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William de Hinton
1345
Holy Trinity Church, Hinton in the Hedges, Northamptonshire, England
The effigy of the knight, presumably Sir William de Hinton living in 1346, is of considerable interest. Both in costume and attitude it resembles the wooden effigy of de Paveley at Paulers pury. Both figures as well as the de Lyons at Warkworth wear the cyclas, a short-lived fashion which is not shown in many effigies; and in only three brasses in England de Paveley 's cyclas is sleeved and his basinet fluted" -two rare features; he has no misericord, but both the Warkworth and Hinton effigies exhibit the early use of that weapon. Another point of interest about de Hinton is the position of his shield showing the enarme fastening it to his arm.
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contains a monument with the recumbent effigies of a knight and his lady, supposed to represent Lord and Lady Lovell, of whose family mansion or castle some remains may still be traced in a meadow near the village