Others were buried with their owners, as with the vestments of the mid-13th century Bishops, Walter de Cantilupe and William de Blois, fragments of which were recovered when their tombs in Worcester Cathedral were opened in the 18th century.
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Although fragmentary examples can be found in a number of museums, the most important specialised collections of Opus Anglicanum garments are at the Cloisters Museum in New York, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and in the Treasury of Sens Cathedral.
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A further style of textile is a vestment illustrated in a miniature portrait of Saint Aethelwold in his Benedictional, which shows the edge of what appears to be a huge acanthus "flower" (a term used in several documentary records) covering the wearer's back and shoulders.
Opus Dei | Mr. Holland's Opus | Opus number | opus number | Opus the Penguin | Opus III | Opus | XS: The Opera Opus | Requiem (Opus 9)". | Opus sacerdotale Amici Israel | Opus No. 1 (1943 song) | Opus Eponymous | Opus (codec) | Opus Avantra | Opus 69 | Opus 40 | Mr. Holland’s Opus | L'Opus Dei : enquête sur le "monstre" |