What do our windows mean? Part 11
The Kempe Glass in All Saints explained by Brian Willett.

No 13, the South Transept south window: The Four Archangels
This a fairly recent addition to the windows of All Saints, replacing a plain window which was here, following the fire of 1985. It originally came from a church in the north of England which had suffered bomb damage. The glass had been kept in the studios of Goddard and Gibbs, specialists in stained glass. It was incomplete, having suffered damage and had been repaired and was given to the church on the understanding that it was available for people to look at it.
The window is part-glazed with images of the four archangels.
From left to right they are:-
Raphael: carrying a fish.
Gabriel: note the Fleurs de Lys (symbol of Our Lady at the Annunciation).
Uriel: wearing a belt of bells.
Each figure is resplendently bedecked with wings, as befits his status as an Angel of God and Messenger to Mankind. Each is also surrounded with a band of designs peculiar to each.
Brian Willett
Editor's Note:
Angels appear throughout the Bible but only two are named: Gabriel and Michael. Raphael appears in the Book of Tobit (Ch5.v4) in the Apocrypha and Uriel is in the Book of Enoch (referred to in Jude verse 14), thought at one stage by some scholars to be a post Christian book, but following its discovery amongst the Dead Sea Scrolls now known to be a very ancient text.