The Yale of Beaufort
The Yale of Beaufort
Published 2018-10-02T12:02:10+00:00
This sculpture depicts The Yale of Beaufort, one of the Queen's Beasts.
The original Queen’s Beasts were a set of ten heraldic statues produced by the Ministry of Works for the coronation ceremony of Queen Elizabeth II on 2 June 1953 by renowned sculptor James Woodford.
It was ultimately decided that they would be gifted to one of the Commonwealth governments and Canada was offered the Beasts. They accepted the offer in 1959 and they now stand in the Canadian Museum of History in Quebec. In 1956 a replica set of Beasts were made in Portland stone once again by James Woodford and donated to Kew. It is these sculptures that visitors to the gardens are greeted with when approaching the main entrance of the Palm House.
The Yale was a mythical beast, supposedly white and covered with gold spots and able to swivel each of its horns independently. It descends to the Queen through Henry VII, who inherited it from his mother, Lady Margaret Beaufort. The shield shows a portcullis surmounted by a royal crown. The portcullis (uncrowned) was a Beaufort badge, but was used both crowned and uncrowned by Henry VII.
Date published | 02/10/2018 |
Title | The Yale of Beaufort |
Date | 1956 |
Dimension | 1.80m |
Medium | Portland stone |
Credit | Replica of James Woodford' (1953) by James Woodford (1956); Presented by an anonymous donor. |
Record | https://www.kew.org/blogs/library-art-and-archives/the-queens-beasts |
Artist | James Woodford |
Place | the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew |