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Bayeux Tapestry

The Bayeux Tapestry (UK: /bˈjɜː, b-/, US: /ˈbj, ˈb-/; French: Tapisserie de Bayeux [tapisʁi də bajø] or La telle du conquest; Latin: Tapete Baiocense) is an embroidered cloth nearly 70 metres (230 feet) long and 50 centimetres (20 inches) tall[1] that depicts the events leading up to the Norman Conquest of England in 1066, led by William, Duke of Normandy challenging Harold II, King of England, and culminating in the Battle of Hastings. It is thought to date to the 11th century, within a few years of the battle. It tells the story from the point of view of the conquering Normans but is now widely accepted to have been made in England.

A scene from the Bayeux Tapestry depicting Bishop Odo rallying Duke William's army during the Battle of Hastings in 1066

According to Sylvette Lemagnen, conservator of the tapestry, in her 2005 book La Tapisserie de Bayeux:

The Bayeux tapestry is one of the supreme achievements of the Norman Romanesque .... Its survival almost intact over nine centuries is little short of miraculous ... Its exceptional length, the harmony and freshness of its colours, its exquisite workmanship, and the genius of its guiding spirit combine to make it endlessly fascinating.[2]

The cloth consists of 58 scenes,[note 1] many with Latin tituli, embroidered on linen with coloured woollen yarns. It is likely that it was commissioned by Bishop Odo, William's maternal half-brother, and made in England – not Bayeux – in the 1070s. In 1729, the hanging was rediscovered by scholars at a time when it was being displayed annually in Bayeux Cathedral. The tapestry is now exhibited at the Musée de la Tapisserie de Bayeux in Bayeux, Normandy, France (49°16′28″N 0°42′01″W / 49.2744°N 0.7003°W / 49.2744; -0.7003).

The designs on the Bayeux Tapestry are embroidered rather than in a tapestry weave, so it does not meet narrower definitions of a tapestry.[5] Nevertheless, it has always been referred to as a tapestry until recent years when the name "Bayeux Embroidery" has gained ground among certain art historians. It can be seen as a rare example of secular Romanesque art. Tapestries adorned both churches and wealthy houses in Medieval Western Europe, though at 0.5 by 68.38 m (1 ft 8 in by 224 ft 4 in), the Bayeux Tapestry is exceptionally large. Only the figures and decoration are embroidered, on a background left plain, which shows the subject very clearly and was necessary to cover large areas.

History

Origins

 
Bishop Odo of Bayeux

The earliest known written reference to the tapestry is a 1476 inventory of Bayeux Cathedral,[6] but its origins have been the subject of much speculation and controversy.

French legend maintained the tapestry was commissioned and created by Queen Matilda, William the Conqueror's wife, and her ladies-in-waiting. Indeed, in France, it is occasionally known as La Tapisserie de la Reine Mathilde ("The Tapestry of Queen Matilda"). However, scholarly analysis in the 20th century concluded it was probably commissioned by William's half-brother, Bishop Odo,[7] who, after the Conquest, became Earl of Kent and, when William was absent in Normandy, regent of England.

The reasons for the Odo commission theory include:

  1. three of the bishop's followers mentioned in the Domesday Book appear on the tapestry;
  2. it was found in Bayeux Cathedral, built by Odo;
  3. it may have been commissioned at the same time as the cathedral's construction in the 1070s, possibly completed by 1077 in time for display on the cathedral's dedication.

Assuming Odo commissioned the tapestry, it was probably designed and constructed in England by Anglo-Saxon artists (Odo's main power base being by then in Kent); the Latin text contains hints of Anglo-Saxon; other embroideries originate from England at this time; and the vegetable dyes can be found in cloth traditionally woven there.[8][9][10] Howard B. Clarke has proposed that the designer of the tapestry was Scolland, the abbot of St Augustine's Abbey in Canterbury, because of his previous position as head of the scriptorium at Mont Saint-Michel (famed for its illumination), his travels to Trajan's Column, and his connections to Wadard and Vital, two individuals identified in the tapestry.[11][12] The actual physical work of stitching was most likely undertaken by female needleworkers. Anglo-Saxon needlework of the more detailed type known as Opus Anglicanum was famous across Europe. It was perhaps commissioned for display in the hall of his palace and then bequeathed to the cathedral he built, following the pattern of the documented but lost hanging of the Anglo-Saxon warrior Byrhtnoth, bequeathed by his widow to Ely Abbey.[13]

Alternative theories exist. Carola Hicks has suggested it could possibly have been commissioned by Edith of Wessex, widow of Edward the Confessor and sister of Harold.[14] Wolfgang Grape has challenged the consensus that the embroidery is Anglo-Saxon, distinguishing between Anglo-Saxon and other Northern European techniques;[15] Medieval material authority Elizabeth Coatsworth[16] contradicted this: "The attempt to distinguish Anglo-Saxon from other Northern European embroideries before 1100 on the grounds of technique cannot be upheld on the basis of present knowledge."[10] George Beech suggests the tapestry was executed at the Abbey of Saint-Florent de Saumur in the Loire Valley and says the detailed depiction of the Breton campaign argues for additional sources in France.[17] Andrew Bridgeford has suggested that the tapestry was actually of English design and encoded with secret messages meant to undermine Norman rule.[18]

Recorded history

The first reference to the tapestry is from 1476 when it was listed in an inventory of the treasures of Bayeux Cathedral. It survived the sack of Bayeux by the Huguenots in 1562; and the next certain reference is from 1724.[19] Antoine Lancelot sent a report to the Académie Royale des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres concerning a sketch he had received about a work concerning William the Conqueror. He had no idea where or what the original was, although he suggested it could have been a tapestry.[20] Despite further enquiries he discovered no more.

 
Montfaucon / Benoît drawing showing King Harold's death

The Benedictine scholar Bernard de Montfaucon made more successful investigations and found that the sketch was of a small portion of a tapestry preserved at Bayeux Cathedral. In 1729 and 1730 he published drawings and a detailed description of the complete work in the first two volumes of his Les Monuments de la Monarchie française. The drawings were by Antoine Benoît, one of the ablest draughtsmen of that time.[20]

The tapestry was first briefly noted in English in 1746 by William Stukeley, in his Palaeographia Britannica.[21] The first detailed account in English was written by Smart Lethieullier, who was living in Paris in 1732–3, and was acquainted with Lancelot and de Montfaucon: it was not published, however, until 1767, as an appendix to Andrew Ducarel's Anglo-Norman Antiquities.[20][22][23]

During the French Revolution, in 1792, the tapestry was confiscated as public property to be used for covering military wagons.[19] It was rescued from a wagon by a local lawyer who stored it in his house until the troubles were over, whereupon he sent it to the city administrators for safekeeping.[20] After the Reign of Terror, the Fine Arts Commission, set up to safeguard national treasures in 1803, required it to be removed to Paris for display at the Musée Napoléon.[20] When Napoleon abandoned his planned invasion of Britain the tapestry's propaganda value was lost and it was returned to Bayeux where the council displayed it on a winding apparatus of two cylinders.[20] Despite scholars' concern that the tapestry was becoming damaged the council refused to return it to the cathedral.[20]

 
Stothard / Basire engravings: scenes showing the Norman troops crossing the Channel and landing in Sussex

In 1816 the Society of Antiquaries of London commissioned its historical draughtsman, Charles Stothard, to visit Bayeux to make an accurate hand-coloured facsimile of the tapestry. His drawings were subsequently engraved by James Basire jr. and published by the Society in 1819–23.[24] Stothard's images are still of value as a record of the tapestry as it was before 19th-century restoration.

By 1842 the tapestry was displayed in a special-purpose room in the Bibliothèque Publique. It required special storage in 1870 with the threatened invasion of Normandy in the Franco-Prussian War and again in 1939–1944 by the Ahnenerbe during the German occupation of France and the Normandy landings. On 27 June 1944 the Gestapo took the tapestry to the Louvre and on 18 August, three days before the Wehrmacht withdrew from Paris, Himmler sent a message (intercepted by Bletchley Park) ordering it to be taken to "a place of safety", thought to be Berlin.[25] It was only on 22 August that the SS attempted to take possession of the tapestry, by which time the Louvre was again in French hands.[25] After the liberation of Paris, on 25 August, the tapestry was again put on public display in the Louvre, and in 1945 it was returned to Bayeux,[20] where it is exhibited at the Musée de la Tapisserie de Bayeux.

Later reputation and history

The inventory listing of 1476 shows that the tapestry was being hung annually in Bayeux Cathedral for the week of the Feast of St John the Baptist; and this was still the case in 1728, although by that time the purpose was merely to air the hanging, which was otherwise stored in a chest.[25] Clearly, the work was being well cared for. In the eighteenth century, the artistry was regarded as crude or even barbarous—red and yellow multi-coloured horses upset some critics. It was thought to be unfinished because the linen was not covered with embroidery.[25] However, its exhibition in the Louvre in 1797 caused a sensation, with Le Moniteur, which normally dealt with foreign affairs, reporting on it on its first two pages.[25] It inspired a popular musical, La Tapisserie de la Reine Mathilde.[citation needed] It was because the tapestry was regarded as an antiquity rather than a work of art that in 1804 it was returned to Bayeux, wherein 1823 one commentator, A. L. Léchaudé d'Anisy, reported that "there is a sort of purity in its primitive forms, especially considering the state of the arts in the eleventh century".[25]

The tapestry was becoming a tourist attraction, with Robert Southey complaining of the need to queue to see the work. In the 1843 Hand-book for Travellers in France by John Murray III, a visit was included on "Recommended Route 26 (Caen to Cherbourg via Bayeux)", and this guidebook led John Ruskin to go there; he would describe the tapestry as "the most interesting thing in its way conceivable". Charles Dickens, however, was not impressed: "It is certainly the work of amateurs; very feeble amateurs at the beginning and very heedless some of them too."[25]

During the Second World War Heinrich Himmler coveted the work, regarding it as "important for our glorious and cultured Germanic history".[25]

In 2018, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that the Bayeux Tapestry would be loaned to Britain for public display. It had been expected to be exhibited at the British Museum in London in 2022, but a date has not yet been finalised. Assuming evidence the tapestry was made in Canterbury is correct, it will be the first time in 950 years it has left France.[26][27]

Construction, design and technique

 
Detail of stem stitching and laid work.

