Church Monuments Vols I-XX (1985-2005)
Authors
Some titles have been abbreviated
A  B  C  D  E  F  H  I  K  L  M  O S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z
Anderson, Freda, Three Westminster abbots: a
problem of identity.
IV: 3-15
Arnold, Janet, The jupon or coat-armour of the
Black Prince in Canterbury Cathedral.

VIII: 12-24
Askew, Portia, Purbeck marble grave slabs
from Southwark
. XIII: 15-16
Badham, Sally, Richard Gough and the
flowering of Romantic antiquarianism
. II:
32-43; London standardisation and
provincial idiosyncracy: the organisation
and working practices of brass-engraving
workshops in pre-Reformation England.
V:
3-25 Medieval minor effigial monuments in
West and South Wales.
XIV: 5-34; ‘A new
feire peynted stone’: medieval English
incised slabs?
XIX: 20-52
Badham, Sally and Bayliss, Jon, Smalpage
monument at St Bartholomew the Great,
London, re-examined.
XX: 81-93
Badham, Sally and Lankester, Philip J., Twenty
five years of the CMS, ‘knights’ in armour
and crossed legs.
XIX: 130-140
Baker, Malcolm, Roubiliac and Cheere in the
1730s and 40s: collaboration and subcontracting
in eighteenth-century English
sculptors’ workshops.
X: 90-108
Bayliss, Jon, Richard Parker ‘the
alablasterman’. V: 39-56; Richard and
Gabriel Royley of Burton-upon-Trent,
tombmakers.
VI: 21-41; A Dutch carver:
Garrett Hollemans I in England.
VIII: 45-
56; Indenture for two alabaster effigies.
XVI: 22-29
Bergé, Willem, Thomas Quellin in Denmark.
XII: 35-48
Binski, Paul, The Coronation of the Virgin on
the Hastings brass at Elsing, Norfolk.
I: 1-9
Blair, Claude, The Conington effigy:
fourteenth-century knights at Conington,
Doddington [i.e. Dodford] and Tollard
Royal.
VI: 3-20; The date of the early
alabaster knight at Hanbury, Staffordshire.

VII: 3-18; The de Vere effigy at Hatfield
Broad Oak.
VIII: 3-11; The wooden knight
at Abergavenny.
IX: 33-52
Blair, Claude and Goodall, John, Effigy at
Wilsthorpe.
XVII: 39-48
Blair, Claude and Knowles, Richard, A.V.B.
(Nick) Norman
, 1930-1998. XIII: 110-112
Blair, Claude, Goodall, John and Lankester,
Philip,
Winchelsea tombs reconsidered.
XV: 5-30
Blair, John. The Limoges enamel tomb of
Bishop Walter de Merton.
X: 3-6
Borean, Linda, John Bushnell in Venice. XIV:
88-103
Boreham, Louise, Louis Reid Deuchars. XII:
86-93
Breiding, Dirk, Fourteenth-century military
effigies in the chapel of Castle Kronberg.

XVI: 5-21
Brodrick, Anne and Darrah, Josephine, The
fifteenth century polychromed limestone
effigies of William Fitzalan, 9th earl of
Arundel, and his wife, Joan Nevill, in the
Fitzalan chapel, Arundel.
I: 65-94
Broome, John. Samuel Baldwin: carver of
Gloucester.
X: 37-54
Bryant, Julius, The church memorials of
Thomas Banks.
I: 49-64
Butler, Lawrence, Monuments in Wakefield
Cathedral.
XIII: 106-109; Smithson
monument at Stanwick. XV: 65-70
Coales, John, Drawings of Roger de
Gaignières
. XII: 14-34; Stothard’s French
excursions revisited.
XIV: 37
Cockerham, Paul, The early Treffry
monuments at Fowey: a re-appraisal
. X:
20-36; Sale of French incised slab. XIII:
35-44
Cockerham, Paul and White, Adam,
Epiphanius Evesham in a French context.
XVIII: 53-64
Coutu, Joan, British sculpture in the West
Indies
. XII: 77-85
Craske, Matthew, Entombed like an Egyptian.
XV: 71-88
Downing, Mark, Military effigies with breast
chains.
X: 7-19; Lions of the Middle Ages.
XIII: 17-34; Military effigy at Clyffe
Pypard, Wilts
. XVIII: 5-9
Downing, Mark and Knowles, Richard,
Fifteenth century helmet depiction,
Gnosall, Staffs.
XVII: 49-53
Easter, Clive J., John Weston of Exeter and the
Last Judgement
. X: 84-89; Monuments and
career of Thomas Green of Camberwell.

