[956] Archivo de Simancas, Registro de Genealogías, n. 916, fol 4, 12.—Inq., Lib. 4352; Lib. 559; Leg. 1473.
[957] Archivo de Simancas, Inq., Leg. 1473.
[958] Ibidem.
[959] Archivo de Simancas, Inq., Lib. 890.
[960] L’Espagne et ses Revolutions, p 148—quoted by Marliani, I, 235. See also Miraflores (Apuntes, pp. 23, 26) who, as an aristocrat, had no affiliation with the Liberals.
[961] Many documents were gathered in the streets and sent to the United States, which have mostly perished through neglect, but some which were secured by Mr. Andrew Thorndike, then a resident of Barcelona, were presented, in 1840, to the American Philosophical Society, through whose courtesy I have been enabled to use them.
Some cases, from a similar source were translated and printed in Boston, in 1828, under the title of “Records of the Spanish Inquisition, translated from the original Manuscripts.”
In Majorca the populace was more aggressive and destroyed the palace of the Inquisition.
[962] Koska Vayo, II, 133-54, 170.—Miraflores, Apuntes, pp. 26-37; Documentos, I, 73-81.—Memorias de Francisco Espoz y Mina, II, 255-72.—Martínez de la Rosa, Examen crítico de las Revoluciones de España, I, 14-22.
[963] Urquinaona, La España bajo el Poder arbitrario de la Congregacion Apostólica, p. 14 (Madrid, 1835).—Miraflores, Apuntes, pp. 40-5; Documentos, I, 87-91.—Cappa, La Inquisicion española, p. 239.—Rodrigo, III, 495.