[28] Manrique, Anales Cisterciences, iii. 201.
[30] The nuns’ choir in the nave is, according to Florez, “the most capacious of all that are known in cathedrals and monasteries.” Esp. Sag., xxvi. 582.
[31] The organ in All Saints, Margaret Street, has the pipes of one stop similarly placed; but I know no old English example of this arrangement.
[32] Mr. Waring and M. Villa Amil have both published drawings of the inner cloister. The drawing of the latter is evidently not to be trusted; but from Mr. Waring’s view I gather that the arches are round, resting on coupled shafts, with large carved capitals. Mr. Waring calls them Romanesque, but in his drawing they look more like very late Transitional work, probably not earlier than A.D. 1200. They appear to be arranged in arcades of six open arches between larger piers, and with such a construction the cloister could hardly have been intended for groining. The famous cloister at Elne, near Perpignan, with those of Verona Cathedral, S. Trophine at Arles, Montmajeur, and Moissac, are examples of the class from which the design of such a cloister as this must have been derived, and its character is therefore rather more like that of Italian work, or work of the South of France, than that of Northern France or England.
[33] España Sagrada, xxvii. 611-14.
[34] España Sagrada, xxvi. 350, 359.
[35] An interesting account of this meeting is given in Cronicas de los Reyes de Castillos, i. p. 481-3.
[36] That it was “of no diocese” was expressly recorded among the titles borne by the Abbess, and given by Ponz, Viage de España, xii. 65.
[37] See the account at length in Esp. Sag., xxvii. 393 and 558.