[30] Such is the meaning of the word, but I would not like to vouch for the etymology. The derivation is possibly the other way.
[31] The tiny mosque of San Cristo de la Luz is the only genuine Moorish fragment. The Puerta del Sol, the church of Sta Maria la Blanca, etc., are Mudéjar work. Cp. note on p. [208].
[32] I.e. “Citadel,” Cæsareum.
[33] James Howell in 1620 estimates the annual income of Toledo at £100,000, a sum equivalent to nearly half a million to-day.
[34] Metal screens and reliquaries.
[35] He has only a statue at Toledo; but his actual grave has a scarcely less honourable site in las Huelgas at Búrgos.
[36] The Mozárabes were Christians under the dominion of the Moors, as Mudéjares were Moors under the dominion of the Christians.
[37] Several such herds were seized by the hungry regiments in the course of the retreat.
[38] Heywood, Fair Maid of the West.
[39] The country people invariably reckon in reals—the old coinage. The piece is no longer struck, but its value is one-fourth of a peseta.