XVI: 65-78
Edis, Jonathan, Beyond Thomas Kirby:
monuments of the Mordaunt family.
XVI:
30-43
Faunch, Christine, Late sixteenth and early
seventeenth effigy sculpture in Devo
n.
XIV: 41-63
Friedman, Terry, Nost at Bothwell. II: 22-31;
Modern Icarus, or the unfortunate
accident.
IX: 68-71
Frosch, Paula, Beresford monument at Fenny
Bentley.
XV: 31-43
Galvin, Carol and Lindley, Phillip, Pietro
Torrigiano’s tomb for Dr Yonge
. III: 42-60
Gittos, Brian and Moira, The Goldsborough
effigies.
IX: 3-32; Irish Purbeck. XIII: 5-

14; Ingleby Arncliffe group of effigies.
XVII: 14-38
Gittos, Brian and Moira and Butler, Lawrence,
Conservation of the Goldsborough effigies.
XII: 5-13
Grant, Teresa, Painted ceiling at Skelmorlie
Aisle.
XVII: 68-88
Hammond, Norman, Church monuments in
Belize.
XIV: 129-139; XV: 89-102; XVII:
118-120
Harris, Amy Louise, Tombs of the New
English in late sixteenth and early
seventeenth-century Dublin.
XI: 25-41;
Funerary monuments of Richard Boyle,
Earl of Cork.
XIII: 70-86
Jacobs, Alain, Joseph Wilton’s Nivelles years
and the influence of Laurent Delvaux.
XII:
58-66
Jezzard, Andrew, George Frampton’s church
monuments.
XI: 61-70
Jones, Martin D.W., Gothic enriched: Thomas
Jackson’s mural tablets in Brighton
College chapel
. VI: 54-66
King, Pamela M., The cadaver tomb in
England: novel manifestations of an old
idea
. V: 26-38
Knöll, Stefanie, Oxford memorials 1580-1680.
XVI: 58-64; Ducal burial place at
Tübingen, Germany, 1537-93
. XX: 94-102
Knowles, Richard, Tale of an ‘Arabian
knight’: the T.E. Lawrence effigy.
VI: 67-
76; Pauline Elizabeth Sheppard Routh,
1925-1993.
VIII: 84; Charles Alfred
Stothard and the monumental effigies of
France.
XIII: 45-69; A further album of
Stothard drawings.
XIV: 38-40
Lankester, Philip J., Two lost effigial
monuments in Yorkshire and the evidence
of church notes.
VIII: 25-44
Lieberman, Ilene D., Sir Francis Chantrey’s
early monuments to children, and
neoclassical sensibilities.
V: 70-80
Lindley, Phillip, Destruction of tomb
monuments in mid-sixteenth-century
England.
XIX: 53-79
Litten, Julian, Burial vaults of the English
aristocracy and landed gentry.
XIV: 104-
128
Llewellyn, Nigel, Horace Walpole and the
post-Reformation funeral monument.
XIX:
96-114
Lock, Léon E., Seventeenth-century Flemish
tomb monuments.
XIX: 80-95
Lord, John, Patronage and church monuments
1660-1794: a regional study
. I: 95-105; A
pugilist’s monument: the Parkyns tomb at
Bunny, Nottinghamshire.
V: 64-69; The
building of the mausoleum at Brocklesby,
Lincolnshire
. VII: 85-96; Repairing and
cleaning of the said burying places.
IX: 83-

92; Richard Hayward. XII: 67-76; Decade
of Bertie memorials in Lincolnshire.
XVII:
107-113
Luxford, Julian M., Thomas Anlaby’s
illustrations of lost medieval tombs.
XX:
31-39
Markus, Mary, Sculptors of the Harrington
tomb, Cartmel
. XI: 5-24
Maule, Jeremy, Thomas Carew’s epitaph for
Maria Wentworth.
XIV: 64-79
Mendelsson, W., Malcolm Watson Norris 25
May 1931- 28 May 1995
. X: 122-123
Mulcahy, Geraldine M., William Day
Keyworth Jun. of London and Hull
. XVI:
126-134
Murdoch, Tessa, Roubiliac’s monuments to
Bishop Hough and the second Duke and
Duchess of Montagu. I: 34-48
Norman, A.V.B., Two early fourteenth century
military effigies.
I: 10-19; An unpublished
fourteenth-century alabaster fragment.
II:
3-8
Norman, Anne, A.V.B. Norman and the C.M.S.
XIX: 5-19
Oosterwijk, Sophie, Chrysoms, shrouds and
infants on English tomb monuments.
XV:
44-64; Examples of medieval mother-andchild
tomb iconography.
XVIII: 10-22; The
‘verminous’ cadaver in Britain and
Europe.
XX: 40-80
Physick, John, Royal monuments in the
nineteenth century
. II: 44-56; The story of a
monument: a tale of religious intolerance.

