| A | B |
| Don Quixote de la Mancha | Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra |
| Wrote religious dramas and others La Vida Es Sueño | Pedro Calderón de la Barca |
| La Vista de Toledo | El Greco |
| Las Meninas | Diego Velázquez |
| Wrote hundreds of popular plays including Fuenteovejuna | Lope de Vega |
| La Vida (of a famous Carmelite reformer) | Santa Teresa de Jesús de Avila |
| The Dark Night of the Soul | San Juan de la Cruz |
| A picaresque novel by an anonymous author | Lazarillo de Tormes |
| Sonatas and other music with Spanish characteristics, with guitars, dancing | Domenico Scarlatti |
| Painter of the Baroque period; religious themes, biblical scenes | Bartolomé Murillo |
| El entierro del Conde Orgaz;View of Toledo | El Greco |
| The loyal companion of Don Quixote | Sancho Panza |
| Don Quixote's "lady" | Dulcinea del Toboso |
| Was defeated by the English and by storms | La Armada Invencible |
| Was constructed to commemororate the victory of San Quintín over the French | El Escorial |
| El Escorial commemorates a victory over | The French |
| The battle of Lepanto commemorates a victory over | The Turks |
| pun d'honor and later Calderonian honor is a concept that shows | the excessivly proud protection of the family name |
| The sterotypical Spanish lover known the world over | Don Juan |
| The fictional idealist who sets to do great deeds and right wrongs | Don Quixote de la Mancha |
| Religious movement that protested the abuses of the Catholic Church | Reformation |
| Movement within the Catholic Church | Counterreformation |
| People on the north coast of Africa that attacked Spain | Berbers |
| Son of Carlos II, also called el Prudente | Felipe II |
| lower nobility granted titles by the Crown; unwilling to work | hidalgos |
| Limpieza de sangre | the concept of a pure blood line, necessary for advancement |
| Those expelled from Aragón, etc. in 1609 | The moriscos |
| Founder of the Jesuit order, answering to the Pope, not Spanish Crown | Ignacio de Loyola |
| Defender of the Indias, exposed the abusive treatment of indigenous | Bartolomé de las Casas |