In preÂviÂous cenÂturies, unless you were a memÂber of the nobilÂiÂty, a wealthy reliÂgious order, or a merÂchant guild, your chances of spendÂing any sigÂnifÂiÂcant amount of time with a Medieval tapesÂtry were slim. Though “much proÂducÂtion was relÂaÂtiveÂly coarse, intendÂed for decÂoÂraÂtive purÂposÂes,” writes the MetÂroÂpolÂiÂtan MuseÂum of Art, the tapesÂtry still comÂmandÂed high prices, just as it comÂmandÂed respect for its ownÂer. And as othÂer decÂoÂraÂtive arts of the time preÂserved hisÂtorÂiÂcal memory—or cerÂtain politÂiÂcal verÂsions of it, at least—tapestry designs might embody “celÂeÂbraÂtoÂry or proÂpaÂganÂdisÂtic themes” in their weft and warp.
“Enriched with silk and gilt metalÂlic thread,” writes the Met, “such tapesÂtries were a cenÂtral comÂpoÂnent of the ostenÂtaÂtious magÂnifÂiÂcence used by powÂerÂful secÂuÂlar and reliÂgious rulers to broadÂcast their wealth and might.” Such is one of the most famous of these works, the Bayeux TapesÂtry, which comÂmemÂoÂrates the 1066 vicÂtoÂry of William the ConÂqueror at the BatÂtle of HastÂings. The famous wall hangÂing, housed at the Bayeux MuseÂum in NorÂmandy, was “probÂaÂbly comÂmisÂsioned in the 1070s” by BishÂop Odo of Bayeux, William’s half-brothÂer, makÂing it a very earÂly examÂple of the form. So the site of a VicÂtoÂriÂan-era repliÂca writes, and yet “nothÂing known is cerÂtain about the tapestry’s oriÂgins.” (The first writÂten record of it dates from 1476.)
While the Bayeux TapesÂtry may have been inacÂcesÂsiÂble to most peoÂple for howÂevÂer many cenÂturies it has existÂed, you can now stand before it in its home of Bayeux, or see the very conÂvincÂing repliÂca at Britain’s ReadÂing MuseÂum. (You’ll note in both casÂes that the Bayeux tapesÂtry is not, in fact, a tapesÂtry, woven on a loom, but a painstakÂing, hand-stitched embroiÂdery.) Or, rather than travÂelÂing, you can watch the video above, an aniÂmatÂed renÂdiÂtion of the tapestry’s stoÂry by filmÂmakÂer David NewÂton and sound designÂer Marc SylÂvan.
DurÂing the years 1064 to the fateÂful 1066, a fierce rivalÂry took shape as the ailÂing King Edward the ConÂfesÂsor’s adviÂsor Harold GodÂwinÂson and William the ConÂqueror vied for the crown. Once Edward died in 1066, Harold seized the throne, promptÂing William to invade and defeat him at the BatÂtle of HastÂings. The TapesÂtry gives us a graphÂic hisÂtoÂry of this bloody conÂtest, “a stoÂry,” writes the Bayeux MuseÂum, “broadÂly in keepÂing with the accounts of authors of the 11th cenÂtuÂry.” “The TapesÂtry’s depicÂtion of the BatÂtle of HastÂings,” hisÂtoÂriÂan Robert Bartlett tells us, “is the fullest picÂtoÂrÂiÂal record of a medieval batÂtle in existence”—and the aniÂmaÂtion above makes it come alive with sound and moveÂment.
Note: The AniÂmatÂed Bayeux TapesÂtry above was origÂiÂnalÂly creÂatÂed as a stuÂdent project. David NewÂton proÂvidÂed the aniÂmaÂtion, and Marc SylÂvan creÂatÂed the origÂiÂnal music and sound effects. Enjoy!
RelatÂed ConÂtent:
ConÂstruct Your Own Bayeux TapesÂtry with This Free Online App
How the Ornate TapesÂtries from the Age of Louis XIV Were Made (and Are Still Made Today)
Josh Jones is a writer and musiÂcian based in Durham, NC. FolÂlow him at @jdmagness
Leave a Reply