England
Healing the Sick - Tewkesbury Abbey
Hardman window of 1888 shows Jesus healing the sick.
Helyn Hardy Brass - Lyddington, Rutland
Brass monument at St. Andrew ⓘ, Lyddington to Helyn Hardy (d1486).
Henry Denton Brass - Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire
Henry Denton (1498) chaplain of Chelveston, a small village near to Higham Ferrers.
Henry Tudor and Elizabeth of York - Stanford on Avon
This remarkable window (1490-1505), rediscovered packed away in 1932, forms the lower section of the great east window at Stanford-on-Avon. It is one of the most striking survivals of late medieval royal propaganda in stained glass, created to celebrate the accession and legitimacy of Henry VII and the founding of the Tudor dynasty.
Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon - Coughton, Warwickshire
Set within the tracery lights of the great east window at St Peter’s ⓘ, Coughton, these panels form part of a distinguished group of Tudor heraldic glass. At the centre are the royal arms of Henry VIII, impaled with those of Catherine of Aragon, enclosed by the initials H and K and surrounded by the Tudor emblems of the rose, portcullis, and crown. The inclusion of Catherine’s arms confirms that the glass was installed before the annulment of their marriage in 1533, most likely during the first decade of Henry’s reign.
Higham Ferrers - St. Mary c1914
Two Kempe and Tower windows from 1914. The first shows St Luke ⓘ, Virgin and Child, and St John the Evangelist ⓘ. The upper lights of the second window shows the Epiphany whilst the bottom light depict the Presentation in the Temple.
Holy Spirit - Baginton, Warwickshire
This tracery window depicts the Holy Spirit in the form of a descending dove, set against a radiant field of blue glass and stylised rays of light. A scroll bearing the inscription “Peace in heaven & Glory in the highest” reinforces the window’s theological focus on divine presence, reconciliation, and praise.
Hope and Prudence - Litchborough, Northamptonshire
This three-light stained glass window of 1926, signed by J. Powell & Sons (Whitefriars), presents a symbolic devotional programme centred on Christian virtue rather than named saints.

