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A Lost Bronze Effigy of 1279 from York Minster
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 November 2011
Summary
York Minster once contained a relief bronze effigy to Dean William de Langton who died in 1279, the earliest known example of such a monument in this country. The effigy was probably destroyed in 1645 though remnants of the tomb survived until 1829. Its appearance is known from antiquarian sources. It is not clear that the expertise to cast a full-size effigy existed in England at that time and the tomb may have been made on the Continent, possibly in France.
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1980
References
NOTES
1 Torre, James, ‘The Antiquities of York Minster’ (1690–1), York Minster Lib. MS. LI (7), fo. 169.Google Scholar
2 Archbishop Bovill's monument originally stood immediately to the south of Dean Duncombe's tomb; it has been in its present position only since 1883. See Barr, C. B. L., ‘The tombs of Archbishops Bovill and Ludham’, 41st Annual Report of the Friends of York Minster (York, 1969), p. 11Google Scholar.
3 Dodsworth, Roger, ‘Epitaphes out of the Metropolitical church and all the other parochial Churches wth in the most famous and Ancient Cytty of York’ (1618), Bodleian Lib. MS. Dodsworth 161, fo. 19.Google Scholar
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5 The drawing was copied in Drake, Francis, Eboracum (York, 1736), p. 494,Google Scholar but many inaccuracies were introduced.
6 That the inscription was in separately inlaid brass letters rather than merely incisedis confirmed by the description of the slab in Browne, John, The History of the Metropolitan Church of St Peter York (York, 1847), p.113, n. 2Google Scholar; this states that it once had ‘an inscription of brass’ though when he saw it all that remained was ‘the vacant deeply-cut inscription on the edges’.
7 Dugdale refers to only the effigy as gilded but we know that the letters were also gilded from John Browne, op. cit., and Gough, Richard, Sepulchral Monuments in Great Britain (London, 1786), ii, part 2, p. 76Google Scholar.
8 Dugdale's transcript has been taken as the base text. The Gough drawing omits Hic Requi… ui Obiit Die Sancti Swithini Ann … Um Deo but is otherwise identical. The other variant readings are: a Requiesuit Torre. b Willielmi Dodsworth, Willi Torre, Wilielmi Drake, c omitted Dodsworth, Torre, d Langton Torre, e Ebor Torre.f Die Sci Swithinii Dodsworth, DieSci Swithini Torre, Die Sci Swy-Thini Drake, Decimo Quinto Die Mensis Julii Gent, g Ano Torre, h Dni Dodsworth, Torre, i Milessimo Ducentessimo Septuagessimo Dodsworth, date in numerals Torre, Drake.; j Ana Torre, kCoram Torre.
9 Torre, op. cit., fo. 200.
10 I am grateful to David O'Connor for this information.
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16 Torre, op. cit., fo. 200 also gives a rough sketch, though only about an inch long, of the top of the monument showing the effigy but this may have been copied from another source; certainly he had access to Dodsworth's manuscript.
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19 Borthwick Institute of Historical Research, York, V 1662–3 Papers (Dean and Chapter of York). Answers to articles of enquiry.
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21 Browne Willis, op. cit., i, plan before p. 1. Gent, Thomas, The Antient and Modern History of the Famous City of York (London, 1790, 2nd edn.), p. 40,Google Scholar says that in 1753 the two chapels were fitted up for early morningprayers after disuse of half a century though they had previously been used for this purpose since time immemorial.
22 The position of the shrine can be fixed by reference to testamentary burials quoted in Torre, op. cit., folios 136–7.
23 Samuel Gale,‘The Inscriptions and Epitaphs of Archbishops, Nobles, Gentry and others buried in the Cathedral Church of St Peter in York’ (1699), Bodleian Lib. MS. Eng. Misc. E147.
24 Gent, op. cit. (London,1730, 1st edn.), p. 136.
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29 Britten, op. cit.,., i, p. 61.
30 Aylmer and Cant, op. cit., p. 432.
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32 ‘Sir William Dugdale's Book of Monuments’ (1640), British Lib., Loan MS. 38, fo. 98V.
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44 Broadly contemporary examples are at Bedale, Yorks. and Rippingale, Lines.
45 Adhdmar, op. cit., no. 98.
46 Ibid., no. 62.
47 Continental examples occur at Lubiaz, Poland(Norris, Malcolm, Monumental Brasses: The Craft (London, 1978), figs. 113–17);Google Scholar Santarem, Portugal (Dr.Cameron, H. K., A List of Monumental Brasses on the Continent of Europe (London, 1970), p. 99)Google Scholar; and Wilhering and Baumgartenberg, Austria (information from John Blair).
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51 Ibid., n. 50.
52 B.L. Add. MS. 15357, fo. 430. See also Calendar Papal Registers, p. 308Google Scholar.
53 Aylmer and Cant, op. cit., p. 64.
54 Borthwick Institute of Historical Research, York, Vo 4a. See also Harrison, F., York Minster (London, 1927), p. 189Google Scholar.
55 Ibid., Vo 4 b.
56 Ibid., Vo 5.
57 Surtees Soc, p. 290.
58 Borthwick Institute of Historical Research, York, Vo 84.
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