[88] Omnium pene Europae, Asiae, Aphricae, atque Americae Gentium habitus. Antwerp, 1581.

[89] It is extremely improbable that this fan leaf had ever any connection with the story given above. It probably belongs to the latter years of the seventeenth, or the early years of the eighteenth century.

[90] M. Édouard Petit has written an exhaustive monograph on the manufacture of fans, Études, souvenirs et considérations sur la fabrication de l’éventail. Versailles, 1859.

[91] Art and Ornament in Dress.

[92] Fans of scented wood had, earlier, been introduced into the French Court by Anne of Austria.

[93] S. Redgrave, South Kensington Catalogue of Fan Exhibition, 1870.

[94] One of the most potent earlier influences on Spanish painting was that of Titian, who, although probably never in Spain, painted a number of pictures for the Escurial.

[95] ‘They all love the feasts of bulls, and strive to appear gloriously fine when they see them.’—Memoirs of Lady Fanshawe.

[96] Procès Verbaux, April 26, 1762, Jan. 1765. Lady Dilke, French Painters of the Eighteenth Century, p. 12.

[97] Walter Thornbury, Legendary Ballads and Songs.