In common with other embroidered hangings of the early medieval period, this piece is conventionally referred to as a "tapestry", although it is not a "true" tapestry in which the design is woven into the cloth in tapestry weave; it is technically an embroidery, although it meets the traditional broader definition of "tapestry" as: "A textile fabric decorated with designs of ornament or pictorial subjects, painted, embroidered, or woven in colours, used for wall hangings, curtains, covers for seats, ..."[28]

The Bayeux tapestry is embroidered in crewel (wool yarn) on a tabby-woven linen ground 68.38 metres long and 0.5 metres wide (224.3 ft × 1.6 ft) and using two methods of stitching: outline or stem stitch for lettering and the outlines of figures, and couching or laid work for filling in figures.[9][10] Nine linen panels, between fourteen and three metres in length, were sewn together after each was embroidered and the joins were disguised with subsequent embroidery.[25] At the first join (start of scene 14) the borders do not line up properly but the technique was improved so that the later joins are practically invisible.[25] The design involved a broad central zone with narrow decorative borders top and bottom.[25] By inspecting the woollen threads behind the linen it is apparent all these aspects were embroidered together at a session and the awkward placing of the tituli is not due to them being added later.[25] Later generations have patched the hanging in numerous places and some of the embroidery (especially in the final scene) has been reworked.[25] The tapestry may well have maintained much of its original appearance—it now compares closely with a careful drawing made in 1730.[25]

The end of the tapestry has been missing from time immemorial and the final titulus "Et fuga verterunt Angli" ("and the English left fleeing") is said to be "entirely spurious", added shortly before 1814 at a time of anti-English sentiment.[19] Musset speculates the hanging was originally about 1.5 metres longer.[19] At the last section still remaining the embroidery has been almost completely restored but this seems to have been done with at least some regard to the original stitching.[19] The stylised tree is quite unlike any other tree in the tapestry.[19] The start of the tapestry has also been restored but to a much lesser extent.[19]

Norton[note 2] has reviewed the various measurements of the length of the tapestry itself and of its nine individual linen panels. He has also attempted to estimate the size and architectural design of the 11th-century Bayeux Cathedral. He considers the tapestry would have fitted well if it had been hung along the south, west, and north arcades of the nave and that the scenes it depicts can be correlated with positions of the arcade bays in a way that would have been dramatically satisfying. He agrees with earlier speculation that a final panel is missing—one that shows William's coronation and which he thinks was some three metres long. Norton concludes that the tapestry was definitely designed to be hung in Bayeux Cathedral specifically; that it was designed to appeal to a Norman audience; and that it was probably designed for Bishop Odo so as to be displayed at the dedication of the cathedral in 1077 in the presence of William, Matilda, their sons, and Odo.[30]

The main yarn colours are terracotta or russet, blue-green, dull gold, olive green, and blue, with small amounts of dark blue or black and sage green. Later repairs are worked in light yellow, orange, and light greens.[9] Laid yarns are couched in place with yarn of the same or contrasting colour.

The tapestry's central zone contains most of the action, which sometimes overflows into the borders either for dramatic effect or because depictions would otherwise be very cramped (for example at Edward's death scene). Events take place in a long series of scenes which are generally separated by highly stylised trees. However, the trees are not placed consistently and the greatest scene shift, between Harold's audience with Edward after his return to England and Edward's burial scene, is not marked in any way at all.[19][note 1]

The tituli are normally in the central zone but occasionally use the top border. The borders are otherwise mostly purely decorative and only sometimes does the decoration complement the action in the central zone. The decoration consists of birds, beasts, fish and scenes from fables, agriculture, and hunting. There are frequent oblique bands separating the vignettes. There are nude figures, some of corpses from battle, others of a ribald nature.[19] A harrow, a newly invented implement, is depicted (scene 10) and this is the earliest known depiction. The picture of Halley's Comet, which appears in the upper border (scene 32), is the first known picture of this comet.[19]

In 1724 a linen backing cloth was sewn on comparatively crudely and, in around the year 1800, large ink numerals were written on the backing which broadly enumerate each scene and which are still commonly used for reference.[19]

 
The entire Bayeux Tapestry. Individual images of each scene are at Bayeux Tapestry tituli. (Scroll left or right.)

Background

Background of the events depicted

 
Edward the Confessor sends Harold to Normandy

In a series of pictures supported by a written commentary, the tapestry tells the story of the events of 1064–1066 culminating in the Battle of Hastings. The two main protagonists are Harold Godwinson, recently crowned King of England, leading the Anglo-Saxon English, and William, Duke of Normandy, leading a mainly Norman army, sometimes called the companions of William the Conqueror.[19]

William was the illegitimate son of Robert the Magnificent, Duke of Normandy, and Herleva (or Arlette), a tanner's daughter. William became Duke of Normandy at the age of seven and was in control of Normandy by the age of nineteen. His half-brother was Bishop Odo of Bayeux.

King Edward the Confessor, king of England and about sixty years old at the time the tapestry starts its narration, had no children or any clear successor. Edward's mother, Emma of Normandy, was William's great aunt. At that time succession to the English throne was not by primogeniture but was decided jointly by the king and by an assembly of nobility, the Witenagemot.

Harold Godwinson, Earl of Wessex and the most powerful noble in England, was Edward's brother-in-law. The Norman chronicler William of Poitiers[31] reported that Edward had previously determined that William would succeed him on the throne, and Harold had sworn to honour this, and yet later that Harold had claimed Edward, on his deathbed, had made him heir over William. However, other sources, such as Eadmer dispute this claim.

Artistic context

Tapestry fragments have been found in Scandinavia dating from the ninth century and it is thought that Norman and Anglo-Saxon embroidery developed from this sort of work. Examples are to be found in the grave goods of the Oseberg ship and the Överhogdal tapestries.[19]

A monastic text from Ely, the Liber Eliensis, mentions a woven narrative wall-hanging commemorating the deeds of Byrhtnoth, killed in 991. Wall-hangings were common by the tenth century with English and Norman texts particularly commending the skill of Anglo-Saxon seamstresses. Mural paintings imitating draperies still exist in France and Italy and there are twelfth-century mentions of other wall-hangings in Normandy and France. A poem by Baldric of Dol might even describe the Bayeux Tapestry itself.[19] The Bayeux Tapestry was therefore not unique at the time it was created: rather it is remarkable for being the sole surviving example of medieval narrative needlework.[32]

Content

Events depicted

 
The messengers with Guy I, Count of Ponthieu, with a portrayal of medieval agriculture in the border

The tapestry begins with a panel of Edward the Confessor sending Harold to Normandy.(scene 1) Later Norman sources say that the mission was for Harold to pledge loyalty to William but the tapestry does not suggest any specific purpose.[25] By mischance, Harold arrives at the wrong location in France and is taken prisoner by Guy, Count of Ponthieu.(scene 7) After exchanges of messages borne by mounted messengers, Harold is released to William, who then invites Harold to accompany him on a campaign against Conan II, Duke of Brittany. On the way, just outside the monastery of Mont Saint-Michel, the army becomes mired in quicksand and Harold saves two Norman soldiers.(scene 17) William's army chases Conan from Dol de Bretagne to Rennes, and Conan finally surrenders at Dinan.(scene 20) William gives Harold arms and armour (possibly knighting him) and Harold takes an oath on saintly relics.(scene 23) Although the writing on the tapestry explicitly states an oath is taken there is no clue as to what is being promised.[25]

Harold leaves for home and meets again with the old king Edward, who appears to be remonstrating with him.(scene 25) Harold is in a somewhat submissive posture and seems to be in disgrace.[25] However, possibly deliberately, the king's intentions are not made clear.[25] The scene then shifts by about one year to when Edward has become mortally ill and the tapestry strongly suggests that, on his deathbed, he bequeaths the crown to Harold.[note 3][19] What is probably the coronation ceremony[note 4] is attended by Stigand, whose position as Archbishop of Canterbury was controversial.[19](scene 31) Stigand is performing a liturgical function, possibly not the crowning itself.[19] The tapestry labels the celebrant as "Stigant Archieps" (Stigand the archbishop) although by that time he had been excommunicated by the papacy who considered his appointment unlawful.[25]

 
Detail of Halley's Comet

A star with a streaming tail, now known to be Halley's Comet, then appears.[note 5] At this point, the lower border of the tapestry shows a fleet of ghost-like ships thus hinting at a future invasion.[25](scene 33) The news of Harold's coronation is taken to Normandy, whereupon we are told that William is ordering a fleet of ships to be built although it is Bishop Odo shown issuing the instructions.(scene 35) The invaders reach England, and land unopposed. William orders his men to find food, and a meal is cooked.(scene 43) A house is burnt by two soldiers, which may indicate some ravaging of the local countryside on the part of the invaders, and underneath, on a smaller scale than the arsonists, a woman holds her boy's hand as she asks for humanity.(scene 47) News is brought to William.[note 6] The Normans build a motte and bailey at Hastings to defend their position. Messengers are sent between the two armies, and William makes a speech to prepare his army for battle.(scene 51)

The Battle of Hastings was fought on 14 October 1066 less than three weeks after the Battle of Stamford Bridge but the tapestry does not provide this context. The English fight on foot behind a shield wall, whilst the Normans are on horses.[note 7] Two fallen knights are named as Leofwine and Gyrth, Harold's brothers, but both armies are shown fighting bravely.[25] Bishop Odo brandishes his baton or mace and rallies the Norman troops in battle.(scene 54)[note 8][25] To reassure his knights that he is still alive and well, William raises his helmet to show his face.[19] The battle becomes very bloody with troops being slaughtered and dismembered corpses littering the ground. King Harold is killed.(scene 57) This scene can be interpreted in different ways, as the name "Harold" appears above a number of knights, making it difficult to identify which character is Harold, since one character appears with an arrow shot in his head under the name "Harold" while another character is slain by a sword underneath the words "was slain" . The final remaining scene shows unarmoured English troops fleeing the battlefield. The last part of the tapestry is missing; however, it is thought that the story contained only one additional scene.[25]

People depicted

The following is a list of known persons depicted on the Bayeux Tapestry:[33]

Latin text

Tituli are included in many scenes to point out names of people and places or to explain briefly the event being depicted.[19] The text is in Latin but at times the style of words and spelling shows an English influence.[19] A dark blue wool, almost black, is mostly used but towards the end of the tapestry other colours are used, sometimes for each word and other times for each letter.[19] The complete text and English translation are displayed beside images of each scene at Bayeux Tapestry tituli.

Unsettled questions

 
Harold's death. Legend above: Harold rex interfectus est, "King Harold is killed"
 
Detail of arrow
 
Ubi unus clericus et Ælfgyva

The depiction of events on the tapestry has raised several questions which remain unsettled.

The identification of Harold II of England in the vignette depicting his death is disputed. Some recent historians disagree with the traditional view that Harold is the figure struck in the eye with an arrow, and that the arrow is a later 18th/19th century modification following a period of repair.[19] Benoît's engraving of 1729, and Bernard de Montfaucon's engravings of the tapestry as it was in 1730, show a spear or lance in place of the arrow and no arrow fletchings. Further, needle holes in the linen suggest that something has been removed, or shortened, and fletchings added to form an arrow.[19] A figure is slain with a sword in the subsequent plate, and the phrase above the figure refers to Harold's death (interfectus est, "he is slain"). This would appear to be more consistent with the labeling used elsewhere in the work. It was common medieval iconography that a perjurer was to die with a weapon through the eye[citation needed]. Therefore, the tapestry might be said to emphasize William's rightful claim to the throne by depicting Harold as an oath breaker. Whether he actually died in this way remains a mystery and is much debated.[34]

There is a panel with what appears to be a clergyman touching or possibly striking a woman's face. No one knows the significance of this scene or the caption above it: ubi unus clericus et Ælfgyva ("where [or in which] a certain cleric and Ælfgyva"), where Ælfgyva is the Latinised spelling of Ælfgifu, a popular Anglo-Saxon woman's name (literally "elf-gift").[25] The use of the grapheme Æ shows familiarity with English spelling.[25] There are two naked male figures in the border below this figure; the one directly below the figure is in a pose mirroring that of the cleric, squatting and displaying his genitalia (a scene that was frequently censored in historical reproductions). However, similar naked figures appear elsewhere in the lower border where there seems to be no connection at all with the main action.[19] Harold had a younger sister named Ælfgifu (her name is spelt Alveva in the Domesday Book of 1086) who was possibly promised to William by Harold or even betrothed to him, but she died c. 1066, prior to the invasion.[35] Ælfgifu was also the name of the mother of Sweyn Knutsson and Harold Harefoot, past kings of Denmark and England respectively, via Cnut the Great. It has been speculated that this scene, occurring after the meeting of Harold and William, is to remind the contemporary viewers of a scandal that occurred between Ælfgifu of Northampton and Emma of Normandy, Cnut's wives, that eventually led to the crowning of Edward the Confessor, child of Emma and her first husband, Æthelred the Unready.[18]

At least two panels of the tapestry are missing, perhaps even another 6.4 m (7.0 yd) in total. This missing area may have depicted William's coronation as King of England.[25] A poem by Baldric of Dol describes a tapestry on the walls of the personal apartments of Adela of Normandy, which is very similar to the Bayeux depiction. He describes the closing scene as the coronation of William in London.[36]

Historical accuracy

The Bayeux Tapestry was probably commissioned by the House of Normandy and essentially depicts a Norman viewpoint. However, Harold is shown as brave, and his soldiers are not belittled. Throughout, William is described as dux ("duke"), whereas Harold, also called dux up to his coronation, is subsequently called rex ("king").[25] The fact that the narrative extensively covers Harold's activities in Normandy (in 1064) indicates that the intention was to show a strong relationship between that expedition and the Norman Conquest starting two years later. It is for this reason that the tapestry is generally seen by modern scholars as an apologia for the Norman Conquest.

