THE MONUMENTAL BRASSES OF WARWICKSHIRE. 
213 
Underneath, on a small plate, is this inscription :— 
Ibfc jacet Dorothea filia Iberfct IMUlouqbbp i milttfe ac uxor 
Bntonli ffft3berbert qe obtit | quto bfe nouebrfs a® Dni m°ccccco 
septlo. 
Translation :— 
Here lietli Dorothy, the daughter of Henry Wilougliby, 
knt., and wife of Antony Fitzlierbert; she died on the 4tli 
day of November, a.d. 1507. 
The letters are carved in relief and are beautifully 
formed; the ground of the plate is coarsely scored, probably 
to prepare it for the enamel which we may suppose once sur¬ 
rounded the letters. The original gravestone has lately been 
uncovered during some alterations to the chancel, and this 
brass, which had been fastened to the wall upside down, has 
now been relaid in its original position. 
Margaret Byngliam, commemorated by No. I., was a 
sister of Sir Baldwin Frevill, and widow of Sir Hugh 
Wilougliby, of Wollaton, in Nottinghamshire, and great- 
grand-mother of Dorothy Fitzlierbert. Antony Fitzlierbert 
was a justice of King’s Bench. Dugdale gives an illustration 
of this brass. 
At Napton-on-the-Hill there is, behind the organ, an 
incised slab and a stone with matrices, and a brass shield 
inlaid in it. 
PACKINGTON (GREAT). — John Wright , Vicar , 
1527. Haines. 
Nothing remains of this memorial save the inscription, 
upon a plate 1ft. by 4in. There are matrices for the four 
evangelical symbols, and a small figure of a priest in euclia- 
ristic vestments (see the account of a priest at Colesliill). 
The words of the inscription are— 
Ibfc facet biis Jobes TKItrpqbt | qunba \dcarDs fstDs ecclie q 
obilt | vfffo btee meV march anno bid | nwo ccccc° cns ale 
ppcfar be'. 
In English :— 
Here lietli Sir John Wright, sometime vicar of this 
church, who died the 8th day of March, a.d. 1527; to whose 
soul God be merciful. 
