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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • March 1, 1798
  • Page 7
  • THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, March 1, 1798: Page 7

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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Life Of Ximenes, Archbishop Of Toledo.

childless . Upon this he was surnamed Impotent ; and diminished , in agteat measure , the ' respect his subjects entertained for him . At last , the Queen being pregnant , his joy on the occasion was extreme : he conducted her to Madrid , where she was delivered of a daughter , who was baptized by the Archbishop of Toledo , held at the font by Count d' Armagnac , Ambassador of Louis XI . King of France , and the Infanta

Isabella ; and , after her mother , named Jane . At the expiration of three months the King assembled the States , and proclaimed the Princess heiress of his kingdoms . The malcontents then openly declared themselves . They undertook to seize the King ' s person , ' and to assassinate his favourite . The ¦ blow having failed , they levied troops , and published a manifesto , containing their complaints ; of which the chief" were , that he appointed -persons unworthy of confidence to public offices of trust ; that he had ,

to the prejudice of the Infanta , the undoubted proprietor of it , put Bertram ! de la Cueva in possession of the grand mastership of St . James ; and that , contrary to all laws of reason and justice , he had declared a daughter of D . Bertrand , his favourite , heiress of Castille . The whole kingdom , persuaded of the King ' s impotence , and moreover offended by the Queen ' s irregular conduct , looked upon Alonsoand Isabellahis sister

D . , , , as their real Princes . They considered the Queen ^ amour with D . Bertrand undoubtedly true ; that his Majesty . bad connived atit ; and Princess Jane was contemptuously and tleridedly called Princess Bertrandille . The insolence of the rebels went so far as to depose the King , and to substitute the'Infant D . Alonso , his brother , in his place . The King , on his part , _ assembled those forces that were still faithful to himand after various

, manoeuvres on both sides , an accommodation tookplace . The Marquis of'Villene , who commanded the troops of the line , himself projected the plan , which was accepted . By the conditions , the King was to grant a general amnesty for the past , and was assured of the peaceable enjoyment of his state for " the future ; that a marriage between the Infant and Princess Jane should be guaranteed ; but that the Infanta Isabella should espouse D . Pedro < 3 iron , Grand Master of the order of Calatrava , the Marquis de Villene ' s brother .

1 he Infanta , although but fifteen years of age , possessed a mind so enlarged , and a heart so replete with sentiments of honour and glorj ' , that , to be thus sacrificed to political interest was repugnant ¦ to her feelings . A mortal sorrow , which vented itself in tears , was the consequence of imparting to her this resolution of the Court . Her governess , D . Beatrix de Bovadilla , found her in this extreme afflictionandupon enquirj'was informed that her disposal to Pedro

, , , Giron was the cause ; that rather than suffer such indignity , she would become a martyr to grief ; that being the daughter of so many Kings , it was not her desi gn to descend from the rank in which God had placed her ; that she was not to be disposed of as the Court had determined ; that to become the . fortune of a private subject , and the reward of a rebel , was not her destiny ; the thought of it made her

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-03-01, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01031798/page/7/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
PRICES OF BINDING PER VOLUME. Article 3
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF HER ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUTCHESS OF CUMBERLAND. Article 4
THE LIFE OF XIMENES, ARCHBISHOP OF TOLEDO. Article 5
BRIEF HISTORY OF NONSENSE. Article 11
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF GENERAL MUSKIEN. Article 13
ACCOUNT OF THE CABALISTICAL PHILOSOPHY OF THE JEWS. Article 14
WISDOM AND FOLLY. A VISION. Article 18
COMPARISON BETWEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Article 22
AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. Article 29
AN ESSAY ON THE CHINESE POETRY. Article 31
CHARACTER OF SIR WILLIAM JONES. Article 34
THE LIFE OF DON BALTHASAR OROBIO, Article 36
THE COLLECTOR. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 42
GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 43
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 44
POETRY. Article 52
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 56
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 56
IRISH PARLIAMENT. Article 60
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
OBITUARY. Article 68
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Life Of Ximenes, Archbishop Of Toledo.

childless . Upon this he was surnamed Impotent ; and diminished , in agteat measure , the ' respect his subjects entertained for him . At last , the Queen being pregnant , his joy on the occasion was extreme : he conducted her to Madrid , where she was delivered of a daughter , who was baptized by the Archbishop of Toledo , held at the font by Count d' Armagnac , Ambassador of Louis XI . King of France , and the Infanta

Isabella ; and , after her mother , named Jane . At the expiration of three months the King assembled the States , and proclaimed the Princess heiress of his kingdoms . The malcontents then openly declared themselves . They undertook to seize the King ' s person , ' and to assassinate his favourite . The ¦ blow having failed , they levied troops , and published a manifesto , containing their complaints ; of which the chief" were , that he appointed -persons unworthy of confidence to public offices of trust ; that he had ,

to the prejudice of the Infanta , the undoubted proprietor of it , put Bertram ! de la Cueva in possession of the grand mastership of St . James ; and that , contrary to all laws of reason and justice , he had declared a daughter of D . Bertrand , his favourite , heiress of Castille . The whole kingdom , persuaded of the King ' s impotence , and moreover offended by the Queen ' s irregular conduct , looked upon Alonsoand Isabellahis sister

D . , , , as their real Princes . They considered the Queen ^ amour with D . Bertrand undoubtedly true ; that his Majesty . bad connived atit ; and Princess Jane was contemptuously and tleridedly called Princess Bertrandille . The insolence of the rebels went so far as to depose the King , and to substitute the'Infant D . Alonso , his brother , in his place . The King , on his part , _ assembled those forces that were still faithful to himand after various

, manoeuvres on both sides , an accommodation tookplace . The Marquis of'Villene , who commanded the troops of the line , himself projected the plan , which was accepted . By the conditions , the King was to grant a general amnesty for the past , and was assured of the peaceable enjoyment of his state for " the future ; that a marriage between the Infant and Princess Jane should be guaranteed ; but that the Infanta Isabella should espouse D . Pedro < 3 iron , Grand Master of the order of Calatrava , the Marquis de Villene ' s brother .

1 he Infanta , although but fifteen years of age , possessed a mind so enlarged , and a heart so replete with sentiments of honour and glorj ' , that , to be thus sacrificed to political interest was repugnant ¦ to her feelings . A mortal sorrow , which vented itself in tears , was the consequence of imparting to her this resolution of the Court . Her governess , D . Beatrix de Bovadilla , found her in this extreme afflictionandupon enquirj'was informed that her disposal to Pedro

, , , Giron was the cause ; that rather than suffer such indignity , she would become a martyr to grief ; that being the daughter of so many Kings , it was not her desi gn to descend from the rank in which God had placed her ; that she was not to be disposed of as the Court had determined ; that to become the . fortune of a private subject , and the reward of a rebel , was not her destiny ; the thought of it made her

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