[681]. Wrongly inscribed “Mother Jak.” Woltmann, 280; Wornum, ii. 40; Sir R. Holmes, i. 9.
[682]. Woltmann, 273, 274; Wornum, i. 3, 4; Sir R. Holmes, i. 3 and ii. 18.
[683]. Woltmann, 207. Reproduced by Davies, p. 118; Catalogue of the Tudor Exhibition, 1890, p. 44; A. F. Pollard, Henry VIII, p. 114; Burlington Fine Arts Club Exhib. Catg., Pl. xviii.; Ganz, Holbein, p. 69. The portrait is now in America. See Appendix (I).
[684]. Catg. Burl. Fine Arts Club Exhib., 1909, p. 95. The entry in the Lumley inventory is—“Of Sir Thomas Moore, Lo. Chancellor, drawne by Haunce Holbyn.”
[685]. One of these copies was in 1867 in the possession of Mr. Charles J. Eyston, of East Hendred (Wornum, p. 246), and a second in the collection of the Marquis of Lothian. There was a small circular portrait of More, on wood, 4 in. in diameter, in Charles I’s collection (No. 48), in a black cap, furred gown, and red sleeves. Evelyn notes in his Diary, under the date Feb. 15th, 1649:—“Sir William Ducy shew’d me some excellent things in miniature, and in oyle of Holbein’s Sir Tho. More’s head.” Among the numerous copies in existence is one by Rubens in the Prado, Madrid. A portrait of More, “invested with the collar of the Garter, by Holbein; upon a pedestal is inscribed the date, MDXXVII,” was included in the sale of the Duke of Bedford’s pictures from Woburn Abbey, on 30th June 1827, and fetched 70 guineas.
[686]. See p. 335.
[687]. Mr. W. F. Dickes, however, reproduces it in his book, Holbein’s “Ambassadors” Unriddled, p. 80, as a portrait by Holbein of the Count Palatine Philipp! Engraved by Vorsterman as a portrait of More by Holbein. Reproduced by Ganz, Holbein, p. 225.
[688]. Athenæum, June 19, 1886, No. 3060, p. 820.
[689]. Quoted by Wornum, p. 248.
[690]. Wornum, pp. 248, 249.