Sir Clements R. Markham
The Story of Majorca and Minorca
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4057664574138
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I Of King Jayme I. of Aragon and how he resolved to conquer Majorca and drive out the Moors
CHAPTER X King Sancho of Majorca
CHAPTER XI King Jayme III. of Majorca
CHAPTER XIII Relates the story, so far as it concerns Majorca, of the last Kings of Aragon
CHAPTER XIV The Majorcans as navigators
CHAPTER XVII The Marquis of Romana and the patriot Jovellanos.
CHAPTER I Minorca—Its prehistoric remains—Mago the Carthaginian—Successive occupations
CHAPTER II Conquest of Minorca by Alfonso III.—The Barbary pirates
CHAPTER III British occupation of Minorca.
CHAPTER V Minorca under British rule
CHAPTER VII The third occupation of Minorca—Loss of British rule
SOME PRESS OPINIONS OF THE RE-ISSUE.
THE WORKS OF Elizabeth Barrett Browning and of Robert Browning.
WORKS BY ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER BENSON.
PREFACE
The story of the Islands of Majorca and Minorca has never been told in our language in a condensed form, although the interest is great from an historical point of view, and the materials sufficient, though not perhaps abundant. It is so closely connected with the history of Aragon and the recovery of the Sicilies from the intruding Angevins that the two cannot be altogether separated. The most that can be done is, as far as practicable, to treat the Aragonese and Sicilian events from a Majorcan point of view. This has been attempted. The stirring events of the conquest of Majorca by Jayme I., the latter part of the reign of his son, and the reigns of Sancho and Jayme III., as well as the adventures and death of Jayme IV., the last of his race, all belong strictly to Majorcan history, as do the chapters on Balearic navigators and the revolt of the ‘Comunidades.’ The story fills a gap in the history of Mediterranean countries which may not be altogether unacceptable to students. This has been one object of the writer.
Another object has been to supply more detailed information respecting the events of former times in the islands, for the use of the considerable