II: 57-62; Westminster Abbey:designs for
Poets’ Corner and a new Roubiliac in the
cloister.
IV: 54-63; The Sondes monuments
at Throwley, Kent.
VI: 42-46; Prime
ministers in Westminster Abbey.
IX: 93-
106
Physick, John and Ramsey, Nigel, Katharine
Ada Esdaile 1881-1950.
I: 115-136
Roscoe, Ingrid, Flemish sculptors and
adjustments for the English market: the
case of Peter Scheemakers
. VII: 75-84; The
monument to the memory of Shakespeare.

IX: 72-82
Roscoe, Ingrid and Hempel, Kenneth, Joseph
Wilton’s Byerley monument, restored. XII:
49-57
Routh, Pauline Sheppard, Elegy in a country
churchyard.
VI: 47-53; Yorkshire’s royal
monument; Prince William of Hatfield
. IX:
53-61
Ryder, Peter, St John’s church Stanwick, North
Yorkshire: the medieval cross slabs.
XVII:
5-13
Scholten, Frits, Canova in Delft, the
commission for the funeral monument to
Willem George Frederik, Prince of Orange
(1806) reconstructed.
X: 109-122

Sherlock, Peter D., Monuments at Corpus
Christi College, Oxford.
XIV: 80-87
Sillence, Matthew J., Two effigies of
Archbishop Walter de Gray at York
Minster
. XX: 5-30
Smith, Charles, The memorial stone tomorrow.
XVII: 114-117
Southwick, Leslie, The armoured effigy of
Prince John of Eltham in Westminster
Abbey and some closely related military
monuments.
II: 9-21
Stocker, Ben, Medieval grave markers in Kent.
I: 106-114
Stocker, Mark, The church monuments of
Joseph Edgar Boehm
. III: 61-75
Sunley, Harry, St Nicholas’ churchyard
Kenilworth; an appropriated monastic
slab?
XIV: 35-36
Tait, Clodagh, Irish images of Jesus 1550-
1650.
XVI: 44-57
Trusted, Marjorie. Moving church monuments:
processional images in Spain in the
seventeenth century
. X: 55-69
Tummers, Harry, The medieval effigial tombs
in Chichester Cathedral.
III: 3-41;
Medieval effigial monuments in the
Netherlands. VII:
19-33
Ward-Jackson, Philip, The French background
of royal monuments at Windsor and
Frogmore.
VIII: 63-83. Carlo Marochetti
and the tombs of Napoleon and the Duke of
Wellington.
XIX: 115-129
Watney, Simon, Shakespeare and
‘Shakespearean’ epitaphs in early Stuart
England
. XX: 103-116
White, Adam, Classical learning and the early
Stuart renaissance.
I: 20-33; Westminster
Abbey in the early seventeenth century: a
powerhouse of ideas.
IV: 16-53; England
c.1560-c.1660: a hundred years of
continental influence.
VII: 34-74; The
Booke of monuments reconsidered:
Maximilian Colt and William Wright
. IX:
62-67
Whittemore, Philip, Waller fecit, London.
XVI: 79-125; Monumental brasses
formerly in the church of St Leonard,
Shoreditch.
XVII: 54-67; Sir William
Dugdale’s ‘Book of draughts’
. XVIII: 23-
52
Wilson, Jean, Holy innocents; some aspects of
the iconography of children on English
Renaissance tombs.
V: 57-63; The
memorial by Nicholas Stone to Sir Thomas
Bodley.
VIII: 57-62; ‘Two names of
friendship, but one starre’: memorials to
single-sex couples in the early modern
period
. X: 70-83; I dote on death: the
fractured marriage in English Renaissance
art and literature.
XI: 42-60;

Personification of moral systems on early
modern English monuments
. XIII: 87-105;
Commemoration of still-born and
unbaptized children in early modern
England.
XVII: 89-106; Monuments to
adolescents in early modern England.

XVIII: 65-89