See also

Family of John * LANGSTON and Margaret * DANVERS

Husband: John * LANGSTON (1429-1506)
Wife: Margaret * DANVERS (1434-1499)
Children: Elizabeth LANGSTON (1450- )
Cloid LANGSTON (1457- )
Joan * LANGSTON (1460-1535)
Richard LANGSTON (1460- )
Thomas LANGSTON (1460- )
William LANGSTON (1470- )
Christopher LANGSTON (1471- )

Husband: John * LANGSTON

picture

John * LANGSTON

Name: John * LANGSTON
Sex: Male
Father: John * LANGSTON (1406-1487)
Mother: Elizabeth * DENTON (1407-1435)
Birth 1429 Buckinghamshire, England
Death 9 Sep 1506 (age 76-77) Caversfield, Buckinghamshire, England
Burial Caversfield Church
Caversfield, Buckinghamshire, England

Wife: Margaret * DANVERS

Name: Margaret * DANVERS
Sex: Female
Father: John * DANVERS (1390-1448)
Mother: Joane * BRULEY (1406-1450)
Birth 1434 Cothrop, Oxfordshire, England
Death 16 Feb 1499 (age 64-65) Caversfield, Buckinghamshire, England

Child 1: Elizabeth LANGSTON

Name: Elizabeth LANGSTON
Sex: Female
Birth 1450

Child 2: Cloid LANGSTON

Name: Cloid LANGSTON
Sex: Male
Birth 1457

Child 3: Joan * LANGSTON

Name: Joan * LANGSTON
Sex: Female
Spouse: Thomas * GIFFORD (1462-1511)
Birth 1460 Caversfield, Buckinghamshire, England
Death 22 Mar 1535 (age 74-75) Stowe, Buckinghamshire, England

Child 4: Richard LANGSTON

Name: Richard LANGSTON
Sex: Male
Birth 1460

Child 5: Thomas LANGSTON

Name: Thomas LANGSTON
Sex: Male
Birth 1460

Child 6: William LANGSTON

Name: William LANGSTON
Sex: Male
Birth 1470

Child 7: Christopher LANGSTON

Name: Christopher LANGSTON
Sex: Male
Birth 1471

Note on Husband: John * LANGSTON

Medieval, around AD 1506

From Oxfordshire, England; probably made in London.

 

Memorial brasses developed in France and Germany in the thirteenth century and rapidly spread to the Low Countries and England. They responded to a need to commemorate the dead within the restricted confines of a church. Brasses were cheaper than sculptural effigies, took up less space and were more decorative than incised stone slabs..

 

This knight in armour has been identified as JOHN Langston (died 1506). At some point in the nineteenth century the brass was separated from the other family brasses in Caversfield Church, Oxfordshire, and was bought by The British Museum in 1861..

 

The knight's identity remained a mystery until a rubbing of the complete brass, taken at Caversfield in 1821, was discovered, that settled the matter conclusively. The rubbing depicts the knight, JOHN Langston, with his wife, AMICE DANVERS, and their twenty-two (!) children. The figures of ten boys and twelve girls are represented very closely together and in miniature. The rubbing is held by the Society of Antiquaries in London..

 

The brasses of AMICE and her children remain at Caversfield Church, although not in their original location, and the inscription which identified the family has been placed erroneously at another of the Langston family tombs. Since a written description of the brasses at Caversfield in 1847 makes no mention of the figure of John Langston, it is likely that it had already become loose and had been removed by this date..

 

M.W. Norris, Monumental brasses: the craft (London, Faber, 1978).

 

J. Robinson, Masterpieces: Medieval Art (London, British Museum Press, 2008).

 

R. Emmerson, 'A missing brass figure from Caversfield identified', Oxoniensia, 42 (1977".

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