- A Knight entering the Lists
- A Bishop’s Crozier, which appears to be of Italian manufacture. (Fourteenth Century)
- Vases of ancient shape
- Votive Crown of Suintila, King of the Visigoths from 621 to 631
- Watches of the Valois Epoch
- Triangular Saxon Harp of the Ninth Century
- Two mounted men of Duke William’s army
- Tympanum of the Thirteenth Century
- Vase of Rock-crystal, mounted in Silver-gilt and enamelled
- Vases of ancient form
- Tintinnabulum or Hand-Bell of the Ninth Century
- Top of an Hour-Glass, engraved and gilt
- Tournament Helmet, screwed on the Breastplate
- Tournament Saddles, ornamented with Paintings
- The Tree of Jesse
- The Weaver
- Three-stringed Crout of the Ninth Century
- The Curule Chair
The Curule Chair called the “Fauteuil de Dagobert,” in gilt bronze, now in the Musée des Souverains. The chair ascribed to St. Eloi, and known as the Fauteuil de Dagobert, is an antique consular chair, which originally was only a folding one; the Abbé Suger, in the twelfth century, added to it the back and arms. - The Saufang of St. Cecilia’s at Cologne. (Sixth Century.)
- The Sword of Charlemagne
- The Caparison of the Horse of Isabel the Catholic
- The Carruca, or Pleasure-Carriage, drawn by a Pair of Horses, dating from the Fifth to the Tenth Century
- The Clockmaker
- The Corporation of the Goldsmiths of Paris carrying the Shrine of St. Geneviève
- Shrine of the Fifteenth Century
- Stall and Reading-desk in carved wood
- Straight Trumpet with Stand
- Sunflower divider
- Seats from Miniatures of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries
- Sedan-chair of Charles V
- Seven-tubed Syrinx, Ninth or Tenth Century
- Shepherd’s Horn. Eighth Century
- Shrine in Copper Gilt
- Round Table of King Artus of Brittany
The form of table was commonly long and straight, but on occasions of state it was semicircular, or like a horse-shoe in form, recalling the Romanesque round table of King Artus of Brittany. - Saddle-cloth. Sixteenth Century
- Sambute, or Sackbut, of the Ninth Century
- Scent-box in Chased Gold
- Psalterion. Twelfth Century
- Psaltery to produce a prolonged sound. Ninth Century
- Rebec, of the Sixteenth Century
- Reliquary, Silver-gilt, surmounted by a Statuette of the Virgin with the Infant Jesus
- Portable Organ of the Fifteenth Century