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Panel Part


Portion of a panel of oak (probably from the freize of a room) incised with floral ornament and a coat of arms quarterly. 1st and 4th azure, a cross or between four leopards faces argent; 2nd and 3rd ermines, a chevron and in chief a leopard's face, the arms of Sir William Kingston (KG 1539, d. 1540), surrounded by the garter, the sun background filled with black composition.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Oak with composition inlay
Brief description
English, Henry VIII
Physical description
Portion of a panel of oak (probably from the freize of a room) incised with floral ornament and a coat of arms quarterly. 1st and 4th azure, a cross or between four leopards faces argent; 2nd and 3rd ermines, a chevron and in chief a leopard's face, the arms of Sir William Kingston (KG 1539, d. 1540), surrounded by the garter, the sun background filled with black composition.
Dimensions8 1/2" x 12 3/4" from register
Marks and inscriptions
Property of H.A. Tipping, Chepstow. Mathern Place. Panels made for Sir Wm. Kingston in 1539 or 40 (Inscribed on reverse of panel)
Credit line
Given by H. Avery Tipping
Object history
Given by H. Avery Tipping, FSA, Mounton House, Chepstow, 'worn and cracked, right portion missing'. Bought by the donor at Bristol. Said to have come either from Painswick Park or Flaxley Abbey.
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
Percy MacQuoid: History of English Furniture. Vol. I. The Age of Oak (London, 1904), fig. 43, p.46 Another form of decorating panels of furniture at this time was by cutting out the ground, leaving the rest of the surface for the design; the sunk ground was then filled in with hard coloured composition. The panels (fig. 43) are either from the top of a long armoire or from the overdoors and overmantel of a room. They were made for Sir William Kingston, Constable of the Tower, who was the gaoler of both Anne Boleyn and Weston. He was created Knight of the Garter April 24, 1539, and died in 1540, so their date is conclusively fixed by the panel, unfortunately mutilated, bearing his arms, within a garter, Quarterly, 1st and 4th azure, a cross between four leopards’ faces argent; 2nd and 3rd ermines, a chevron and in chief a leopard’s face. The other arms are those of Lady Kingston, and the remaining panels of this series are decorated with heroic heads and scrolls of conventional ornament. It was solely through the report made by this Sir William Kingston to Cromwell of what Anne Boleyn had during her captivity told Lady Kingston in confidence, that young Sir Francis Weston first became implicated.
Collection
Accession number
W.53-1913

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
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