Early 16th century Netherlandish roundel of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary with Saint Elizabeth in Stanford-on-Avon, Northamptonshire.
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Part of the Magnificat window in Great Malvern Priory. This panel depicts the visit of the Virgin Mary to her relative St Elizabeth. In the background are two angels, one with a lute.
This panel in the east window of the north aisle of Middleton Cheney, Northamptonshire depicts St Elizabeth and is by Ford Madox Brown.
These twin stained-glass lights in the Cathedral of Sainte-Croix, Orléans, created in 1861 by the Lobin Studios of Tours, depict St Elizabeth and her son St John the Baptist. They form part of the mid-nineteenth-century restoration of the cathedral’s glazing, executed under the direction of the prolific French glass painter Lucien-Léopold Lobin.
This scene of the Visitation of Mary to her relation St Elizabeth is from the early 13th century Life of Mary window (1217-1220) at Chartres Cathedral.
These statues (1230-1255) are part of the entral portal of the north transept, known as the "Portail de la Vierge" of the western façade of Reims Cathedral. The two figures on the left depict the annunciation with Gabriel looking at the Virgin Mary, the figures on the right represent the visitation of Mary to Saint Elizabeth.
This statue of Saint Elizabeth (1230) is part of a Visitation tableux on the central portal of Reims Cathedra.
These four stained-glass panels in the quire clerestory of Gloucester Cathedral were designed and executed by Clayton and Bell, one of the foremost English glass studios of the Victorian era. The sequence depicts Zechariah and St Elizabeth, the parents of St John the Baptist, together with St John himself and St Simeon
This late 15th century fresco (c1485-1490) in the church of Santa Maria Novella, Florence is by Domenico Ghirlandaio, depicting the Visit to Hebron by the Virgin Mary to Saint Elizabeth.









