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vival of the republican spirit, 418; miscarriage of Porcaro's revolutionary projects, 419. See Papal Power. Romeo and Juliet, parallel to the story of, i. 402 and _note_. Saint Bathilda, character of, i. 112. Saint Boniface. See Winfrid. Saint Denis, sum paid for redeeming the abbot of, i. 22. Saint John of Jerusalem, knights of, i. 40; their saint, who he was, _ib. note_ r; their enormous possessions, _ib._ and _note_ s. Saint Louis. See Louis IX. Saint Medard, parentage of, i. 296. Saint Pol (count of), anecdote of, i. 84 _note_ f; executed on the scaffold, 89; anecdote of his distrust of Louis XI, 97 _note_. Saint Wilfrid, historical service rendered by, i. 112. Saints, great addition to the calendar of, in the time of Clovis and his sons, i. 111; historical value of their lives, _ib._; extent of their title to canonization, 112, 113. Saladin, conquest of Jerusalem by, i. 40. Salic lands, characteristics of, i. 147-149 and _notes_. Salic law, circumstances which led to the confirmation of the, i. 47, 48; date of its enactment, 278, 279; its incompleteness as a code, 280. Sancho the Great bestows Castile on his second son, ii. 4; he incorporates Naxara, 6. Sancho IV. assassinates Don Lope, ii. 13; clerical encroachments encouraged by, 220 _note_ r. Sanctuary, institution of the privilege of, iii. 302. Saracens, expulsion of the, from France, i. 7 and _note_ q; their inroads upon Italy, 19 and _note_ u; Eudon's great victory over them, 116; their conflicts with the Christians [see Crusades]; they conquer Spain, ii, 2; encroachments of the Christians on their territories, 3; mainspring of their heroism, 117; their eastern conquests, 119; their triumphs in the west, _ib._; effect of their successes, _ib._; their internal dissensions, 121. See Crusades, Moors. Saragosa taken from the Moors, ii. 5. Sardinia conquered by the Pisans, i. 441; its cession to the king of Aragon, 443. Saxons, obstinate resistance to Charlemagne by the, i. 10; enormous number beheaded by him, 13; true cause of their wars with the Franks, 120; their early kings, 303. See Anglo-Saxons. Scabini, representative character of the, i. 216; difference between them and the Rachimburgii, _ib. note_ z; their functions, 238 and _no
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