The beauty of Seville is proverbial. ÒWho has not seen Seville, has not seen a wonder of loveliness,Ó say the Spaniards. They are proud indeed of Seville, as they are of everything else belonging to them, and of themselves especially, often with less reason. We must carry the reader back about three hundred years, to a beautiful mansion not far from the banks of the famed Guadalquiver. In the interior were two courts, open to the sky. Round the inner court were marble pillars richly carved and gilt, supporting two storeys of galleries; and in the centre a fountain threw up, as high as the topmost walls, a bright jet of water, which fell back in sparkling spray into an oval tank below, full of many-coloured fish. In the court, at a sufficient distance from the fountain to avoid its spray, which, falling around, increased the delicious coolness of the air, sat a group of ladies employed in working tapestry, the colours they used being of those bright dyes which the East alone could at that time supply. The only person who was moving was a young girl, who was frolicking round the court with a little dog, enticed to follow her by a coloured ball, which she kept jerking, now to one side, now to the other, laughing as she did so at the animalÕs surprise, in all the joyousness of innocent youth. She had scarcely yet reached that age when a girl has become conscious of her charms and her power over the sterner sex. The ladies were conversing earnestly together, thinking, it was evident, very little of their work, when a servant appearing announced the approach of Don Gonzales Munebrega, Bishop of Tarragona. For the peculiar virtues he possessed in the eye of the supreme head of his Church, he was afterwards made Archbishop of the same see. Uneasy glances were exchanged among the ladies; but they had scarcely time to speak before a dignified-looking ecclesiastic entered the court, followed by two inferior priests. One of the ladies, evidently the mistress of the house, advanced to meet him, and after the usual formal salutations had been exchanged, he seated himself on a chair which was placed for him by her side, at a distance from the rest of the party, who were joined, however, by the two priests. The young girl no sooner caught sight of the Bishop from the farther end of the hall, where the little dog had followed her among the orange trees, than all trace of her vivacity disappeared.
Ann Radcliffe was born Ann Ward on 9th July 1764 in Holborn, central London to parents William and Ann.
The policy of the Inquisition in Venice regarding Conversos was an expression of its willingness to compromise with the state in order to avoid conflict.
Historia de la Inquisición en España y América
Historia de la Inquisición en España y América
Ya en 1901 esta concentración de procesos en la capital del distrito toledano llamó la atención del investigador alemán Ernst Schäfer , quien lo estudió en un cuidadoso artículo en la espera de la redacción de su Beiträge zur Geschichte ...
Accioín, historia y aventura se dan cita como un torbellino en las inolvidables páginas de esta primera novela de la serie, Las aventuras del capitán Alatriste, que comienza cuando el valeroso protagonista acepta un peligroso encargo .
e - Nós , D. Francisco Xavier Miery Campillo , pela graça de Deus e da Santa Sé Apostólica , Bispo , Cavaleiro grande ... de Alarcón para sua preciosa novela O Chapéu de Três Bicos , e os versos da Cachucha : Eu tinha uma cachucha ? que ...
A dramatic account of the Spanish Inquisition.--Preface.
The Roman Inquisition in Enlightened Malta
I, Elena de la Cruz [microform]: Heresy, Gender, and Crisis in Mexico City, 1568