P0455
 
P0455
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P0455a
 
Personal Data
Surname Hinton (de Hinton)
First name William
Nickname  
Dating 1346
Location Hinton in the Hedges
Life dates born 1284 - died 1346
Title  
Close relatives  
Type of the object tomb effigy
Place of manufacturing
(place of burial)
 
Place of exposition Holy Trinity, Hinton in the Hedges, Northamptonshire, England
Date of manufacturing  
Artist
Comments

(Link)
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.

(Link)
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

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P0455b
 
Personal Data
Surname Chastillon
First name Richard
Nickname  
Dating 1350?
Location Leckhampstead
Life dates + before 1356
Title knight of the shire in 1331 and 1341
Close relatives father - Hugh Chastillon (+ Between 1316 and 1323)
wife - Elizabeth
children - Hugh, Richard
Type of the object tomb effigy
Place of manufacturing
(place of burial)
 
Place of exposition Leckhampstead, Buckinghamshire, UK
Date of manufacturing  
Artist
Comments

(Link)
an effigy of a medieval knight dating back to the 14th century

(Link)
Leckhampstead, Buckinghamshire
Stone effigy of a knight, probably commemorating Hugh Chastillon, who died between 1316 and 1323

(Link)
Under the westernmost arch of the arcade is a table tomb, probably commemorating Hugh Chastillon, who died between 1316 and 1323, with the recumbent effigy of a knight in armour wearing a bascinet, cyclas, and long sword, and a shield on the left arm.

изображенный костюм выглядит немного позже своего аналога (P0455a, 1346) (подолы сюрко стали короче) и может быть датирован около 1350, поэтому персонаж Hugh Chastillon (died between 1316 and 1323) нам не подходит, но вполне подходит его сын Richard (died before 1356)

это подтверждает запись о надгробии на странице Buckinghamshire Archaeological Society
(Link)
Chastiloun, Richard or Malcolm de, effigy in Leckhampstead church

(Link)
the manor, which then passed to his son Hugh. Hugh Chastillon held Leckhampstead during the reigns of Edward I and Edward II, and was knight of the shire for 1300 and 1301. Between 1316 and 1323 he was succeeded by Richard Chastillon, his son, who was sued for debt in 1327 and 1330. He, who was knight of the shire in 1331 and again ten years later, in 1332 settled two-thirds of the manor and the reversion of the third held by Hawise widow of Hugh in dower on himself for life, with remainder to his son Hugh and the latter's wife Margaret. In 1344 he settled messuages, land and rent in Great Leckhampstead and Foscott on himself and his wife Elizabeth, with remainder to their son Richard and his heirs male, and was still holding the manor in 1346. He was succeeded probably before 1356 by his son Hugh, who was Sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire in that year, and presented to the church in 1359.

 

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P0455c
 
Personal Data
Surname Paveley (Pavely, de)
First name Robert VI (?VIII)
Nickname  
Dating 1346
Location Paulerspury
Life dates b. Abt 1275 (1280), Of Paulespury, Northamptonshire,England, d. 1346
Title Sir
Close relatives Father - Sir Laurence I de Paveley, b. 1258, Of Paulespury, Northamptonshire, d. Aft 1329
wife - Elizabeth Shampevalk
son - John De Praveley (b. 1296 (a. 1305), Of Paulespury,Northamptonshire, d. 1391)
Type of the object wooden figure
Place of manufacturing
(place of burial)
 
Place of exposition St James the Great, Paulerspury, Northamptonshire
Date of manufacturing  
Artist
Comments

Надгробие приписывается Sir Lawrence de Pavely (+1329), но костюм соответствует периоду 1340-х, поэтому более вероятно, что это его сын Robert VI de Paveley (+1346)

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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