James Nedeham

The framework of a timber arbour accessed from the terrace was painted by John Hethe with "white and fine bice and gold antique gilt".

[5] At Greenwich Palace, Nedeham constructed kennels for the king's greyhounds at the tilt yard, a cockpit for fighting birds and seats for male spectators and for Catherine of Aragon, a shelter for the king to stand in to practice with hand guns, [6] Nedeham's account for Windsor includes refreshing the Queen's privy chamber for Anne Boleyn in June 1533.

[8] In December 1534, he directed works at Greenwich Palace to make an artificial forest for the Lord of Misrule's boar hunt.

The monument was later destroyed, but a drawing shows a classical structure polychromed as marble with pillars and an architrave surmounted by obelisks.

[13] His own house in London in All Hallows Lombard Street parish was adjacent to an inn called the "White Hart of the Mystery or Art of the Fishmongers".