The History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic — Volume 1
Anne Soulard, Tiffany Vergon, Charles Aldarondo and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team
English writers have done more for the illustration of Spanish history, than for that of any other except their own. To say nothing of the recent general compendium, executed for the Cabinet Cyclopaedia, a work of singular acuteness and information, we have particular narratives of the several reigns, in an unbroken series, from the emperor Charles the Fifth (the First of Spain) to Charles the Third, at the close of the last century, by authors whose names are a sufficient guaranty for the excellence of their productions. It is singular, that, with this attention to the modern history of the Peninsula, there should be no particular account of the period which may be considered as the proper basis of it,— the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella.
In this reign, the several States, into which the country had been broken up for ages, were brought under a common rule; the kingdom of Naples was conquered; America discovered and colonized; the ancient empire of the Spanish Arabs subverted; the dread tribunal of the Modern Inquisition established; the Jews, who contributed so sensibly to the wealth and civilization of the country, were banished; and, in fine, such changes were introduced into the interior administration of the monarchy, as have left a permanent impression on the character and condition of the nation.
It must be admitted, however, that an account of this reign could not have been undertaken at any preceding period, with anything like the advantages at present afforded; owing to the light which recent researches of Spanish scholars, in the greater freedom of inquiry now enjoyed, have shed on some of its most interesting and least familiar features. The most important of the works to which I allude are, the History of the Inquisition, from official documents, by its secretary, Llorente; the analysis of the political institutions of the kingdom, by such writers as Marina, Sempere, and Capmany; the literal version, now made for the first time, of the Spanish-Arab chronicles, by Conde; the collection of original and unpublished documents, illustrating the history of Columbus and the early Castilian navigators, by Navarrete; and, lastly, the copious illustrations of Isabella's reign, by Clemencin, the late lamented secretary of the Royal Academy of History, forming the sixth volume of its valuable Memoirs.
William Hickling Prescott
---
HISTORY OF THE REIGN OF FERDINAND AND ISABELLA, THE CATHOLIC.
PREFACE
FOOTNOTES
PREFACE
CONTENTS OF VOLUME I.
INTRODUCTION.
PART FIRST.
CHAPTER VIII.
INTRODUCTION.
SECTION I.
FOOTNOTES
SECTION II.
FOOTNOTES
PART FIRST.
CHAPTER I.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER II.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER III.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER IV.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER V.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER VI.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER VII.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER VIII.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER IX.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER X.
FOOTNOTES
CHAPTER XI.
FOOTNOTES
END OF VOL. I.