Italy, 133. His retreat to Gaeta, 141. Routed, 144. Fate of the army under, 150. His death, 151. San Germane, Gonsalvo takes post at, in. 122. Santa Fe, history of the origin of, n. 92. Santa Hermandad, establishment of the, I. 179. See Hcrmandad. Santillana, liiigo Lopez de Mendoza, marquis of, an illustrious wit of the reign of John II., i. IC. His death, 18,°79. Cited, 27, note. Saracen invasion of Spain, i. xxi.'j, xxxvii. Saragossa, Autos da fc celebrated at, n. 8. Visited by the sovereigns, 45. Savona, brilliant interview of Ferdinand and Louis XII. at, ni. 278. Scales, Lord, aids the Spanish sovereigns, I. 397. The queen's courtesy to, 398. His costume at the meeting of Ferdi- nand and Isabella before Moclin, 402. Loses his life, ii. 49, note. Scott, Sir Walter, his representation of Rene's character,!. 54, note; of Re- becca and Isaac, 239, note. Sculptors in Spain, ni. 483. Segovia, interview there, between Hen- ry IV. and Isabella, i. 127. Isabella proclaimed queen there, 141. Tumult at, suppressed by Isabella, 183. Seminara, the march against, ii. 30G. Battle of, 308. Sempere, critical notice of, i. Ixxix. Seville, the corporation of, offer pre- miums for poetry, i. 21. Reception of Isabella there, 1S7. Inquisition at, 250. Prevalence of the plague at, 253. Reception of Columbus at, n. 164. Colonial trade confined to, 495. Here- tics burned there, ni. 491, note. See Mendoza. Sforza, Lodovico, intrigues of, ii. 264. His proposal to the king of France, 265. Jealous of the French, 282, 289. Unpopiilarity of, ni. 4. His fate, 5. Sheep, in Castile, i. Iv. Sidonia, Medina, the duke of, head of the Guzmans, i. 119. A supporter of Isabella, 189. Marches to relieve Al- hama, 333 ; to Malaga, )i. 29. Death of, 107, note. Application made to, by Colutnbus, 123. His income, ui. 434, note. Sierra Vermeja, revolt of the, ii. 431. Expedition into the, 433. Spaniards routed there, 439. Submission of, 441. Fate of the inhabitants of, 441. Bal- lads thereon, 442. IVlelancholj' reminis- cences respecting, 444. Silva, Alonso de, sent by Ferdinand to the French court, ii. 275. Charles's dissatisfaction with him, 276. Opens a correspondence with Sforza, 282. Silva, Juan de, count of Cifuentes, his connexion with the expedition to Ax- arquia, i. 359, 360. Silveira, Fernando de, representative of the prince of Portugal, at the affianc- ing with the infanta Isabella, ii. 80.