The original two tapestries have remained in the House of Lords.
Victorian morality required that a naked figure in the original tapestry (in the border below the Ælfgyva figure) be depicted wearing a brief garment covering his genitals.
The six original tapestries illustrate the story of the Grail quest as told in Sir Thomas Malory's Morte d'Arthur.
Nicolae Titulescu, the young Conservative Democrat politician and bureaucrat, was ridiculed for having acquired, through his foreign connections, an original tapestry from the Gobelins Manufactory.
In the original tapestry Urgutha was striking the elf with its fist; there was no rod!
The original tapestry is on display in the foyer of the La Caixa headquarters in Barcelona.
The naked figure in the original tapestry (in the border below the Ælfgyva figure) is depicted wearing a brief garment because the drawing which was worked from was similarly bowdlerised.
The character Cardeas Vist owns the original tapestry.
The company took an interest in the house, converting the flats into which it had been divided back into a single dwelling and rehanging some of the original tapestries.
The original tapestries, purchased by Mr. Berry for the mansion, still remain in the mansion library today.