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XVIII.—On the early Stall-plates of the Knights of the Garter

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2012

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Extract

Affixed to the panelling at the back of the stalls in the choir of St. George's chapel at Windsor are a great number of gilt plates of various sizes and shapes, but chiefly rectangular, resplendent with enamelled and painted armorial ensigns. These are the stall-plates of the Knights of the Garter; a series of memorials extending over a period of upwards of five hundred years, and forming such a storehouse of ancient and modern historical armory as exists nowhere else in Europe.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1888

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References

page 399 note a Archaeologia, xxxi. 164181Google Scholar.

page 402 note a History of the Orders of Knighthood, I. 31Google Scholar.

page 402 note b Sic for “precii ita magni."

page 405 note a In 1828 there were 437 plates for 665 knights.

page 405 note b Harl. MS. 6298.

page 406 note a Kegister of the Order of the Garter, i. 231n.