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» »Unlabelled » Only known wood carving of Wolsey’s coat of arms rediscovered

A polychrome oak panel relief of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey’s coat of arms has been identified as the only surviving wood-carved sculpture of his arms made in the cardinal’s lifetime. It is one of only two sculptures of Wolsey’s coat of arms known to survive. The other is a terracotta relief fixed to the wall of the center yard at Hampton Court Palace.

It is composed of two panels from the same Baltic oak tree mounted in an oak frame. Dendrochronological analysis found the three was felled in around1520. At that time, Wolsey was at the peak of his power and his rapid downfall still a decade away. Born in a family of merchants, Thomas Wolsey was royal chaplain to King Henry VII in 1507, and by 1515 was a Cardinal and Lord Chancellor to King Henry VIII.

His arms were granted to him in 1525. As a cardinal, he was entitled to use the red galero cardinalizio, the broad-brimmed hat with red cords and 15 tassels on each side that was the symbol of his clerical office, on his coat of arms. This version only had 10 tassels per side, perhaps in reference to his archbishoprics, just as the cross topping the escutcheon is an archiepiscopal cross. The heraldry on the shield is a silver cross with a red lion center and four blue leopards’ faces. The top field of the shield features a red Tudor rose flanked by two Cornish choughs, black birds also known as “beckets,” that symbolize Wolsey’s namesake St. Thomas Becket.

The panel is expertly carved in relief. It is evidently not the work of a provincial artisan, rather the creation of a skilled sculptor, and something intended to be displayed in opulent surroundings. Although it might have, at some point, been set into a wainscot, the panel functions as a singular artwork. This would have raised its status as an artwork in its own right (as opposed to an element in a decorative architectural scheme) and as a moveable object, undoubtedly ensured its survival. Its high status is again demonstrated by the care the sculptor has taken in including the two attending griffins, whose claws hold up the capello romano and touch the escutcheon. These details set the panel apart from other, more perfunctory carvings which no doubt existed in the Cardinal’s day.

Contemporary accounts and inventories record dozens of objects — tapestries, quilts, chairs, andirons — decorated with Wolsey’s arms, all of which disappeared after his precipitous fall from grace in 1529 and death from dysentery less a year later. Henry VIII made a point of covering Wolsey’s arms at Hampton Court Palace. The only other known sculpture of his coat of arms survived incognito under a masonry relief of the royal arms with an iron crown covering the galero of the original terracotta relief. Henry covered it when he took possession of the palace in 1531, and the original was only rediscovered when Henry’s heraldic device was removed for conservation in 1845.

The traceable ownership history of the object goes back to the 18th century. On the back is a handwritten note that reads: “Arms of Cardinal Wolsey of Christ Church Oxford, 29th November 1530.” It is signed P.B. D. Cooke, marking it as having belonged to Philip Bryan Davies Cooke (1793 – 1853) of Gwynsaney Hall, North Wales, and Owston Hall in Yorkshire. The panel was sold earlier this year in an auction of Gwynsaney Hall art and interiors. It was billed as a “Victorian carved, painted and gilt rectangular wood panel.” The pre-sale estimate was £300-500 ($400-665), but clearly someone suspected this more than a 19th century replica because the hammer price was £13,000 ($17,300).

Art dealer Simon Dickinson acquired the panel from the private collector who bought it at the Gwynsaney Hall auction. His team researched the history of the piece and performed the scientific studies that discovered its real age. They also have a theory about whose hands kept it safe was in when all the other Wolsey coats of arms were destroyed.

Wolsey’s most famous and consequential disciple, and the man who would ultimately replace him as Henry’s chief minister, was Thomas Cromwell. Cromwell was a merchant, lawyer and parliamentarian. In 1524 he entered Wolsey’s household, initially as his lawyer. By 1527 he was one of Wolsey’s personal councillors. We can see in an inventory of Thomas Cromwell’s household effects, dated 26th June 1527, that Cromwell prominently displayed his connection to his cardinal patron, then at the apex of his power and influence. In his parlour, probably at Austin Friars (the house is not specified), Cromwell had a ‘table of my lorde cardynalls Armes paynted and gylted’, and in his hall ‘my lorde cardynalls armes gylted in canaus’.[5] These two items were, in modern English, a wooden panel (table) depicting the Cardinal’s arms, painted and gilded, and a canvas painted with Wolsey’s arms. It is impossible to know from this perfunctory description whether this ‘table’ is the same as our panel. What it does demonstrate, however, is that Cromwell owned two coats of arms, one sounding identical to ours, that were displayed publicly in his home.



* This article was originally published here

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