Medieval English Oak Secular Figure of a Knight
Epoque 1400-1500
Origine England
Medium polychrome, Oak
Epoque: 1400-1500
Origine: England
Medium: polychrome, Oak
Literature: cf: D Edge and J M Paddock ‘Arms and Armour of the Medieval Knight’ London, 1988 pg 57
Victoria and Albert Museum Medieval English Oak Figure of a Knight, one of the Three ‘Naworth’ Figures, circa 1450 (A11-2001)

Holding a parade shield meant for display at tournaments at his feet this oak figure may have once held a flag which displayed a heraldic device. It has been suggested by the Victoria and Albert Museum that these figures were once part of the large screen found in medieval great halls. Viewed from below they would have displayed the family’s heraldry, ancestry and importance. Medieval arms and armour were expensive and their use in figurative carving such as this denoted chivalrous rank and status. In the 15th century the entitlement to knighthood was by wealth and an income of £40 would entitle a man to become a knight.
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