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  1. The effigy of Henry V’s queen is a full length effigy with a painted red dress and groove on her head for a crown. Elizabeth of York Only the pear wood head and arm of Elizabeth now survives.

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  2. Funeral effigy of Elizabeth of York. © Dean and Chapter of Westminster. William III wax effigy. Conservation 2016. © Dean and Chapter of Westminster. Catherine, Duchess of Buckingham wax effigy with her son Robert. © Dean and Chapter of Westminster.

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  4. Henry’s imposing tomb at the east end of the chapel has magnificent gilt bronze effigies of the king and his wife, Elizabeth of York, made by the brilliant Florentine Renaissance sculptor, Pietro Torrigiano. The king and queen lie in a vault below their monument, together with James I. The bronze screen is by Thomas Ducheman.

  5. Feb 2, 2003 · The face of her effigy may have been based on her death mask, taken when she died on her thirty-seventh birthday in the royal apartments in the Tower of London. She had not recovered from giving birth the week before, perhaps prematurely, to her eighth child – a little girl, who did not survive long.

  6. Elizabeth of York. For her aunt, see Elizabeth of York, Duchess of Suffolk. For Princess Elizabeth of York, see Elizabeth II. Elizabeth of York (11 February 1466 – 11 February 1503) was Queen of England from her marriage to King Henry VII on 18 January 1486 until her death in 1503. [1] .

  7. Sep 14, 2022 · As Museum Crush says, effigies of other monarchs — like Catherine, Duchess of Buckingham, Henry VII, Mary I, Queen Anne, Edward III, Catherine de Valois, Elizabeth of York, and more — also reside in the galleries. These effigies often came with regal clothing, worn since their creation, but some of these pieces have either been damaged or lost.

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