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Catherine de Valois wooden funeral effigy on the left and the stone head thought to represent her on the right.

Westminster Abbey is the home to a collection of unique and wonderful medieval wooden funeral effigies.  These are to go on show once again in June 2018 with the opening the Abbey’s new Jubilee Galleries.  Some of them are definite death masks such as those of Edward III and Henry VII although there is very little doubt that they are all portraits of those they represent (1).  The one I am focussing on here is that of Katherine de Valois, wife to Henry V.  There are few if any surviving portraits of Katherine so her effigy is especially interesting as to how she actually looked.  To give a brief résumé Katherine’s remains were removed from their original burial site in the old Lady Chapel when it was demolished to make way for Henry Tudor’s grandiose new Chapel.  They were then left above ground, next to her husband’s monument for the next two hundred years.  Samuel Pepys recorded in his diary on visiting the abbey he was able to take Katherine in his arms and kiss her on the lips.  Poor Katherine.  Eventually in 1778 Katherine was placed in a vault.  Finally in the 19th century, Dean Stanley had her reburied beneath the alter in her husband’s chantry.  Thank goodness for that!

Now fresh interest has recently been ignited by the discovery of a stone head in Meath, Ireland, which is believed to represent Katherine. Here is an interesting article covering the story.

Take a look at the wooden effigy and the stone head,  compare and judge for yourselves.

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Katherine’s effigy in Westminster Abbey

  1.  Recollections of a Westminster Antiquary Lawrence Tanner p138

 


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  1. Excellent deduction, Watson…I mean sparkypus. Very interesting. Good article.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. […] the typos run thick and fast. For instance, The widowed Catherine of Valois is referred to as a ‘window’, and Owen Tudor becomes ‘Owen Henry’ and then […]

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  3. […] desirable, royal match. Henry was further denied female companionship after his mother, Catherine de Valois, left the court, eloping with Owen Tudor when Henry was about ten years […]

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  4. […] Tudors as being important in English history commenced with the affair between the widowed Katherine of Valois and the rather lowly Welshman Owen Tudor. They had a number of children, although whether or not […]

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  5. […] Charles was, of course, the father of the Catherine of Valois, who married Henry V of England–a union that produced Henry VI, who inherited his […]

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  6. […] that was known to happen. It’s been pointed out to me that Charles VI was the father of Katherine of Valois (1), who because the queen of Henry V of England. Katherine and Henry were in turn the parents of […]

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  7. […] including the same, therefore its own offspring must remain illegitimate. 3) Any remarriage of Catherine de Valois from 1422-36, to whoever and notwithstanding its general illegality is also missing, as it would be […]

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  8. […] writing about Catherine of Valois, mother to Edmund and Jasper Tudor, in his book Royal Marriage Secrets John Ashdown-Hill writes […]

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  9. […] it’s stated that Edmund had a slight claim to the throne. Very slight, he just happened to have the same mother as Henry […]

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  10. […] arch-enemy of Richard, Duke of York. Yes, the same Edmund who was involved with the widowed Catherine of Valois, resulting in her leaving court and ending up with Owen Tudor. (it has also been rumoured her […]

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  11. […] his murderer’s son and heir, who would become Henry V. It was eventually Isabella’s sister, Catherine of Valois, who married Henry V. And we all know the calamities for which we have her to […]

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  12. […] been accepted. It is worth mentioning though that the only evidence we have that Owain Tudor and Katherine of Valois were married was a similar statement in Parliament. Curiously, no one seems to question their […]

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