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Story Of The Princess Des Ursins In Spain - Camarera Mayor (1899) (Paperback)
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Story Of The Princess Des Ursins In Spain - Camarera Mayor (1899) (Paperback)
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for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book:
CHAPTER III THE EVIL GENIUS OF SPAIN Important reforms were
gradually and cautiously introduced into the Court. One of these
was the reduction of the royal household, which had been very large
under the Austrian kings. It was a custom in Spain for both king
and nobles to take over, together with their inheritance, all the
retinue, including slaves and pensioners, of their predecessor,
without dismissing any of their own followers; so that the
households, with their dependencies, kept on increasing in numbers.
A visitor at the Court of Charles II. writes: "I am told that the
King provides daily food in Madrid alone for ten thousand persons."
Probably this was no exaggeration, for we learn from the same
writer that some of the wives of the richergrandees had as many as
five hundred female attendants. In reducing the King's household an
example of economy was set which it was hoped the nobility would
follow. A small reform of a more delicate and personal nature was
attempted by the young Queen. Spanish Court etiquette, which
perpetuated many a Moorish custom, had decreed that women's feet
must never be visible. Even the doors and steps of carriages were
so constructed as to conceal them. The ladies for this reason wore
a long and cumbersome over- skirt called the " tantillo." " The
Queen Marie of Savoy," writes the Duc de Noailles, "wished the
ladies of the palace to follow her example by discarding the
tantillo. This proposed innovation was actually regarded as an
affair of State! Some gentlemen went so far as to declare that they
would rather see their wives lying dead before them than that their
feet should be seen! The Ambassador Blecourt wrote gravely (to his
Court) that a descent of the English upon all the coasts of Spain
wouldA CRY FOR WAR 29 have caused less ...
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