Francisco de Enzinas, or Dryander, does not come within our horizon, as he left Spain before he became a Protestant and, as he never returned, the Spanish Inquisition had nothing to do with him. His curious Latin memoirs, with a contemporary French translation, have been published by the Société de l’Histoire de Belgique (Bruxelles, 1862-3). A German version, by Hedwig Böhmer, appeared at Bonn, in 1893. Eduard Böhmer, with his customary exhaustiveness, has collected everything that can be gleaned about him, in his Bibliotheca Wiffeniana, I, 133 sqq.
[1138] Reginaldi Gonsalvii Montani S. Inquisit. hispan. Artes aliquot detectæ, pp. 159-64 (Heidelbergæ, 1567).
[1139] Schäfer, II, 378 sqq.
[1140] Archivo de Simancas, Inq. de Barcelona, Córtes, Leg. 17, fol. 83.—See Appendix.
[1141] Ibidem, Inq., Lib. 79, fol. 98.
[1142] Schäfer, II, 342-53. The account of Dr. Egidio by Llorente (Hist. crít., cap. XVIII, art. i, n. 8-20), borrowed from González de Montes, is shown by Schäfer to be wholly incorrect.
[1143] Archivo hist. nacional, Inq. de Valencia, Leg. 375.
[1144] Bulario de la Orden de Santiago, Lib. III, fol. 88.
[1145] Schäfer, II, 1-271, 342, 352. The statistics are as follows:—
| Natives. | Foreigners. | |
| Barcelona | — | 8 |
| Logroño | 18 | 30 |
| Valencia | — | 2 |
| Saragossa | 5 | 6 |
| Cuenca | 5 | 3 |
| Granada | — | 3 |
| Llerena | 1 | — |
| Toledo | 8 | 14 |
| Seville | 2 | — |