 
Coronation of Harold, seemingly by Stigand

The tapestry's narration seems to place stress on Harold's oath to William, although its rationale is not made clear.[19] Norman sources claim that the English succession was being pledged to William, but English sources give varied accounts.[19] Today it is thought that the Norman sources are to be preferred.[37] Both the tapestry and Norman sources[38] name Stigand, the excommunicated archbishop of Canterbury, as the man who crowned Harold, possibly to discredit Harold's kingship; one English source[39] suggests that he was crowned by Ealdred, archbishop of York, and favoured by the papacy, making Harold's position as legitimate king more secure. Contemporary scholarship has not decided the matter, although it is generally thought that Ealdred performed the coronation.[40][41]

Although political propaganda or personal emphasis may have somewhat distorted the historical accuracy of the story, the Bayeux Tapestry constitutes a visual record of medieval arms, apparel, and other objects unlike any other artifact surviving from this period. There is no attempt at continuity between scenes, either in individuals' appearance or clothing. The knights carry shields, but show no system of hereditary coats of arms—the beginnings of modern heraldic structure were in place, but would not become standard until the middle of the 12th century.[19] It has been noted that the warriors are depicted fighting with bare hands, while other sources indicate the general use of gloves in battle and hunt.

The American historian Stephen D. White, in a study of the tapestry,[42] has "cautioned against reading it as an English or Norman story, showing how the animal fables visible in the borders may instead offer a commentary on the dangers of conflict and the futility of pursuing power".[43]

Replicas and continuations

 
Start of the Bayeux Tapestry replica in Reading Museum, Berkshire

A number of replicas of the Bayeux Tapestry have been created.

 
Sections of the 1066 Medieval Mosaic re-creation in New Zealand
  • An approximately half-scale mosaic version of the Bayeux Tapestry was formerly on display at Geraldine, New Zealand.[52] It was made up of 1.5 million 7 mm2 pieces of spring steel—off-cuts from patterning disks of knitting machines—and was created by Michael Linton over a period of twenty years from 1979. The work was in 32 sections, and included a hypothetical reconstruction of the missing final section leading up to William the Conqueror's coronation at Westminster Abbey on Christmas Day, 1066.[53]
  • Jason Welch, a woodcarver from North Creake, Norfolk, England, created a replica of the tapestry between 2011 and 2014 in carved and painted wooden relief on 25 five-foot planks. He undertook the project to help cope with the grief of losing his 18-year-old son.[54]
  • Mia Hansson, from Skanör, Sweden, living in Wisbech, Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire, started a reproduction on 13 July 2016.[55] As of May 2023 she had completed 40 metres, saying that she expected to finish in some 4 years. Hansson takes part of her replica out for talk and display events. In September 2020 she published Mia's Bayeux Tapestry Colouring Book, with hand-drawn images from the tapestry.[56][57]

Other modern artists have attempted to complete the work by creating panels depicting subsequent events up to William's coronation, though the actual content of the missing panels is unknown. In 1997, the embroidery artist Jan Messent completed a reconstruction showing William accepting the surrender of English nobles at Berkhamsted (Beorcham), Hertfordshire, and his coronation.[58][59][60] In early 2013, 416 residents of Alderney in the Channel Islands finished a continuation including William's coronation and the building of the Tower of London.[61]

In popular culture

 
Street art in Bayeux referring to the Tapestry

Because it resembles a modern comic strip or movie storyboard, is widely recognised, and is so distinctive in its artistic style, the Bayeux Tapestry has frequently been used or reimagined in a variety of different popular culture contexts. George Wingfield Digby wrote in 1957:

It was designed to tell a story to a largely illiterate public; it is like a strip cartoon, racy, emphatic, colourful, with a good deal of blood and thunder and some ribaldry.[62]

It has been cited by Scott McCloud in Understanding Comics as an example of early sequential-narrative art;[63] and Bryan Talbot, a British comic book artist, has called it "the first known British comic strip".[64]

It has inspired many modern political and other cartoons, including:

The tapestry has inspired modern embroideries, most notably and directly:

Other embroideries more loosely inspired by it include the Hastings Embroidery (1966), the New World Tapestry (1980–2000), the Quaker Tapestry (1981–89), the Great Tapestry of Scotland (2013), the Scottish Diaspora Tapestry (2014–15), Magna Carta (An Embroidery) (2014–15), and (in this case a woven tapestry with embroidered details) the Game of Thrones Tapestry (2017–19).

A number of films have used sections of the tapestry in their opening credits or closing titles, including Disney's Bedknobs and Broomsticks, Anthony Mann's El Cid, Franco Zeffirelli's Hamlet, Frank Cassenti's La Chanson de Roland, Kevin Reynolds' Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, and Richard Fleischer's The Vikings.[68]

The design and embroidery of the tapestry form one of the narrative strands of Marta Morazzoni's 1988 novella The Invention of Truth.

The tapestry is referred to in Tony Kushner's play Angels in America. The apocryphal account of Queen Matilda's creation of the tapestry is used, perhaps in order to demonstrate that Louis, one of the main characters, holds himself to mythological standards.[69]

In March 2022 the French specialist factual documentary Mysteries of the Bayeux Tapestry was broadcast by BBC Four.[70] The programme explores both the history of the tapestry and the scientific and archaeological stories that lie within its embroidery. The original 90-minute documentary, written by Jonas Rosales, directed by Alexis de Favitski and produced by Antoine Bamas, was cut to 59 minutes for the BBC broadcast.[71] The documentary includes the work of scientists from the Laboratoire d'Archéologie Moléculaire et Structurale (LAMS) at the French National Centre for Scientific Research, using a hyperspectral camera, measuring 215 different colours, to analyse the exact pigments used to produce the original colours for the dyed woollen threads, derived from madder, weld and indigo.[70]

Notes

  1. ^ a b The exact number of scenes is not clearly defined; the Musée de la Tapisserie de Bayeux states 58 scenes, although some interpretations regard the tapestry as being divided into 70 scenes.[3][4]
  2. ^ Professor Christopher Norton is emeritus professor of History of Art at the University of York in the Centre for Medieval Studies.[29]
  3. ^ 5 January 1066.
  4. ^ 6 January 1066.
  5. ^ A comet was believed to be a bad omen at this time and Halley's comet would have first appeared in 1066 around 24 April, nearly four months after Harold's coronation.
  6. ^ Possibly about Harold's victory in the Battle of Stamford Bridge, although the Tapestry does not specify this.
  7. ^ This reflected the military reality.
  8. ^ Clerics were not supposed to shed blood, hence Odo has no sword. Rather than just praying for the Norman knights, however, which ought to have been his role, Odo seems militarily active.

