Black Nobility

John ap Elis Eyton, knight

Explore Sir John ap Elis Eyton (d.1526), a Welsh knight whose effigy preserves his swarthy features, noble lineage, and status despite deliberate facial alterations.

Sir Thomas Markenfield

Discover Sir Thomas Markenfield (14th century), a medieval knight whose effigy preserves his swarthy features, noble lineage, and Israelite symbolism despite deliberate facial defacement.

Swarthy "BLACK" English Nobility Sir Robert Scargill of Thorpe Hall (d.1531)

Explore Sir Robert Scargill of Thorpe Hall (d.1531), a medieval knight whose effigy preserves his swarthy features, noble lineage, and status despite deliberate facial alterations.

Black Nobility Richard de Goldsborough2

Discover Sir Richard de Goldsborough, a medieval knight whose effigy preserves his swarthy features, noble lineage, and Israelite symbolism despite deliberate facial defacement.

The story of Jerpoint Abbey, a historic Cistercian monastery in southeastern Ireland, begins with the legacy of one of Osraige’s most notable dynasties.

Explore the Berkeley legacy through Sir Giles Berkeley (d.1294) and Sir Thomas Berkeley (d.1365), whose effigies preserve their swarthy features, noble lineage, and medieval status despite deliberate facial defacement.

Discover the effigy of Knight Sir Lambert de Trikyngham (d.1280) in a medieval English church. Despite deliberate facial defacement, his Hebrew/Israelite features, including a broad nose and full lips reminiscent of KRS-One, remain visible. His feet rest on a lion, symbolizing the Lion of Judah and his Israelite heritage, preserving a noble lineage often erased from history.

Explore the tomb of Edmund Harman (c.1509–1577), barber-surgeon to King Henry VIII, at St John the Baptist Church, Burford. Despite deliberate facial defacement, Harman and his wife Agnes’s Hebrew/Israelite features — broad noses and full lips — remain visible. Their tomb, including sixteen children, preserves a swarthy lineage often erased from history.

Anglo Saxon King Offa 757c Canterbury Cathedral

King Offa (died 29 July 796 AD) was King of Mercia, a kingdom of the Anglo-Saxons, England, from 757 until his death. The son of Prince Thingfrith and a descendant of Eowa, the noble line of Kings. Offa came to the throne after a civil war that led to the assassination of Æthelbald. Offa defeated the other claimant, King Beornred. In the early years of Offa’s rulership, he likely consolidated his control of the Midlands, taking advantage of the instability in Kent’s kingdom to establish himself as overlord.

Black English Anglo Saxon King Saint Ethelbert 779c

Black Anglo-Saxon King Æthelberht, also called Saint Ethelbert the King (died 20 May 794 at Sutton Walls, Herefordshire), was an 8th-century saint and a king of East Anglia, the Anglo-Saxon English kingdom today now includes the English counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. Very few of the coins he issued have been discovered. The British Museum only shows one coin without his face.