monument (remade 19th century) to Sir William Huddesfield and his wife Katherine Courtenay. North wall of chancel, Shillingford St George Church. It contains two monumental brasses: one affixed to the wall and one to the slab A monumental brass of Huddesfield and his second wife Katherine Courtenay survives in Shillingford St George Church, and the arms of Bosome (
Azure, three bird bolts in pale points downward or) survive in a stained glass window in the same church. The brass is affixed to the wall on the north side of the chancel, above a
chest tomb, with grey marble slab on top, set into an
Easter Sepulchre style alcove remade in the 19th century. Around the edge of the slab is an ident for an inscription in brass, now lost, but transcribed in 1630 by the Devon historian
Thomas Westcote (c. 1567 – c. 1637) as follows: :
"here lieth Sir William Huddiffeild, knight, Attorney-general to King Edward IV, and of the Council to King Henry VII, and Justice of Oyer and Determiner, which died the 10th day of march in the year of Our Lord 1499, on whose soul Jesus have mercy, Amen. Honor Deo et Gloria". The brass depicts a knight and a lady, both kneeling under a double canopy, with a son and two daughters. The bare headed knight is fully dressed in armour, over which he wears a
tabard showing the arms of Huddesfield with a crescent for
difference, with sword and spurs. in front of him is a
prie dieu, on which is an open book, and his gauntlets are on the floor by his side, with his helmet on top of which is his crest, a boar rampant. The lady wears a pedimental head-dress and lappets, with gown, ornamented girdle with pomander hanging therefrom. Over all she wears a robe of estate showing the arms of Courtenay:
Or, three torteaux a label of three points azure. Behind her kneels her only son by her second husband George Rogers, and behind him her two daughters Elizabeth and Katherine. The following inscription, partly in Latin, appears below (with abbreviations extended): ::''Conditor et Rede(m)ptor corporis et anime sit mihi medicus et custos utriusque. Dame Kateryn ye wife of Sr Willm Huddesfeld & dought of S'r Phil' Courtnay, kny'kt''. A framed rubbing of the brass hangs in the chapel of
Powderham Castle. ==Notes==