References

  1. ^ Caviness, Madeline H. (2001). Reframing Medieval Art: Difference, Margins, Boundaries. Medford, MA: Tufts University.; Koslin, Desirée (1990). "Turning Time in the Bayeux Embroidery". Textile & Text. 13: 28–29.; Bertrand, Simone (1966). La tapisserie de Bayeux. La Pierre-qui-Vire: Zodiaque. p. 23. et combien pauvre alors ce nom de broderie nous apparaît-il!
  2. ^ Sylvette Lemagnen, Preface, p. 9; Musset, Lucien (1 November 2005) [1989]. La Tapisserie de Bayeux: œuvre d'art et document historique [The Bayeux Tapestry] (annotated edition). Translated by Rex, Richard (First ed.). Woodbridge, United Kingdom: Boydell & Brewer Ltd. p. 272. ISBN 978-1-84383-163-1.
  3. ^ "Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online". Bayeux Museum. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  4. ^ Freeman, Henry (21 March 2016). The Middle Ages: A History From Beginning to End. Hourly History. ISBN 978-1-5303-7624-7.
  5. ^ Saul, Nigel. "Bayeux Tapestry". A Companion to Medieval England. Stroud, UK: Tempus. pp. 32–33. ISBN 0-7524-2969-8, but see OED "Tapestry": "A textile fabric decorated with designs of ornament or pictorial subjects, painted, embroidered, or woven in colours, used for wall hangings, curtains, covers for seats, ..." before mentioning "especially" those woven in a tapestry weave.
  6. ^ Fowke, Frank Rede. The Bayeux Tapestry – A History and Description, London: G. Bell & Sons, 1913.
  7. ^ Sir Frank Stenton (ed) et al, The Bayeux Tapestry. A comprehensive survey London: Phaidon, 1957 revised 1965.
  8. ^ UNESCO World Heritage nomination form, in English and French. Word document. Published 9 May 2006.
  9. ^ a b c Wilson, David M.: The Bayeux Tapestry, Thames and Hudson, 1985, pp. 201–27
  10. ^ a b c Coatsworth, Elizabeth (2005). "Stitches in Time: Establishing a History of Anglo-Saxon Embroidery". In Netherton, Robin; Owen-Crocker, Gale R. (eds.). Medieval Clothing and Textiles. Boydell & Brewer. pp. 1–27. ISBN 978-1-84383-123-5.
  11. ^ Clarke, Howard B. (2013). "The Identity of the Designer of the Bayeux Tapestry". Anglo-Norman Studies 35. pp. 119–140. doi:10.1017/9781782041085.009. ISBN 978-1-78204-108-5.
  12. ^ "Designer of the Bayeux Tapestry identified". Medievalists.net. 30 October 2013. Retrieved 30 October 2013.
  13. ^ Dodwell, C. R. (1982). Anglo-Saxon Art, a New Perspective. Manchester: Manchester UP. pp. 134–36. ISBN 0-7190-0926-X.
  14. ^ "New Contender for The Bayeux Tapestry?", from the BBC, 22 May 2006. The Bayeux Tapestry: The Life Story of a Masterpiece, by Carola Hicks (2006). ISBN 0-7011-7463-3
  15. ^ See Grape, Wolfgang, The Bayeux Tapestry: Monument to a Norman Triumph, Prestel Publishing, 3791313657
  16. ^ "Oxford Bibliographies Online – Author (Contributor: Elizabeth Coatsworth)". Oxford University Press. Retrieved 4 August 2013.
  17. ^ Beech, George: Was the Bayeux Tapestry Made in France?: The Case for St. Florent of Saumur. (The New Middle Ages), New York, Palgrave Macmillan 1995; reviewed in Robin Netherton and Gale R. Owen-Crocker, editors, Medieval Clothing and Textiles, Volume 2, Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK, and Rochester, New York, the Boydell Press, 2006, ISBN 1-84383-203-8
  18. ^ a b Bridgeford, Andrew, 1066: The Hidden History in the Bayeux Tapestry, Walker & Company, 2005. ISBN 1-84115-040-1
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Musset, Lucien (2005). The Bayeux Tapestry. Boydell Press. ISBN 1-84383-163-5.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h Bertrand, Simone (1965) [1957]. "The History of the Tapestry". In Stenton, Frank (ed.). The Bayeux Tapestry (revised ed.). London: Phaidon Press. pp. 88–97.
  21. ^ Brown 1988, p. 47.
  22. ^ Brown 1988, p. 48.
  23. ^ Hicks 2006, pp. 82–84.
  24. ^ Brown 1988, p. 153.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Hicks, Carola (2006). The Bayeux Tapestry. The Life Story of a Masterpiece. Chatto and Windus. ISBN 0-7011-7463-3.
  26. ^ For example, illustrations in the Bayeux Tapestry can be shown to have been copied from the Old English Hexateuch, formerly held in Canterbury, and Canterbury was Bishop Odo's English power-base.
  27. ^ "Bayeux Tapestry to be displayed in Britain". The Times. 17 January 2018. Retrieved 19 January 2018.
  28. ^ OED, "Tapestry", which goes on to mention "especially" those woven in a tapestry weave.
  29. ^ "Christopher Norton - History of Art, The University of York". www.york.ac.uk.
  30. ^ Norton, Christopher (23 October 2019). "Viewing the Bayeux Tapestry, Now and Then". Journal of the British Archaeological Association. 172 (1): 52–89. doi:10.1080/00681288.2019.1642012.
  31. ^ William of Poitiers: Gesta Willelmi ducis Normannorum et regis Anglorum, c.1071.
  32. ^ Wingfield Digby, George (1965). "Technique and Production". In Stenton, Frank (ed.). The Bayeux Tapestry (2nd ed.). Phaidon Press. pp. 37–55 (37, 45–48).
  33. ^ "People identified on the tapestry". bayeux-tapestry.org.uk. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
  34. ^ Foys, Martin (2009). Pulling the Arrow Out: The Legend of Harold's Death and the Bayeux Tapestry. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell and Brewer. pp. 158–75. ISBN 978-1-84383-470-0.
  35. ^ Mason, Emma (2004). The House of Godwine: the history of a dynasty. London: Hambledon and London. ISBN 1852853891.
  36. ^ Bertrand, Simone The Bayeux Tapestry 1978 p.30
  37. ^ Bates, David (2004). "William I". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/29448. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  38. ^ William of Poitiers: Gesta Willelmi ducis Normannorum et regis Anglorum, c.1071. Orderic Vitalis Historia Ecclesiastica, c.1123-1131.
  39. ^ Florence of Worcester / John of Worcester Chronicon ex Chronicis completed c.1140.
  40. ^ Gibbs-Smith, Charles (1965). "Notes on the Plates". In Frank Stenton (ed.). The Bayeux Tapestry. Phaedon Press.
  41. ^ Cowdrey, H. E. J. (2004). "Stigand (d. 1072)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/26523. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  42. ^ . www.acls.org. Archived from the original on 31 July 2019. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  43. ^ "Prufrock: The Meaning of the Bayeux Tapestry, When Israeli Prisoners Translated 'The Hobbit,' and the French 'Anti-Keynes'". The Weekly Standard. 25 January 2018.
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 17 August 2011.
  45. ^ "Bayeux Gallery". Reading Museum. 3 April 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  46. ^ "Britain's Bayeux Tapestry". Reading Museum. 22 January 2021. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  47. ^ "Ray Dugan's Bayeux Tapestry". Dugansbayeuxtapestry.com. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  48. ^ "Bayeux Tapestry, topic of seminar". Newsrelease.uwaterloo.ca. 15 March 2001. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  49. ^ "Vikingerne kommer!" [The Vikings Are Coming!] (in Danish). Kristeligt Dagblad. 30 November 2005.
  50. ^ "Nu hænger Bayeux-tapetet i en hestestald i Vendsyssel" [The "Bayeux tapestry" displayed in a horse stable in North Jutland]. Politiken. 8 September 2016. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
  51. ^ "History center to display Bayeux Tapestry replica". University of North Georgia. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  52. ^ Linton, Michael. "The Medieval Mosaic The Recreation of the Bayeux Tapestry, as a 34 metre Medieval Mosaic Masterpiece". Archived from the original on 16 February 2016. Retrieved 17 August 2011.
  53. ^ "A Medieval Mosaic (Medieval Mosaic)". 1066. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  54. ^ Lazzari, Adam (14 January 2014). "Photo gallery: Norfolk man creates a 135ft wooden version of the Bayeux Tapestry to help cope with his son's death". Dereham Times. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  55. ^ Monger, Garry (2022). "Fenland's Bayeux Tapestry". The Fens (49): 20.
  56. ^ Hansson, Mia (2020). Mia's Bayeux Tapestry Colouring Book. March: Eyrie Press. ISBN 978-1-913149-11-6.
  57. ^ Hansson, Mia. "Mia's Bayeux Tapestry Story". Facebook. Retrieved 6 February 2019.
  58. ^ "Berkhamsted Castle". Berkhamsted Local History Society. Retrieved 9 February 2013.
  59. ^ (PDF). Castle Panels. Berkhamsted Castle. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2013. (discussed in . 2014. Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved 11 February 2014.)
  60. ^ Messant, Jan (1999). Bayeux Tapestry Embroiderers' Story. Thirsk: Madeira Threads. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-9516348-5-1.
  61. ^ "Bayeux Tapestry ending made in Alderney". BBC News. 9 February 2013.
  62. ^ Wingfield Digby, "Technique and Production", p. 37.
  63. ^ McCloud 1993. Understanding Comics pp. 11–14
  64. ^ The History of the British Comic, Bryan Talbot, The Guardian Guide, 8 September 2007, p. 5.
  65. ^ Hassall, John (2014) [1915]. Ye Berlyn Tapestrie. Oxford: Bodleian Library. ISBN 978-1-85124-416-4.
  66. ^ "The New Yorker". Condé Nast. 15 July 1944. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  67. ^ Steven, Alasdair (24 September 2003). . The Scotsman. Archived from the original on 3 November 2014. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  68. ^ Burt, Richard (July 2007). "Re-embroidering the Bayeux Tapestry in Film and Media: The Flip Side of History in Opening and End Title Sequences". Exemplaria. 19 (2): 327–350. doi:10.1179/175330707X212895. S2CID 161901758.
  69. ^ "SparkNote on Angels in America". SparkNotes. SparkNotes LLC. Retrieved 30 October 2014. Louis's problem is exacerbated by his tendency towards abstraction and his unreasonably high standards for himself. In Scene Three, he tells Emily about La Reine Mathilde, who supposedly created the Bayeux Tapestry. Louis describes La Reine's unceasing devotion to William the Conqueror and laments his own comparative lack of devotion. But as critic Allen J. Frantzen has pointed out, this popular story about Mathilde and the tapestry is wrong—it was actually created in England decades after the conquest. Louis, then, is holding himself to a mythological standard of loyalty, and he curses himself based on a positively unreal example. This is part of a larger pattern of excessive guilt and harshness toward himself, which, paradoxically, prevents him from judging his own weaknesses accurately and trying to correct them. Because no one could possibly live up to Mathilde's example, Louis initially justifies his moral failure. Later, in Perestroika, he will arrive at a more genuine remorse and an honest understanding of what he has done.
  70. ^ a b "BBC Four - Mysteries of the Bayeux Tapestry". BBC.
  71. ^ Elmes, John. "BBC4 to reversion Bayeux Tapestry doc". Broadcast.

Further reading

  • Backhouse, Janet; Turner, D. H.; Webster, Leslie, eds. (1984). The Golden Age of Anglo-Saxon Art, 966–1066. London: British Museum Publications. ISBN 0-7141-0532-5.
  • Bates, David; Barral i Altet, Xavier (2019). La Tapisserie de Bayeux. Paris: Citadelles & Mazenod.
  • Bernstein, David J. (1986). "The Mystery of Bayeux Tapestry" Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 0-297-78928-7
  • Bloch, Howard (2006). A Needle in the Right Hand of God: The Norman Conquest of 1066 and the Making and Meaning of the Bayeux Tapestry. Random House ISBN 978-1-4000-6549-3
  • Bridgeford, Andrew (2005). 1066 : the hidden history in the Bayeux Tapestry Walker & Company ISBN 978-0-8027-7742-3
  • Brown, Shirley Ann (1988). The Bayeux Tapestry: History and Bibliography. Woodbridge: Boydell. ISBN 978-0-85115-509-8.
  • Burt, Richard (2007). "Loose Threads: Weaving Around Women in the Bayeux Tapestry and Cinema", in Medieval Film, ed. Anke Bernau and Bettina Bildhauer Manchester University Press
  • Burt, Richard (July 2007). "Re-embroidering the Bayeux Tapestry in Film and Media: The Flip Side of History in Opening and End Title Sequences". Exemplaria. 19 (2): 327–350. doi:10.1179/175330707X212895. S2CID 161901758.
  • Burt, Richard (2009). "Border Skirmishes: Weaving Around the Bayeux Tapestry and Cinema in Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves and El Cid." In Medieval Film. Ed. Anke Bernau and Bettina Bildhauer (Manchester: Manchester UP), pp. 158–18.
  • Burt, Richard (2008). Medieval and Early Modern Film and Media (New York and London: Palgrave Macmillan), xiv; 279 pp. Paperback edition, 2010.
  • Campbell, Miles Warren (1984). "Aelfgyva : The Mysterious Lady of the Bayeux Tapestry". Annales de Normandie. 34 (2): 127–145. doi:10.3406/annor.1984.5553.
  • Foys, Martin K., Overbey, Karen Eileen Overbey and Terkla, Dan (eds.) (2009) The Bayeux Tapestry: New Interpretations, Boydell and Brewer ISBN 978-1783271245.
  • Gibbs-Smith, C. H. (1973). The Bayeux Tapestry London; New York, Phaidon; Praeger
  • Hicks, Carola (2006). The Bayeux Tapestry: The Life Story of a Masterpiece. London: Chatto & Windus. ISBN 978-0-7011-7463-7.
  • Jones, Chas (2005). "The Yorkshire Preface to the Bayeux Tapestry" The Events of September 1066 – Depicted In a Community Tapestry, Writers Print Shop, first edition. ISBN 978-1-904623-37-3
  • Pastan, Elizabeth Carson, and Stephen White, with Kate Gilbert (2014). The Bayeux Tapestry and its Contexts: A Reassessment. Boydell Press ISBN 978-1-84383-941-5.
  • Rud, Mogens (1992). "The Bayeux Tapestry and the Battle of Hastings 1066", Christian Eilers Publishers, Copenhagen; contains full colour photographs and explanatory text
  • Werckmeister, Otto Karl (1976). "The Political Ideology of the Bayeux Tapestry." Studi Medievali, 3rd Series 17, no. 2: 535–95.
  • Wilson, David McKenzie (ed.) (2004). The Bayeux Tapestry: the Complete Tapestry in Color, Rev. ed. New York: Thames & Hudson ISBN 978-0-500-25122-5, 0-394-54793-4 (1985 ed.). LC NK3049.
  • Wissolik, Richard David (1982). "Duke William's Messengers: An 'Insoluble, Reverse-Order' Scene of the Bayeux Tapestry". Medium Ævum. 51 (1): 102–107. doi:10.2307/43632127. JSTOR 43632127. ProQuest 1293416903.
  • Wissolik, Richard David (March 1979). "The Monk Eadmer as Historian of the Norman Succession: Korner and Freeman Examined." American Benedictine Review, pp. 32–42.
  • Wissolik, Richard David. "The Saxon Statement: Code in the Bayeux Tapestry." Annuale Mediævale. 19 (September 1979), 69–97.
  • Wissolik, Richard David (1989). The Bayeux Tapestry. A Critical Annotated Bibliography with Cross References and Summary Outlines of Scholarship, 1729–1988, Greensburg: Eadmer Press.

