Ralph Fitzherbert

First is shown Richard, who became a knight of Rhodes, and then Thomas, who was the rector of Norbury from 1500 to 1518 and precentor of Lichfield Cathedral.

Under the terms of that will, John was required to pay five pounds a year to cover Anthony's studies.

Since the destruction by fire in 1998 of the wooden effigy of Ralph Neville, 2nd Earl of Westmorland (d. 1484) at Brancepeth in County Durham, this is the only surviving representation of a boar pendant, although a number of actual examples have been excavated (See Dunstable Swan Jewel).

[9] Fitzherbert died two years before Richard III lost his crown and life in the nearby Battle of Bosworth.

The armour portrayed on the effigy of Ralph Fitzherbert has been reproduced as a fully functional suit of plate[2][10] The sculptures themselves were copied in the 19th century as plaster casts which are held in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

Elizabeth died October 1490. [ 5 ]
Richard, Thomas and John Fitzherbert on the tomb
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