About 1501 Thomas Warley, Clerk of the King's Works to Henry VII, recorded in Latin the payments for preparations at St. Paul's Cathedral in connection with the marriage of the King's eldest son Arthur, along with payments for work at the Tower of London, Westminster Palace, Greenwich, and Eltham (British Museum, Egerton MS. 2358, Henry VII:15). With amounts for John Moore, Richard Codeman (or Codinham), Robert Bellamy, and Nicholas Delphyn, he listed those for a sculptor named John Hudde, who had carved two lions and a great rose surmounted by an imperial crown over the north door in Westminster Hall, and the dragon, lion, and leopards of a royal cipher in the Great Hall of the Tower of London, the latter afterwards painted and gilded by Robert Duke.