External links

  •   Media related to Bayeux Tapestry at Wikimedia Commons
  • Bayeux Tapestry – Bayeux Museum
    • Digital exploration of the tapestry
  • High quality panoramic image of Bayeux Tapestry (Bibliotheca Augustana)
  • A Guide to the Bayeux Tapestry – Latin-English translation
  • The Bayeux Tapestry – collection of videos, articles and bibliography
  • "Bayeux Tapestry, The" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 555–556. With 16 images

bayeux, tapestry, ɜː, french, tapisserie, bayeux, tapisʁi, bajø, telle, conquest, latin, tapete, baiocense, embroidered, cloth, nearly, metres, feet, long, centimetres, inches, tall, that, depicts, events, leading, norman, conquest, england, 1066, william, duk. The Bayeux Tapestry UK b aɪ ˈ j ɜː b eɪ US ˈ b eɪ j uː ˈ b aɪ French Tapisserie de Bayeux tapisʁi de bajo or La telle du conquest Latin Tapete Baiocense is an embroidered cloth nearly 70 metres 230 feet long and 50 centimetres 20 inches tall 1 that depicts the events leading up to the Norman Conquest of England in 1066 led by William Duke of Normandy challenging Harold II King of England and culminating in the Battle of Hastings It is thought to date to the 11th century within a few years of the battle It tells the story from the point of view of the conquering Normans but is now widely accepted to have been made in England A scene from the Bayeux Tapestry depicting Bishop Odo rallying Duke William s army during the Battle of Hastings in 1066 According to Sylvette Lemagnen conservator of the tapestry in her 2005 book La Tapisserie de Bayeux The Bayeux tapestry is one of the supreme achievements of the Norman Romanesque Its survival almost intact over nine centuries is little short of miraculous Its exceptional length the harmony and freshness of its colours its exquisite workmanship and the genius of its guiding spirit combine to make it endlessly fascinating 2 The cloth consists of 58 scenes note 1 many with Latin tituli embroidered on linen with coloured woollen yarns It is likely that it was commissioned by Bishop Odo William s maternal half brother and made in England not Bayeux in the 1070s In 1729 the hanging was rediscovered by scholars at a time when it was being displayed annually in Bayeux Cathedral The tapestry is now exhibited at the Musee de la Tapisserie de Bayeux in Bayeux Normandy France 49 16 28 N 0 42 01 W 49 2744 N 0 7003 W 49 2744 0 7003 The designs on the Bayeux Tapestry are embroidered rather than in a tapestry weave so it does not meet narrower definitions of a tapestry 5 Nevertheless it has always been referred to as a tapestry until recent years when the name Bayeux Embroidery has gained ground among certain art historians It can be seen as a rare example of secular Romanesque art Tapestries adorned both churches and wealthy houses in Medieval Western Europe though at 0 5 by 68 38 m 1 ft 8 in by 224 ft 4 in the Bayeux Tapestry is exceptionally large Only the figures and decoration are embroidered on a background left plain which shows the subject very clearly and was necessary to cover large areas Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Recorded history 1 3 Later reputation and history 2 Construction design and technique 3 Background 3 1 Background of the events depicted 3 2 Artistic context 4 Content 4 1 Events depicted 4 2 People depicted 4 3 Latin text 5 Unsettled questions 6 Historical accuracy 7 Replicas and continuations 8 In popular culture 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit Bishop Odo of Bayeux The earliest known written reference to the tapestry is a 1476 inventory of Bayeux Cathedral 6 but its origins have been the subject of much speculation and controversy French legend maintained the tapestry was commissioned and created by Queen Matilda William the Conqueror s wife and her ladies in waiting Indeed in France it is occasionally known as La Tapisserie de la Reine Mathilde The Tapestry of Queen Matilda However scholarly analysis in the 20th century concluded it was probably commissioned by William s half brother Bishop Odo 7 who after the Conquest became Earl of Kent and when William was absent in Normandy regent of England The reasons for the Odo commission theory include three of the bishop s followers mentioned in the Domesday Book appear on the tapestry it was found in Bayeux Cathedral built by Odo it may have been commissioned at the same time as the cathedral s construction in the 1070s possibly completed by 1077 in time for display on the cathedral s dedication Assuming Odo commissioned the tapestry it was probably designed and constructed in England by Anglo Saxon artists Odo s main power base being by then in Kent the Latin text contains hints of Anglo Saxon other embroideries originate from England at this time and the vegetable dyes can be found in cloth traditionally woven there 8 9 10 Howard B Clarke has proposed that the designer of the tapestry was Scolland the abbot of St Augustine s Abbey in Canterbury because of his previous position as head of the scriptorium at Mont Saint Michel famed for its illumination his travels to Trajan s Column and his connections to Wadard and Vital two individuals identified in the tapestry 11 12 The actual physical work of stitching was most likely undertaken by female needleworkers Anglo Saxon needlework of the more detailed type known as Opus Anglicanum was famous across Europe It was perhaps commissioned for display in the hall of his palace and then bequeathed to the cathedral he built following the pattern of the documented but lost hanging of the Anglo Saxon warrior Byrhtnoth bequeathed by his widow to Ely Abbey 13 Alternative theories exist Carola Hicks has suggested it could possibly have been commissioned by Edith of Wessex widow of Edward the Confessor and sister of Harold 14 Wolfgang Grape has challenged the consensus that the embroidery is Anglo Saxon distinguishing between Anglo Saxon and other Northern European techniques 15 Medieval material authority Elizabeth Coatsworth 16 contradicted this The attempt to distinguish Anglo Saxon from other Northern European embroideries before 1100 on the grounds of technique cannot be upheld on the basis of present knowledge 10 George Beech suggests the tapestry was executed at the Abbey of Saint Florent de Saumur in the Loire Valley and says the detailed depiction of the Breton campaign argues for additional sources in France 17 Andrew Bridgeford has suggested that the tapestry was actually of English design and encoded with secret messages meant to undermine Norman rule 18 Recorded history Edit The first reference to the tapestry is from 1476 when it was listed in an inventory of the treasures of Bayeux Cathedral It survived the sack of Bayeux by the Huguenots in 1562 and the next certain reference is from 1724 19 Antoine Lancelot sent a report to the Academie Royale des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres concerning a sketch he had received about a work concerning William the Conqueror He had no idea where or what the original was although he suggested it could have been a tapestry 20 Despite further enquiries he discovered no more Montfaucon Benoit drawing showing King Harold s death The Benedictine scholar Bernard de Montfaucon made more successful investigations and found that the sketch was of a small portion of a tapestry preserved at Bayeux Cathedral In 1729 and 1730 he published drawings and a detailed description of the complete work in the first two volumes of his Les Monuments de la Monarchie francaise The drawings were by Antoine Benoit one of the ablest draughtsmen of that time 20 The tapestry was first briefly noted in English in 1746 by William Stukeley in his Palaeographia Britannica 21 The first detailed account in English was written by Smart Lethieullier who was living in Paris in 1732 3 and was acquainted with Lancelot and de Montfaucon it was not published however until 1767 as an appendix to Andrew Ducarel s Anglo Norman Antiquities 20 22 23 During the French Revolution in 1792 the tapestry was confiscated as public property to be used for covering military wagons 19 It was rescued from a wagon by a local lawyer who stored it in his house until the troubles were over whereupon he sent it to the city administrators for safekeeping 20 After the Reign of Terror the Fine Arts Commission set up to safeguard national treasures in 1803 required it to be removed to Paris for display at the Musee Napoleon 20 When Napoleon abandoned his planned invasion of Britain the tapestry s propaganda value was lost and it was returned to Bayeux where the council displayed it on a winding apparatus of two cylinders 20 Despite scholars concern that the tapestry was becoming damaged the council refused to return it to the cathedral 20 Stothard Basire engravings scenes showing the Norman troops crossing the Channel and landing in Sussex In 1816 the Society of Antiquaries of London commissioned its historical draughtsman Charles Stothard to visit Bayeux to make an accurate hand coloured facsimile of the tapestry His drawings were subsequently engraved by James Basire jr and published by the Society in 1819 23 24 Stothard s images are still of value as a record of the tapestry as it was before 19th century restoration By 1842 the tapestry was displayed in a special purpose room in the Bibliotheque Publique It required special storage in 1870 with the threatened invasion of Normandy in the Franco Prussian War and again in 1939 1944 by the Ahnenerbe during the German occupation of France and the Normandy landings On 27 June 1944 the Gestapo took the tapestry to the Louvre and on 18 August three days before the Wehrmacht withdrew from Paris Himmler sent a message intercepted by Bletchley Park ordering it to be taken to a place of safety thought to be Berlin 25 It was only on 22 August that the SS attempted to take possession of the tapestry by which time the Louvre was again in French hands 25 After the liberation of Paris on 25 August the tapestry was again put on public display in the Louvre and in 1945 it was returned to Bayeux 20 where it is exhibited at the Musee de la Tapisserie de Bayeux Later reputation and history Edit The inventory listing of 1476 shows that the tapestry was being hung annually in Bayeux Cathedral for the week of the Feast of St John the Baptist and this was still the case in 1728 although by that time the purpose was merely to air the hanging which was otherwise stored in a chest 25 Clearly the work was being well cared for In the eighteenth century the artistry was regarded as crude or even barbarous red and yellow multi coloured horses upset some critics It was thought to be unfinished because the linen was not covered with embroidery 25 However its exhibition in the Louvre in 1797 caused a sensation with Le Moniteur which normally dealt with foreign affairs reporting on it on its first two pages 25 It inspired a popular musical La Tapisserie de la Reine Mathilde citation needed It was because the tapestry was regarded as an antiquity rather than a work of art that in 1804 it was returned to Bayeux wherein 1823 one commentator A L Lechaude d Anisy reported that there is a sort of purity in its primitive forms especially considering the state of the arts in the eleventh century 25 The tapestry was becoming a tourist attraction with Robert Southey complaining of the need to queue to see the work In the 1843 Hand book for Travellers in France by John Murray III a visit was included on Recommended Route 26 Caen to Cherbourg via Bayeux and this guidebook led John Ruskin to go there he would describe the tapestry as the most interesting thing in its way conceivable Charles Dickens however was not impressed It is certainly the work of amateurs very feeble amateurs at the beginning and very heedless some of them too 25 During the Second World War Heinrich Himmler coveted the work regarding it as important for our glorious and cultured Germanic history 25 In 2018 French President Emmanuel Macron announced that the Bayeux Tapestry would be loaned to Britain for public display It had been expected to be exhibited at the British Museum in London in 2022 but a date has not yet been finalised Assuming evidence the tapestry was made in Canterbury is correct it will be the first time in 950 years it has left France 26 27 Construction design and technique Edit Detail of stem stitching and laid work In common with other embroidered hangings of the early medieval period this piece is conventionally referred to as a tapestry although it is not a true tapestry in which the design is woven into the cloth in tapestry weave it is technically an embroidery although it meets the traditional broader definition of tapestry as A textile fabric decorated with designs of ornament or pictorial subjects painted embroidered or woven in colours used for wall hangings curtains covers for seats 28 The Bayeux tapestry is embroidered in crewel wool yarn on a tabby woven linen ground 68 38 metres long and 0 5 metres