[9] Between Palamos and Palafurgall, or Capes Gros and San Sebastian.
[10] Extinct.
[11] Extinct.
[12] The best account of the coinage of Majorca is in the Appendix to Bover’s Historia de la casa real de Mallorca y noticia de las monedas proprias de esta isla (Palma, 1855).
[13] So says Fray Pedro Marsilio, the editor in Latin of the Journal of Jayme I. But the olive grows wild in Majorca. The cultivated olive is grown from the plains to a height of two thousand feet in the mountains.
[14] Carta historico-artistica sobre el edificio de la Iglesia Cathedral de Palma que escribio el Exmo Don Gaspar de Jovellanos (Palma, 1832).
[15] So called because, when he unjustly put the brothers Carbajal to death, they summoned him to meet them before the judgment-seat of God on a day which they named. Fernando IV. died suddenly on that very day.
[16] ‘Esperonte’ was a salient angle in the curtain of a fortified place, generally in front of a gate.
[17] A princess of Hainault, through another descent from the Prince of the Morea, also claimed the Lordship of Clarencia. Philippa of Hainault, Queen of Edward III., inherited this honorary title, and it was given to her second son Lionel. This is a more probable origin of the title than that it was derived from the Lordship of Clare. In that case it would be Clare, not Clarence.
[18] I have to thank Mr. Gilbert Ogilvy for the sketches of the chair, and the photograph.