  - Contents of Volume XXVII
- Illustrations
- Preface
- Documents of 1636
- Memorial Informatorio Al Rey
- Grau y Monfalcon’s Informatory Memorial of 1637
- Number 1. Intention of this memorial, in which are discussed all the principal matters of the Filipinas Islands.
- Number 2. Condition of the commerce of the islands, and dangers from any changes therein
- Number 3. Commissions given to Licentiate Quiroga, and their execution
- Number 4. Uneasiness caused in Nueva EspaÑa, and what can be feared in the islands
- [V. Purpose to which this memorial is directed.—Ex. his.]
- [VI. Proposition to abandon the islands, and its foundations.—Ex. his.]
- Number 7. More attention should be paid to the conservation of states than to the increase of the royal revenues.
- Number 8. As, and for the reasons that, Flandes is preserved, the islands should be preserved
- Number 9. Resolution of preserving the islands well founded
- Number 10. The conservation of the islands is more necessary today
- Number 11. First reason of the importance of the islands: their discovery
- Number 12. Second reason for the importance of the islands: their size and number
- Number 13. Grandeur and characteristics of the distinguished and very loyal city of Manila
- Number 14. Third reason of the importance of the islands: their native and acquired character
- Number 15. Commerce of the islands, domestic and foreign; and in what the domestic consists
- Number 16. Number and diversity of Indians in the islands
- Number 17. Indians tributary to the royal crown in the Indias
- Number 18. Fourth reason for the importance of the islands: their location, as is explained
- Number 19. Importance of the islands because they offer opposition to the Dutch
- Number 20. The foreign and general commerce of the islands makes them more valuable
- Number 21. Estimation of the commerce of the Orient, and its condition
- Number 22. Oriental commerce; why it is valued
- Number 23. Beginnings of the Oriental commerce by way of Persia
- Number 24. Commerce of the Orient through the Arabian Gulf and other parts
- Number 25. Commerce of India confined to Portugal
- Number 26. Entrance of the Dutch into India, and their commerce
- Number 27. Commerce of the Orient, which the Dutch carry on from Ba[n]tan
- Number 28. Commerce in cloves, and how the Dutch entered it, and took possession of Maluco
- Number 29. Recovery of Maluco by the governor of Filipinas, and its annexation thereto
- Number 30. The clove trade, which is carried on by way of India
- Number 31. The Dutch return to Maluco; and the deeds of the governor of Filipinas
- Number 32. Dutch forts and presidios in the Filipinas district
- Number 33. Arguments based on the forts of the Dutch
- Number 34. First argument: for the condition and danger of the commerce
- Number 35. Second argument: participation in the clove trade of Maluco
- Number 36. Third argument: the profits of that commerce, and the effect [on it] of the Filipinas
- Number 37. [Fourth argument:] Commerce of China sustains the Filipinas, and how it is carried on.
- Number 38. Fifth argument for the importance of the islands: their superiority in those seas
- Number 39. Sixth argument
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