wide 224 3 ft 1 6 ft and using two methods of stitching outline or stem stitch for lettering and the outlines of figures and couching or laid work for filling in figures 9 10 Nine linen panels between fourteen and three metres in length were sewn together after each was embroidered and the joins were disguised with subsequent embroidery 25 At the first join start of scene 14 the borders do not line up properly but the technique was improved so that the later joins are practically invisible 25 The design involved a broad central zone with narrow decorative borders top and bottom 25 By inspecting the woollen threads behind the linen it is apparent all these aspects were embroidered together at a session and the awkward placing of the tituli is not due to them being added later 25 Later generations have patched the hanging in numerous places and some of the embroidery especially in the final scene has been reworked 25 The tapestry may well have maintained much of its original appearance it now compares closely with a careful drawing made in 1730 25 The end of the tapestry has been missing from time immemorial and the final titulus Et fuga verterunt Angli and the English left fleeing is said to be entirely spurious added shortly before 1814 at a time of anti English sentiment 19 Musset speculates the hanging was originally about 1 5 metres longer 19 At the last section still remaining the embroidery has been almost completely restored but this seems to have been done with at least some regard to the original stitching 19 The stylised tree is quite unlike any other tree in the tapestry 19 The start of the tapestry has also been restored but to a much lesser extent 19 Norton note 2 has reviewed the various measurements of the length of the tapestry itself and of its nine individual linen panels He has also attempted to estimate the size and architectural design of the 11th century Bayeux Cathedral He considers the tapestry would have fitted well if it had been hung along the south west and north arcades of the nave and that the scenes it depicts can be correlated with positions of the arcade bays in a way that would have been dramatically satisfying He agrees with earlier speculation that a final panel is missing one that shows William s coronation and which he thinks was some three metres long Norton concludes that the tapestry was definitely designed to be hung in Bayeux Cathedral specifically that it was designed to appeal to a Norman audience and that it was probably designed for Bishop Odo so as to be displayed at the dedication of the cathedral in 1077 in the presence of William Matilda their sons and Odo 30 The main yarn colours are terracotta or russet blue green dull gold olive green and blue with small amounts of dark blue or black and sage green Later repairs are worked in light yellow orange and light greens 9 Laid yarns are couched in place with yarn of the same or contrasting colour The tapestry s central zone contains most of the action which sometimes overflows into the borders either for dramatic effect or because depictions would otherwise be very cramped for example at Edward s death scene Events take place in a long series of scenes which are generally separated by highly stylised trees However the trees are not placed consistently and the greatest scene shift between Harold s audience with Edward after his return to England and Edward s burial scene is not marked in any way at all 19 note 1 The tituli are normally in the central zone but occasionally use the top border The borders are otherwise mostly purely decorative and only sometimes does the decoration complement the action in the central zone The decoration consists of birds beasts fish and scenes from fables agriculture and hunting There are frequent oblique bands separating the vignettes There are nude figures some of corpses from battle others of a ribald nature 19 A harrow a newly invented implement is depicted scene 10 and this is the earliest known depiction The picture of Halley s Comet which appears in the upper border scene 32 is the first known picture of this comet 19 In 1724 a linen backing cloth was sewn on comparatively crudely and in around the year 1800 large ink numerals were written on the backing which broadly enumerate each scene and which are still commonly used for reference 19 The entire Bayeux Tapestry Individual images of each scene are at Bayeux Tapestry tituli Scroll left or right Background EditBackground of the events depicted Edit Edward the Confessor sends Harold to NormandyIn a series of pictures supported by a written commentary the tapestry tells the story of the events of 1064 1066 culminating in the Battle of Hastings The two main protagonists are Harold Godwinson recently crowned King of England leading the Anglo Saxon English and William Duke of Normandy leading a mainly Norman army sometimes called the companions of William the Conqueror 19 William was the illegitimate son of Robert the Magnificent Duke of Normandy and Herleva or Arlette a tanner s daughter William became Duke of Normandy at the age of seven and was in control of Normandy by the age of nineteen His half brother was Bishop Odo of Bayeux King Edward the Confessor king of England and about sixty years old at the time the tapestry starts its narration had no children or any clear successor Edward s mother Emma of Normandy was William s great aunt At that time succession to the English throne was not by primogeniture but was decided jointly by the king and by an assembly of nobility the Witenagemot Harold Godwinson Earl of Wessex and the most powerful noble in England was Edward s brother in law The Norman chronicler William of Poitiers 31 reported that Edward had previously determined that William would succeed him on the throne and Harold had sworn to honour this and yet later that Harold had claimed Edward on his deathbed had made him heir over William However other sources such as Eadmer dispute this claim Artistic context Edit Tapestry fragments have been found in Scandinavia dating from the ninth century and it is thought that Norman and Anglo Saxon embroidery developed from this sort of work Examples are to be found in the grave goods of the Oseberg ship and the Overhogdal tapestries 19 A monastic text from Ely the Liber Eliensis mentions a woven narrative wall hanging commemorating the deeds of Byrhtnoth killed in 991 Wall hangings were common by the tenth century with English and Norman texts particularly commending the skill of Anglo Saxon seamstresses Mural paintings imitating draperies still exist in France and Italy and there are twelfth century mentions of other wall hangings in Normandy and France A poem by Baldric of Dol might even describe the Bayeux Tapestry itself 19 The Bayeux Tapestry was therefore not unique at the time it was created rather it is remarkable for being the sole surviving example of medieval narrative needlework 32 Content EditEvents depicted Edit The messengers with Guy I Count of Ponthieu with a portrayal of medieval agriculture in the border The tapestry begins with a panel of Edward the Confessor sending Harold to Normandy scene 1 Later Norman sources say that the mission was for Harold to pledge loyalty to William but the tapestry does not suggest any specific purpose 25 By mischance Harold arrives at the wrong location in France and is taken prisoner by Guy Count of Ponthieu scene 7 After exchanges of messages borne by mounted messengers Harold is released to William who then invites Harold to accompany him on a campaign against Conan II Duke of Brittany On the way just outside the monastery of Mont Saint Michel the army becomes mired in quicksand and Harold saves two Norman soldiers scene 17 William s army chases Conan from Dol de Bretagne to Rennes and Conan finally surrenders at Dinan scene 20 William gives Harold arms and armour possibly knighting him and Harold takes an oath on saintly relics scene 23 Although the writing on the tapestry explicitly states an oath is taken there is no clue as to what is being promised 25 Harold leaves for home and meets again with the old king Edward who appears to be remonstrating with him scene 25 Harold is in a somewhat submissive posture and seems to be in disgrace 25 However possibly deliberately the king s intentions are not made clear 25 The scene then shifts by about one year to when Edward has become mortally ill and the tapestry strongly suggests that on his deathbed he bequeaths the crown to Harold note 3 19 What is probably the coronation ceremony note 4 is attended by Stigand whose position as Archbishop of Canterbury was controversial 19 scene 31 Stigand is performing a liturgical function possibly not the crowning itself 19 The tapestry labels the celebrant as Stigant Archieps Stigand the archbishop although by that time he had been excommunicated by the papacy who considered his appointment unlawful 25 Detail of Halley s Comet A star with a streaming tail now known to be Halley s Comet then appears note 5 At this point the lower border of the tapestry shows a fleet of ghost like ships thus hinting at a future invasion 25 scene 33 The news of Harold s coronation is taken to Normandy whereupon we are told that William is ordering a fleet of ships to be built although it is Bishop Odo shown issuing the instructions scene 35 The invaders reach England and land unopposed William orders his men to find food and a meal is cooked scene 43 A house is burnt by two soldiers which may indicate some ravaging of the local countryside on the part of the invaders and underneath on a smaller scale than the arsonists a woman holds her boy s hand as she asks for humanity scene 47 News is brought to William note 6 The Normans build a motte and bailey at Hastings to defend their position Messengers are sent between the two armies and William makes a speech to prepare his army for battle scene 51 The Battle of Hastings The Battle of Hastings was fought on 14 October 1066 less than three weeks after the Battle of Stamford Bridge but the tapestry does not provide this context The English fight on foot behind a shield wall whilst the Normans are on horses note 7 Two fallen knights are named as Leofwine and Gyrth Harold s brothers but both armies are shown fighting bravely 25 Bishop Odo brandishes his baton or mace and rallies the Norman troops in battle scene 54 note 8 25 To reassure his knights that he is still alive and well William raises his helmet to show his face 19 The battle becomes very bloody with troops being slaughtered and dismembered corpses littering the ground King Harold is killed scene 57 This scene can be interpreted in different ways as the name Harold appears above a number of knights making it difficult to identify which character is Harold since one character appears with an arrow shot in his head under the name Harold while another character is slain by a sword underneath the words was slain The final remaining scene shows unarmoured English troops fleeing the battlefield The last part of the tapestry is missing however it is thought that the story contained only one additional scene 25 People depicted Edit The following is a list of known persons depicted on the Bayeux Tapestry 33 AElfgifu Archbishop Stigand Conan II Duke of Brittany Edith of Wessex Edward the Confessor Eustace Count of Boulogne Guy Count of Ponthieu Hakon Harold Earl of WessexLeofwine Godwinson Odo Bishop of Bayeux Robert the Staller Robert Count of Mortain Scolland Turold Wadard William Duke of Normandy Vital Latin text Edit Main article Bayeux Tapestry tituli Tituli are included in many scenes to point out names of people and places or to explain briefly the event being depicted 19 The text is in Latin but at times the style of words and spelling shows an English influence 19 A dark blue wool almost black is mostly used but towards the end of the tapestry other colours are used sometimes for each word and other times for each letter 19 The complete text and English translation are displayed beside images of each scene at Bayeux Tapestry tituli Unsettled questions Edit Harold s death Legend above Harold rex interfectus est King Harold is killed Detail of arrow Ubi unus clericus et AElfgyva The depiction of events on the tapestry has raised several questions which remain unsettled The identification of Harold II of England in the vignette depicting his death is disputed Some recent historians disagree with the traditional view that Harold is the figure struck in the eye with an arrow and that the arrow is a later 18th 19th century modification following a period of repair 19 Benoit s engraving of 1729 and Bernard de Montfaucon s engravings of the tapestry as it was in 1730 show a spear or lance in place of the arrow and no arrow fletchings Further needle holes in the linen suggest that something has been removed or shortened and fletchings added to form an arrow 19 A figure is slain with a sword in the subsequent plate and the phrase above the figure refers to Harold