[116] Zurita, op. cit., Lib. ix, cap. xxiv.

[117] A royal cédula of September 3, 1509, to Matheo de Morrano, appointed as receiver, orders him to pay the following salaries, to commence from the date of leaving home for the journey. The sums are in gold ducats:

Salary.Ayuda
de costa.
The Bishop of Cefalù, inquisitor,300200
Dr. Andrés de Palacios, inquisitor,300100
Dr. Melchior, judge of confiscations,100
Matheo de Morrano, receiver,300150
Joan de Moros, alguazil,20060
Dr. Diego de Bonilla, procurador fiscal,20050
Miguel de Asiz, notary of secreto and court of confiscations, 10050
Joan de Villena, notary of secreto,10050
abriel de Fet, notary of sequestrations,100
A gaoler,5415
Johan de Vergara, messenger,3010
Juan Vazquez, messenger,3010
1814695

Palacios was paid eight months’ salary in advance by the receiver of Barcelona.—Archivo de Simancas, Inquisicion, Lib. III, fol. 1, 52.

[118] Archivo de Simancas, Inquisicion, Lib. III, fol. 2-11.

[119] Tristani Caraccioli, Epist. de Inquisitione (Muratori, S. R. I., T. XXII, p. 97).—Archivo de Simancas, Inquisicion, Lib. 3, fol. 68, 74.—Amabile, I, 101-18.—Zurita, Hist. del Rey Hernando, Lib. ix, cap. xxvi.—Spondani Annal. Eccles., ann. 1510, n. 13.

The formula withdrawing the Inquisition was “Havendo el Rey nostro Signore cogniosciuto la antiqua observancia e religione de la fidelissima Cita di napoli et de tucto questo regno verso la santa fe catholica sua Altezza ha mandato et ordinato levarese la inquisicione da dicta Cita et de tucto il regno predicto per lo bene vivere universale de tucti; et ultra questo su Altezza ha mandato publicare le infrascripte pragmatiche, dato in castello nova, napoli 22 novembre, 1510.”—Amabile, p. 118.

In Ferdinand’s letter books there is nothing further respecting the Neapolitan troubles until May 27, 1511, he writes to Diego de Obregon, the receiver of Sicily, that the Bishop of Cefalù returns there by his orders and, in view of his sufferings for the Inquisition his salary must be paid. Yet he died without receiving it and, on February 16, 1514, Ferdinand ordered Obregon to pay the arrears to Mariano de Acardo, in reward for certain services rendered, but this was still unpaid in January of the following year. As for Andrés Palacios, a cédula of June 6, 1511, recognized him as inquisitor of Valencia, with salary dating back to January 1st and an ayuda de costa of a hundred ducats.—Archivo de Simancas, Inquisicion, Lib. 3, fol. 145, 146, 280, 313.

[120] Ibidem, Lib. 3, fol. 238, 239.

[121] Archivo de Simancas, Inquisicion, Lib. 3, fol. 238, 239, 260, 261, 292, 295, 316, 317, 350.