Brass rubbing, in black heel-ball, on white paper, Sir Hugh Hastings, 1347, builder of the church at Elsing, Norfolk, in armour with arms on jupon, shield on arm, head on cushion, legs lost, single canopy (mutilated), St George on pediment and 8 weepers

Brass rubbing, in black heel-ball, on white paper, Sir Hugh Hastings, 1347, builder of the church at Elsing, Norfolk, in armour with arms on jupon, shield on arm, head on cushion, legs lost, single canopy (mutilated), St George on pediment and 8 weepers (2 lost), by Herbert Druitt, 1876-1943
' Eight weepers (2 lost) appear in the side shafts: Edward III, Thomas Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, Despencer (lost), Roger, Lord Grey of Ruthyn (eff. replaced in 1905), Henry Plantagenet, Earl of Lancaster, Laurence Hastings, Earl of Pembroke (lost), Ralph, Lord Stafford, and Almaric, Lord St Amand, all in armour with armorial bearings on their jupons' (Source: A List of Monumental Brasses in the British Isles, Mill Stephenson, pub.1926)
' the brass of Sir Hugh Hastings is the most important of the three; for, in addition to the central figure, the sides of the canopy contained eight historic personages 9of which two are lost), all wearing this kind of jupon. Sir Hugh Hastings wears a rounded bascinet with a moveable visor, a steel collar or gorget ovber the camail, genouielleres with spikes and rowell spurs. The cuffs of the hawberg hang down, showing the hauketon below. Above the knees appear purpointed cuisseaux. The hands are bare. There are no jambs. The heater-shaped shield and the jupon each bear the Hastings arms:- Or, a maunche gules, with a label of three p;oints azure. The maunche is richly embroidered. (Source: A Manual of Costume as Illustrated by Monumental Brasses, Herbert Druitt, pub.1906)
Brass rubbing, in black heel-ball, on white paper, Sir Hugh Hastings, 1347, builder of the church at Elsing, Norfolk, in armour with arms on jupon, shield on arm, head on cushion, legs lost, single canopy (mutilated), St George on pediment and 8 weepers