s death interfectus est he is slain This would appear to be more consistent with the labeling used elsewhere in the work It was common medieval iconography that a perjurer was to die with a weapon through the eye citation needed Therefore the tapestry might be said to emphasize William s rightful claim to the throne by depicting Harold as an oath breaker Whether he actually died in this way remains a mystery and is much debated 34 There is a panel with what appears to be a clergyman touching or possibly striking a woman s face No one knows the significance of this scene or the caption above it ubi unus clericus et AElfgyva where or in which a certain cleric and AElfgyva where AElfgyva is the Latinised spelling of AElfgifu a popular Anglo Saxon woman s name literally elf gift 25 The use of the grapheme AE shows familiarity with English spelling 25 There are two naked male figures in the border below this figure the one directly below the figure is in a pose mirroring that of the cleric squatting and displaying his genitalia a scene that was frequently censored in historical reproductions However similar naked figures appear elsewhere in the lower border where there seems to be no connection at all with the main action 19 Harold had a younger sister named AElfgifu her name is spelt Alveva in the Domesday Book of 1086 who was possibly promised to William by Harold or even betrothed to him but she died c 1066 prior to the invasion 35 AElfgifu was also the name of the mother of Sweyn Knutsson and Harold Harefoot past kings of Denmark and England respectively via Cnut the Great It has been speculated that this scene occurring after the meeting of Harold and William is to remind the contemporary viewers of a scandal that occurred between AElfgifu of Northampton and Emma of Normandy Cnut s wives that eventually led to the crowning of Edward the Confessor child of Emma and her first husband AEthelred the Unready 18 At least two panels of the tapestry are missing perhaps even another 6 4 m 7 0 yd in total This missing area may have depicted William s coronation as King of England 25 A poem by Baldric of Dol describes a tapestry on the walls of the personal apartments of Adela of Normandy which is very similar to the Bayeux depiction He describes the closing scene as the coronation of William in London 36 Historical accuracy EditThe Bayeux Tapestry was probably commissioned by the House of Normandy and essentially depicts a Norman viewpoint However Harold is shown as brave and his soldiers are not belittled Throughout William is described as dux duke whereas Harold also called dux up to his coronation is subsequently called rex king 25 The fact that the narrative extensively covers Harold s activities in Normandy in 1064 indicates that the intention was to show a strong relationship between that expedition and the Norman Conquest starting two years later It is for this reason that the tapestry is generally seen by modern scholars as an apologia for the Norman Conquest Coronation of Harold seemingly by Stigand The tapestry s narration seems to place stress on Harold s oath to William although its rationale is not made clear 19 Norman sources claim that the English succession was being pledged to William but English sources give varied accounts 19 Today it is thought that the Norman sources are to be preferred 37 Both the tapestry and Norman sources 38 name Stigand the excommunicated archbishop of Canterbury as the man who crowned Harold possibly to discredit Harold s kingship one English source 39 suggests that he was crowned by Ealdred archbishop of York and favoured by the papacy making Harold s position as legitimate king more secure Contemporary scholarship has not decided the matter although it is generally thought that Ealdred performed the coronation 40 41 Although political propaganda or personal emphasis may have somewhat distorted the historical accuracy of the story the Bayeux Tapestry constitutes a visual record of medieval arms apparel and other objects unlike any other artifact surviving from this period There is no attempt at continuity between scenes either in individuals appearance or clothing The knights carry shields but show no system of hereditary coats of arms the beginnings of modern heraldic structure were in place but would not become standard until the middle of the 12th century 19 It has been noted that the warriors are depicted fighting with bare hands while other sources indicate the general use of gloves in battle and hunt The American historian Stephen D White in a study of the tapestry 42 has cautioned against reading it as an English or Norman story showing how the animal fables visible in the borders may instead offer a commentary on the dangers of conflict and the futility of pursuing power 43 Replicas and continuations Edit Start of the Bayeux Tapestry replica in Reading Museum Berkshire A number of replicas of the Bayeux Tapestry have been created Through the collaboration of William Morris with textile manufacturer Thomas Wardle Wardle s wife Elizabeth who was an accomplished seamstress embarked on creating a reproduction in 1885 25 She organised some 37 women in her Leek School of Art Embroidery to collaborate working from a full scale water colour facsimile drawing provided by the South Kensington Museum The full size replica was finished in 1886 and is now exhibited in Reading Museum in Reading Berkshire England 44 45 The naked figure in the original tapestry in the border below the AElfgyva figure is depicted wearing a brief garment because the drawing which was worked from was similarly bowdlerised 25 The replica was digitised and made available online in 2020 46 Ray Dugan of University of Waterloo Ontario Canada completed a stitched replica in 1996 47 Since its completion it has been displayed in various museums and galleries in Canada and the United States 48 In 2000 a Danish association Vikingegruppen Lindholm Hoje began making a replica of the Bayeux Tapestry using the original sewing techniques 49 The replica was completed in June 2014 and went on permanent exhibition at Borglum Abbey in May 2015 50 Dr E D Wheeler former judge and former dean at Oglethorpe University commissioned a hand painted full size replica of the Bayeux Tapestry completed by Margaret ReVille and donated it to the University of West Georgia in Carrollton in 1994 In 2014 the replica was acquired by the University of North Georgia in Dahlonega 51 Sections of the 1066 Medieval Mosaic re creation in New Zealand An approximately half scale mosaic version of the Bayeux Tapestry was formerly on display at Geraldine New Zealand 52 It was made up of 1 5 million 7 mm2 pieces of spring steel off cuts from patterning disks of knitting machines and was created by Michael Linton over a period of twenty years from 1979 The work was in 32 sections and included a hypothetical reconstruction of the missing final section leading up to William the Conqueror s coronation at Westminster Abbey on Christmas Day 1066 53 Jason Welch a woodcarver from North Creake Norfolk England created a replica of the tapestry between 2011 and 2014 in carved and painted wooden relief on 25 five foot planks He undertook the project to help cope with the grief of losing his 18 year old son 54 Mia Hansson from Skanor Sweden living in Wisbech Isle of Ely Cambridgeshire started a reproduction on 13 July 2016 55 As of May 2023 update she had completed 40 metres saying that she expected to finish in some 4 years Hansson takes part of her replica out for talk and display events In September 2020 she published Mia s Bayeux Tapestry Colouring Book with hand drawn images from the tapestry 56 57 Other modern artists have attempted to complete the work by creating panels depicting subsequent events up to William s coronation though the actual content of the missing panels is unknown In 1997 the embroidery artist Jan Messent completed a reconstruction showing William accepting the surrender of English nobles at Berkhamsted Beorcham Hertfordshire and his coronation 58 59 60 In early 2013 416 residents of Alderney in the Channel Islands finished a continuation including William s coronation and the building of the Tower of London 61 In popular culture Edit Street art in Bayeux referring to the Tapestry Because it resembles a modern comic strip or movie storyboard is widely recognised and is so distinctive in its artistic style the Bayeux Tapestry has frequently been used or reimagined in a variety of different popular culture contexts George Wingfield Digby wrote in 1957 It was designed to tell a story to a largely illiterate public it is like a strip cartoon racy emphatic colourful with a good deal of blood and thunder and some ribaldry 62 It has been cited by Scott McCloud in Understanding Comics as an example of early sequential narrative art 63 and Bryan Talbot a British comic book artist has called it the first known British comic strip 64 It has inspired many modern political and other cartoons including John Hassall s satirical pastiche Ye Berlyn Tapestrie published in 1915 which tells the story of the German invasion of Belgium in August 1914 65 Rea Irvin s cover for the New Yorker magazine of 15 July 1944 marking D Day 66 George Gale s pastiche chronicling the saga leading up to Britain s entry into the European Economic Community published across six pages in The Times s Europa supplement on 1 January 1973 67 The tapestry has inspired modern embroideries most notably and directly The Overlord Embroidery 1974 commemorating Operation Overlord and the Normandy landings of 1944 now at Portsmouth The Prestonpans Tapestry 2010 which chronicles the events surrounding the Battle of Prestonpans in 1745Other embroideries more loosely inspired by it include the Hastings Embroidery 1966 the New World Tapestry 1980 2000 the Quaker Tapestry 1981 89 the Great Tapestry of Scotland 2013 the Scottish Diaspora Tapestry 2014 15 Magna Carta An Embroidery 2014 15 and in this case a woven tapestry with embroidered details the Game of Thrones Tapestry 2017 19 A number of films have used sections of the tapestry in their opening credits or closing titles including Disney s Bedknobs and Broomsticks Anthony Mann s El Cid Franco Zeffirelli s Hamlet Frank Cassenti s La Chanson de Roland Kevin Reynolds Robin Hood Prince of Thieves and Richard Fleischer s The Vikings 68 The design and embroidery of the tapestry form one of the narrative strands of Marta Morazzoni s 1988 novella The Invention of Truth The tapestry is referred to in Tony Kushner s play Angels in America The apocryphal account of Queen Matilda s creation of the tapestry is used perhaps in order to demonstrate that Louis one of the main characters holds himself to mythological standards 69 In March 2022 the French specialist factual documentary Mysteries of the Bayeux Tapestry was broadcast by BBC Four 70 The programme explores both the history of the tapestry and the scientific and archaeological stories that lie within its embroidery The original 90 minute documentary written by Jonas Rosales directed by Alexis de Favitski and produced by Antoine Bamas was cut to 59 minutes for the BBC broadcast 71 The documentary includes the work of scientists from the Laboratoire d Archeologie Moleculaire et Structurale LAMS at the French National Centre for Scientific Research using a hyperspectral camera measuring 215 different colours to analyse the exact pigments used to produce the original colours for the dyed woollen threads derived from madder weld and indigo 70 Notes Edit a b The exact number of scenes is not clearly defined the Musee de la Tapisserie de Bayeux states 58 scenes although some interpretations regard the tapestry as being divided into 70 scenes 3 4 Professor Christopher Norton is emeritus professor of History of Art at the University of York in the Centre for Medieval Studies 29 5 January 1066 6 January 1066 A comet was believed to be a bad omen at this time and Halley s comet would have first appeared in 1066 around 24 April nearly four months after Harold s coronation Possibly about Harold s victory in the Battle of Stamford Bridge although the Tapestry does not specify this This reflected the military reality Clerics were not supposed to shed blood hence Odo has no sword Rather than just praying for the Norman knights however which ought to have been his role Odo seems militarily active References Edit Caviness Madeline H 2001 Reframing Medieval Art Difference Margins Boundaries Medford MA Tufts University Koslin Desiree 1990 Turning Time in the Bayeux Embroidery Textile amp Text 13 28 29 Bertrand Simone 1966 La tapisserie de Bayeux La Pierre qui Vire Zodiaque p 23 et combien pauvre alors ce nom de broderie nous apparait il Sylvette Lemagnen Preface p 9 Musset Lucien 1 November 2005 1989 La Tapisserie de Bayeux œuvre d art et document historique The Bayeux Tapestry annotated edition Translated by Rex Richard First ed Woodbridge United Kingdom Boydell amp Brewer Ltd p 272 ISBN 978 1 84383 163 1 Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online Bayeux Museum Retrieved 17 July 2022 Freeman Henry 21 March 2016 The Middle Ages A History From Beginning to End Hourly History ISBN 978 1 5303 7624 7 Saul Nigel Bayeux Tapestry A Companion to Medieval England Stroud UK Tempus pp 32 33 ISBN 0 7524 2969 8 but see OED Tapestry A textile fabric decorated with designs of ornament or pictorial subjects painted embroidered or woven in colours used for wall hangings curtains covers for seats before mentioning especially those woven in a tapestry weave Fowke Frank Rede The Bayeux Tapestry A History and Description London G Bell amp Sons 1913 Sir Frank Stenton ed et al The Bayeux Tapestry A comprehensive survey London Phaidon 1957 revised 1965 UNESCO World Heritage nomination form in English and French Word document Published 9 May 2006 a b c Wilson David M The Bayeux Tapestry Thames and Hudson 1985 pp 201 27 a b c Coatsworth Elizabeth 2005 Stitches in Time Establishing a History of Anglo Saxon Embroidery In Netherton Robin Owen Crocker Gale R eds Medieval Clothing and Textiles Boydell amp Brewer pp 1 27 ISBN 978 1 84383 123 5 Clarke Howard B 2013 The Identity of the Designer of the Bayeux Tapestry Anglo Norman Studies 35 pp 119 140 doi 10 1017 9781782041085 009 ISBN 978 1 78204 108 5 Designer of the Bayeux Tapestry identified Medievalists net 30 October 2013 Retrieved 30 October 2013 Dodwell C R 1982 Anglo Saxon Art a New Perspective Manchester Manchester UP pp 134 36 ISBN 0 7190 0926 X New Contender for The Bayeux Tapestry from the BBC 22 May 2006 The Bayeux Tapestry The Life Story of a Masterpiece by Carola Hicks 2006 ISBN 0 7011 7463 3 See Grape Wolfgang The Bayeux Tapestry Monument to a Norman Triumph Prestel Publishing 3791313657 Oxford Bibliographies Online Author Contributor Elizabeth Coatsworth Oxford University Press Retrieved 4 August 2013 Beech George Was the Bayeux Tapestry Made in France The Case for St Florent of Saumur The New Middle Ages New York Palgrave Macmillan 1995 reviewed in Robin Netherton and Gale R Owen Crocker editors Medieval Clothing and Textiles Volume 2 Woodbridge Suffolk UK and Rochester New York the Boydell Press 2006 ISBN 1 84383 203 8 a b Bridgeford Andrew 1066 The Hidden History in the Bayeux Tapestry Walker amp Company 2005 ISBN 1 84115 040 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Musset Lucien 2005 The Bayeux Tapestry Boydell Press ISBN 1 84383 163 5 a b c d e f g h Bertrand Simone 1965 1957 The History of the Tapestry In Stenton Frank ed The Bayeux Tapestry revised ed London Phaidon Press pp 88 97 Brown 1988 p 47 Brown 1988 p 48 Hicks 2006 pp 82 84 Brown 1988 p 153 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Hicks Carola 2006 The Bayeux Tapestry The Life Story of a Masterpiece Chatto and Windus ISBN 0 7011 7463 3 For example illustrations in the Bayeux Tapestry can be shown to have been copied from the Old English Hexateuch formerly held in Canterbury and Canterbury was Bishop Odo s English power base Bayeux Tapestry to be displayed in Britain The Times 17 January 2018 Retrieved 19 January 2018 OED Tapestry which goes on to mention especially those woven in a tapestry weave Christopher Norton History of Art The University of York www york ac uk Norton Christopher 23 October 2019 Viewing the Bayeux Tapestry Now and Then Journal of the British Archaeological Association 172 1 52 89 doi 10 1080 00681288 2019 1642012 William of Poitiers Gesta Willelmi ducis Normannorum et regis Anglorum c 1071 Wingfield Digby George 1965 Technique and Production In Stenton Frank ed The Bayeux Tapestry 2nd ed Phaidon Press pp 37 55 37 45 48 People identified on the tapestry bayeux tapestry org uk Retrieved 5 December 2018 Foys Martin 2009 Pulling the Arrow Out The Legend of Harold s Death and the Bayeux Tapestry Woodbridge UK Boydell and Brewer pp 158 75 ISBN 978 1 84383 470 0 Mason Emma 2004 The House of Godwine the history of a dynasty London Hambledon and London ISBN 1852853891 Bertrand Simone The Bayeux Tapestry 1978 p 30 Bates David 2004 William I Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 29448 subscription or UK public library membership required William of Poitiers Gesta Willelmi ducis Normannorum et regis Anglorum c 1071 Orderic Vitalis Historia Ecclesiastica c 1123 1131 Florence of Worcester John of Worcester Chronicon ex Chronicis completed c 1140 Gibbs Smith Charles 1965 Notes on the Plates In Frank Stenton ed The Bayeux Tapestry Phaedon Press Cowdrey H E J 2004 Stigand d 1072 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 26523 subscription or UK public library membership required ACLS American Council of Learned Societies www acls org Results www acls org Archived from the original on 31 July 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2019 Prufrock The Meaning of the Bayeux Tapestry When Israeli Prisoners Translated The Hobbit and the French Anti Keynes The Weekly Standard 25 January 2018 Britain s Bayeux Tapestry at the Museum of Reading Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 17 August 2011 Bayeux Gallery Reading Museum 3 April 2017 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Britain s Bayeux Tapestry Reading Museum 22 January 2021 Retrieved 31 March 2021 Ray Dugan s Bayeux Tapestry Dugansbayeuxtapestry com Retrieved 30 April 2012 Bayeux Tapestry topic of seminar Newsrelease uwaterloo ca 15 March 2001 Retrieved 30 April 2012 Vikingerne kommer The Vikings Are Coming in Danish Kristeligt Dagblad 30 November 2005 Nu haenger Bayeux tapetet i en hestestald i Vendsyssel The Bayeux tapestry displayed in a horse stable in North Jutland Politiken 8 September 2016 Retrieved 5 June 2017 History center to display Bayeux Tapestry replica University of North Georgia Retrieved 24 July 2020 Linton Michael The Medieval Mosaic The Recreation of the Bayeux Tapestry as a 34 metre Medieval Mosaic Masterpiece Archived from the original on 16 February 2016 Retrieved 17 August 2011 A Medieval Mosaic Medieval Mosaic 1066 Retrieved 7 February 2014 Lazzari Adam 14 January 2014 Photo gallery Norfolk man creates a 135ft wooden version of the Bayeux Tapestry to help cope with his son s death Dereham Times Retrieved 15 June 2020 Monger Garry 2022 Fenland s Bayeux Tapestry The Fens 49 20 Hansson Mia 2020 Mia s Bayeux Tapestry Colouring Book March Eyrie Press ISBN 978 1 913149 11 6 Hansson Mia Mia s Bayeux Tapestry Story Facebook Retrieved 6 February 2019 Berkhamsted Castle Berkhamsted Local History Society Retrieved 9 February 2013 Invasion of England Submission to William PDF Castle Panels Berkhamsted Castle Archived from the original PDF on 8 July 2011 Retrieved 9 February 2013 discussed in Castle Panels 2014 Archived from the original on 19 February 2014 Retrieved 11 February 2014 Messant Jan 1999 Bayeux Tapestry Embroiderers Story Thirsk Madeira Threads p 112 ISBN 978 0 9516348 5 1 Bayeux Tapestry ending made in Alderney BBC News 9 February 2013 Wingfield Digby Technique and Production p 37 McCloud 1993 Understanding Comics pp 11 14 The History of the British Comic Bryan Talbot The Guardian Guide 8 September 2007 p 5 Hassall John 2014 1915 Ye Berlyn Tapestrie Oxford Bodleian Library ISBN 978 1 85124 416 4 The New Yorker Conde Nast 15 July 1944 Retrieved 30 October 2014 Steven Alasdair 24 September 2003 George Gale Obituary The Scotsman Archived from the original on 3 November 2014 Retrieved 3 November 2014 Burt Richard July 2007 Re embroidering the Bayeux Tapestry in Film and Media The Flip Side of History in Opening and End Title Sequences Exemplaria 19 2 327 350 doi 10 1179 175330707X212895 S2CID 161901758 SparkNote on Angels in America SparkNotes SparkNotes LLC Retrieved 30 October 2014 Louis s problem is exacerbated by his tendency towards abstraction and his unreasonably high standards for himself In Scene Three he tells Emily about La Reine Mathilde who supposedly created the Bayeux Tapestry Louis describes La Reine s unceasing devotion to William the Conqueror and laments his own comparative lack of devotion But as critic Allen J Frantzen has pointed out this popular story about Mathilde and the tapestry is wrong it was actually created in England decades after the conquest Louis then is holding himself to a mythological standard of loyalty and he curses himself based on a positively unreal example This is part of a larger pattern of excessive guilt and harshness toward himself which paradoxically prevents him from judging his own weaknesses accurately and trying to correct them Because no one could possibly live up to Mathilde s example Louis initially justifies his moral failure Later in Perestroika he will arrive at a more genuine remorse and an honest understanding of what he has done a b BBC Four Mysteries of the Bayeux Tapestry BBC Elmes John BBC4 to reversion Bayeux Tapestry doc Broadcast Further reading EditBackhouse Janet Turner D H Webster Leslie eds 1984 The Golden Age of Anglo Saxon Art 966 1066 London British Museum Publications ISBN 0 7141 0532 5 Bates David Barral i Altet Xavier 2019 La Tapisserie de Bayeux Paris Citadelles amp Mazenod Bernstein David J 1986 The Mystery of Bayeux Tapestry Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 0 297 78928 7 Bloch Howard 2006 A Needle in the Right Hand of God The Norman Conquest of 1066 and the Making and Meaning of the Bayeux Tapestry Random House ISBN 978 1 4000 6549 3 Bridgeford Andrew 2005 1066 the hidden history in the Bayeux Tapestry Walker amp Company ISBN 978 0 8027 7742 3 Brown Shirley Ann 1988 The Bayeux Tapestry History and Bibliography Woodbridge Boydell ISBN 978 0 85115 509 8 Burt Richard 2007 Loose Threads Weaving Around Women in the Bayeux Tapestry and Cinema in Medieval Film ed Anke Bernau and Bettina Bildhauer Manchester University Press Burt Richard July 2007 Re embroidering the Bayeux Tapestry in Film and Media The Flip Side of History in Opening and End Title Sequences Exemplaria 19 2 327 350 doi 10 1179 175330707X212895 S2CID 161901758 Burt Richard 2009 Border Skirmishes Weaving Around the Bayeux Tapestry and Cinema in Robin Hood Prince of Thieves and El Cid In Medieval Film Ed Anke Bernau and Bettina Bildhauer Manchester Manchester UP pp 158 18 Burt Richard 2008 Medieval and Early Modern Film and Media New York and London Palgrave Macmillan xiv 279 pp Paperback edition 2010 Campbell Miles Warren 1984 Aelfgyva The Mysterious Lady of the Bayeux Tapestry Annales de Normandie 34 2 127 145 doi 10 3406 annor 1984 5553 Foys Martin K 2003 Bayeux Tapestry Digital Edition Individual licence ed CD ROM On line version 2013 Foys Martin K Overbey Karen Eileen Overbey and Terkla Dan eds 2009 The Bayeux Tapestry New Interpretations Boydell and Brewer ISBN 978 1783271245 Gibbs Smith C H 1973 The Bayeux Tapestry London New York Phaidon Praeger Hicks Carola 2006 The Bayeux Tapestry The Life Story of a Masterpiece London Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 0 7011 7463 7 Jones Chas 2005 The Yorkshire Preface to the Bayeux Tapestry The Events of September 1066 Depicted In a Community Tapestry Writers Print Shop first edition ISBN 978 1 904623 37 3 Pastan Elizabeth Carson and Stephen White with Kate Gilbert 2014 The Bayeux Tapestry and its Contexts A Reassessment Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 941 5 Rud Mogens 1992 The Bayeux Tapestry and the Battle of Hastings 1066 Christian Eilers Publishers Copenhagen contains full colour photographs and explanatory text Werckmeister Otto Karl 1976 The Political Ideology of the Bayeux Tapestry Studi Medievali 3rd Series 17 no 2 535 95 Wilson David McKenzie ed 2004 The Bayeux Tapestry the Complete Tapestry in Color Rev ed New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 25122 5 0 394 54793 4 1985 ed LC NK3049 Wissolik Richard David 1982 Duke William s Messengers An Insoluble Reverse Order Scene of the Bayeux Tapestry Medium AEvum 51 1 102 107 doi 10 2307 43632127 JSTOR 43632127 ProQuest 1293416903 Wissolik Richard David March 1979 The Monk Eadmer as Historian of the Norman Succession Korner and Freeman Examined American Benedictine Review pp 32 42 Wissolik Richard David The Saxon Statement Code in the Bayeux Tapestry Annuale Mediaevale 19 September 1979 69 97 Wissolik Richard David 1989 The Bayeux Tapestry A Critical Annotated Bibliography with Cross References and Summary Outlines of Scholarship 1729 1988 Greensburg Eadmer Press External links Edit Anglo Saxon England portal Media related to Bayeux Tapestry at Wikimedia Commons Bayeux Tapestry Bayeux Museum Digital exploration of the tapestry High quality panoramic image of Bayeux Tapestry Bibliotheca Augustana A Guide to the Bayeux Tapestry Latin English translation The Bayeux Tapestry collection of videos articles and bibliography Bayeux Tapestry The Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed 1911 pp 555 556 With 16 images Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bayeux Tapestry amp oldid 1160819142, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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