[173] Fernández y González, p. 28.
[174] Ayala, Crónica de Don Pedro I, año II, cap. xvii.
[175] Fernández y González, pp. 39, 45-6, 58.
[176] Mondexar, Memorias de Alonso VIII, cap. cv, cviii.—Roderici Toletani de Rebus Hispan. Lib. VIII, cap. xii.
[177] Villanueva, Viage Literario, XXI, 131.
[178] Fernández y González, p. 97.
[179] See the capitulation of Valencia in 1232 (Villanueva, XVII, 331); also the Constitutiones Pacis et Treugæ of Catalonia, in 1214, 1225, and 1228 (Marca Hispanica, pp. 1402, 1407, 1413), and also that of Rosellon, in 1217 (D’Achery, Spicileg. III, 587). In 1279 Pedro III of Aragon issues letters “to all his faithful Moors of the frontier of Castile and Viar,” inviting them to come and populate Villareal, offering them the vacant lands there and pledging them security for all their goods (Coleccion de Documentos de la Corona de Aragon, VIII, 151).
[180] Coleccion de Cédulas, V, 571, 573, 584, 600, 608, 622, 632; VI, 93, 106, 112, 220, 292, 308, 326, 385, 455. A charter of San Fernando III, in 1246, selling certain lands to the city of Toledo, says “vendo á vos, concejo de Toledo, á los caballeros é al pueblo, é á cristianos é á moros é á judios, á los que sodes é á los que han de ser adelant, todos aquellos terminos, etc.”—Fernández y González, p. 319.
[181] Fernández y González, pp. 117, 122, 123.—Memorial histórico español, I, 285.
[182] Coleccion de Cédulas, V, 29.—Fernández y González, p. 294. In the charter of Hinestrosa (1287) the wergild for homicide is 500 sueldos. In that of Arganzon (1191) allusion is made to the wergild of 500 sueldos, but the special privilege is granted that the murderer shall pay only 250, the other 250 being remitted “for the sake of the king’s soul.” In the charter of Amaya (1285) the wergild is sixty maravedís.—(Coleccion de Cédulas, V, 222, 112, 205.)