For a very useful overview see -
https://www.asc.ox.ac.uk/sites/default/files/2024-07/AllSoulsCollegeChapelGuide.pdf
here is not the place to go into the architectural developments at All Souls but there are many and various sources on line
For Talman at All Souls see -
https://georgiangroup.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/GGJ_2008_08_FAIR_sec.pdf
The Mural Monument to Radclyffe Howard.
1768.
Suggested here as sculpted in the workshop of Robert Taylor (1714 - 88) at Spring Gardens, Charing Cross.
Former apprentice /assistant to Henry Cheere and later distinguished architect..
https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2025/06/sir-robert-taylors-designs-for-church.html
Facing one another across the outer chapel.
The monuments of the Architect George Clarke and Dodington Grevile (a Tory parliamentarian opposed to the extension of religious toleration who helped with funding).
..............
For some of the designs for funary monuments by Henry Cheere see -
https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2025/06/drawings-of-funeral-monuments-by-henry.html
.................
The Monument to George Clarke by Henry Cheere as reported in the Daily Post, 3 June 1738.
Dr George Clarke (1661 - 1736).
Fellow of All Souls College. M.P. for the University of
Oxford, Architect.
George Clarke (1661-1736), Fellow of All Souls from 1680
until his death, Tory politician - MP for Oxford in 1685, Winchelsea in 1702,
and East Looe in 1705.
see my post - https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2018/04/bust-of-george-clarke-codrington.html

The hairy Paw foot of the Sarcophagus is a signature detail of the works of Henry Cheere.
..............................
The Stone? Relief of Dodington Grevile.
This is perhaps the maquette for the marble relief illustrated below.
....................
The Relief of Dodington Grevile on the Domed Tower of the West Front Gatehouse at All Souls.
The Relief is on the East side of the building facing into the Quad - there is a corresponding portrait relief on the west side of the building facing the Radcliffe Camera. I have not yet determined the suject but it appears to be of a Bishop wearing his mitre.
...................................
The Mural Monument of Marow Knightly.
It is inscribed aged 20, died 1731.
Another monument which has all the hallmarks of an early production from the workshop at Westminster of Henry Cheere, but so far I have no evidence for this attribution.
The use of the coloured marble and the bracket supports and the apron with putti which Cheere would adapt and develop strengthen this attribution.
.....................
The Mural Monument to Stephen and Elizabeth Niblett.
c.1766.
It is attributed to Nicholas Read (d. 1787) apprentice of Roubiliac (1746).
Biographical Dictionary... Yale 2009 - refs Gunnis but gives no further info.
If not Read I would suggest perhaps William Tyler (d.1801) also an apprentice of Roubiliac.
It is the first and only memorial of a woman in the chapel - the unusual design is both bold and unique the unusual shape of the background - usually an obelisk was repeated albeit in a slightly different form on the monument to Henry Herbert, Lord Pembroke previously standing in the church at Wilton - the background has been removed, and also on the monument to Andrew Fountaine at Narford, Norfolk both by Roubiliac.
To the right of two lamps an academic gown is cast over a pile of books, all superbly sculpted in white marble.
Niblett was elected Warden (head) of All Souls College, Oxford in 1726, a post he held until 1766.
During his time as Warden of All Souls College, he was also Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University from 1735 until 1738.
The Nibletts lived in the warden’s lodgings for forty years and died within fifteen months of each other.
For reference - the Roubiliac Monument to Andrew Fountaine at Narford.
....................
Elizabeth Niblett. (d. 1765)
Anonymous portrait.
All Souls College, Oxford.
Inscribed on the back Stephen Niblett S.T.P. Coll. Omn. Anim. Custos Witts pinxit 1744.
https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/mrs-elizabeth-niblett-d-1765-221553
........................................