st. mary’s abbey church. 
i8 3 
V. 
St. Agatha, her breasts lacerated. 
< 
t-H 
St. Edmund, shot with arrows. 
VII. 
St. Thomas a Beckett, slain by knights. 
VIII. 
St. Vincent, before the Prefect Dacian. 
IX. 
SS. Stephen and Lawrence. 
X. 
St. Benedict, with monks of St. Mary’s, kneeling. 
XI. 
St. Nicholas, “ 3 LattS popup,” is meant as a rendering of 
N ucoXaos. 
XII. 
St. Peter, his imprisonment and crucifixion. 
XIII. 
St. Paul’s conversion and beheading. 
XIV. 
St. Andrew, his crucifixion and suicide of his crucifier, 
Egeas, pro-consul of Achaia. 
XV. 
St. John the Evangelist, in the cauldron of oil before 
the Latin gate, then dying peacefully at Ephesus. 
XVI. 
St. John the Baptist, in hairy garment in the desert. 
XVII. 
St. Bartholomew, flayed, crucified, and beheaded. 
XVIII. 
St. Catherine, buried by angels on Mount Sinai. 
XIX. 
St. Oswald. 
XX. 
St. Olaf, invoked to save Christian people from woes. 
XXI. 
Invocation of all the Apostles. 
XXII. 
St. Giles, wounded by an arrow shot at the does which 
gave him milk in his woodland home. 
XXIII. 
St. Benedict, habited as a monk, his food brought by 
a shepherd, and rolling among thorns to subdue the 
flesh. 
XXIV. 
St. Martin, dividing his cloak with the begger. 
XXV. 
St. Cuthbert. 
XXVI. 
St. William of York and the fall of Ouse Bridge. 
XXVII. 
A Martyr, to whom demons fire and water yield, he is 
beheaded. 
XXVIII. 
St. Agnes, stripped, thrown into the fire, and beheaded. 
XXIX. 
St. Margaret, imprisoned, scourged and torn. 
With the exception of S. Bega, St. Vincent, St Benedict, and St. 
Giles, these subjects are also represented in the Minster or the 
Churches. 
