The tomb effigies of Catherine and Sir Roger can be seen in St. Athan's Church.
His tomb effigy is in St Boniface's church in Bunbury, Cheshire, though there is some doubt as to whether he was in fact buried there.
Their tomb effigies, looking curiously flattened and unassuming by comparison with the later recumbent figures that people the place, are there in the cathedral.
Sadler is also represented by his tomb effigy at Standon, and a portrait.
Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, as depicted in his tomb effigy.
Instead, another character died in the latest episode, killed instantly in a car accident that miraculously left him unmarked, unbloodied, as pale and perfect as a tomb effigy.
They are frequently represented on tomb effigies and monumental brasses of the late 15th and early 16th centuries.
Depictions of mid 14th century examples are preserved as part of tomb effigies (figuring as part of the full military dress of the deceased knight).
In 1326, she commissioned a tomb effigy for her great-grandfather, Charles I, the brother of Louis IX.
The tomb effigy of Robert de Vere, 3rd Earl of Oxford was moved from the priory chapel to the parish church at Hatfield.