The uncovered head of a mummy: showing the head with the outer covering removed and the head with a pledget of tow in the mouth. Lithograph by J. Basire after George Scharf, 1852.
- Scharf, George, 1820-1895
- Date:
- 23 April 1852
- Reference:
- 45271i
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A pledget of tow is a compress of lint for laying over an ulcer or wound
The mouth is shown after the removal of the pledget showing a one inch gap between the lips. Next to the mummy was a crozier, indicating that the deceased was possibly a bishop. The committee of the Society of Antiquaries concluded that it was the body of William Lyndewode (William Lyndwood), ca. 1375–1446, administrator, ecclesiastical lawyer, and bishop of St David's, Pembrokeshire. "His will was proved on 26 November 1446, and his body was buried in St Stephen's Chapel in the palace of Westminster, following the desires expressed in the will. The later history of the burial spot is uncertain, but in 1852 a body with a crosier thought to be Lyndwood's was discovered in the crypt. It was reinterred in Westminster Abbey in the north wall of the north cloister, a short distance from the east entrance door. The black marble ledger, under which it rests, is unfortunately now invisible because of construction carried out at a later date around the cloister door."--Oxford dictionary of national biography
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