Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Should the Bayeux tapestry be brought back to England?

On June 24th, the BBC Radio 4 Programme Today interviewed Dr Dave Musgrove, the editor of BBC History magazine, and Dr Carola Hicks, art historian, about where the Bayeux Tapestry. To listen to their five minute conversation, please click here.

Tapestry row sparks new Norman conflict
Stephen McGinty
25 June 2008
The Scotsman

IT IS the most famous cartoon strip in history, the story of the Norman Conquest in 1066 detailed in colourful weave and stitch. But the Bayeux Tapestry, one of France's national treasures, was, historians now believe, actually made in Britain and should be repatriated.

The 70-metre tapestry that depicts the campaign of William the Conqueror currently sits in the town of Bayeux, in Normandy, where records show it has been since at least 1476. Yet there is a growing evidence that, instead of being created in France as was previously thought, the tapestry was stitched by English hands and should now be sent back.



The British government has twice before requested a loan of the tapestry, first for the Queen's coronation in 1953 and again in 1966, for the 900th anniversary of the Battle of Hastings. Neither request was successful. However, yesterday the editor of BBC History Magazine said that the tapestry should be allowed to be displayed in England.

Dave Musgrove said most experts were now agreed it was created on this side of the Channel. He said: "There is a pretty good academic consensus that it could well have been made in Canterbury. The Latin script that accompanies the pictorial images shows signs of being written by someone who came from an Anglo-Saxon background. Secondly the imagery in the tapestry is very similar to imagery that we know was in illuminated manuscripts that we know were in Canterbury's library at the time. It is an iconic document of English history and wouldn't it be amazing to have it shown in England where there is a very good chance it was made, and wouldn't that inspire people to get involved in medieval history? The crowds would come flocking."

According to French legend, the tapestry was created by Queen Matilda, William the Conqueror's wife, with the assistance of her ladies-in-waiting and as a result the tapestry is also known as "La Tapisserie de la Reine Mathilde" (Queen Matilda's Tapestry). In recent decades, however, scholarly analysis indicates that it was commissioned by Bishop Odo, William's half-brother, possibly to display in Bayeux Cathedral at the time of the building's completion in 1077.

However, as the Bishop's main power base at the time was in Kent, the tapestry is now believed to have been designed and constructed in England by Anglo-Saxon artists. Yet one other candidate, recently put forward by Carola Hicks, an art historian at Cambridge University, is Edith of Wessex, the widow of Edward the Confessor, whose death in 1066 led to the dispute over succession and the battle of Hastings. Ms Hick's posits the theory that Edith, one of only three clothed women portrayed in the tapestry, had it made to strengthen her new position in the Norman hierarchy and to show her support for the new King William.

Over the years the tapestry has been used in opening or closing credits of a number of films including El Cid, which starred Charlton Heston and Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves with Kevin Costner. The style of the tapestry, which was described by the artist, Bryan Talbot, as the "first known British comic strip", was even parodied in The Simpsons. Michael Lewis, the deputy director of the Portable Antiquities Scheme, and the author of The Real World of the Bayeux Tapestry, said: "I think it would be lovely to see it in this country. If the tapestry was returned, it would be possible to display it with the works that it was influenced by."

However, Sylvette Lemagnen, curator of the Bayeux Tapestry Museum in Normandy, where the artefact currently sits behind four layers of armoured glass, said any move would require high-level permission. "It is not my responsibility nor the responsibility of the town of Bayeux to answer such a question because the tapestry belongs to the French state," she said.



BRITISH CLAIM TO BAYEUX TAPESTRY
By Joe Churcher
24 June 2008
Press Association National Newswire

One of France's national treasures, the Bayeux Tapestry, was made in Britain and should be put on show in this country, a historian said today. The 70-metre woven medieval depiction of William the Conqueror's 1066 invasion is a major tourist draw in the Normandy town of Bayeux, where records show it has been since at least 1476. But Dave Musgrove, editor of BBC History Magazine, said most experts were now agreed that it was created on this side of the Channel 400 years earlier.

"There is a pretty good academic consensus that it could well have been made in Canterbury," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. "The Latin script that accompanies the pictorial images shows signs of being written by someone who came from an Anglo-Saxon background. And secondly the imagery in the tapestry is very similar to imagery that we know was in illuminated manuscripts that we know were in Canterbury's library at the time."

He went on: "It is an iconic document of English history. Yes it relates to French and Norman history as well but for English history it is really, really important. And wouldn't it be amazing to have it shown in England where there is a very good chance it was made and wouldn't that inspire people to get involved in medieval history. The crowds would come flocking."

Art historian Carola Hicks said it "could well" have been made in England but urged caution over any attempt to move it. "It has been in France since 1476 and it is a French national monument so I think there are very grave issues in laying claims on a nationalistic basis," she said.

Lessons from history also counselled against the idea, she suggested, pointing out that Napoleon brought it to Paris as a propaganda weapon when he was planning to invade England in 1803. "Look what happened to him."

The head of the Nazi SS Heinrich Himmler also spent most of the Second World War plotting to remove it to Berlin, she said. Dr Musgrove said a replica sown by Victorian needlewomen in the 1880s and on display in Reading was excellent but "doesn't look quite the same".

Medieval boat discovered in North Suffolk

THE unearthing of a medieval boat on the north Suffolk coast is of “great...
25 June 2008
East Anglian Daily Times


THE unearthing of a medieval boat on the north Suffolk coast is of “great national importance”, the archaeological team behind the discovery said last night. As reported in yesterday's EADT the remains were found during excavations at Sizewell in advance of the onshore works for the Greater Gabbard Wind Farm.

The vessel, which was probably a small inshore fishing boat, was broken up sometime between the 12th and 14th Centuries and parts of its hull were re-used to create a timber lining for a well. Robert Atfield, Suffolk County Council Archaeological Service's project manager, said: “The waterlogged conditions have ensured that the timbers are very well preserved. It is very rare to find a timber boat like this preserved to such a great extent, this is very much a significant find and of great importance nationally. This kind of lucky find is something which does not happen very often, we will now be looking at trying to conserve the timbers. We might try and reconstruct and display the vessel in the future.”

The other finds include a wide range of pottery, part of a wooden platter, various personal items such as buckles and clothing fasteners, fishing hooks, and weights. All of the discoveries from the dig will now be cleaned, conserved and studied in further detail. Mr Atfield added: “Where we found the boat was probably the inland edge of the settlement that was Sizewell. It would have been very much a thriving settlement based near to the beach, but large areas of land were eroded by the sea during the 12th Century and much of the settlement lost.”

The area around the dig site would have been part of the property of Leiston Abbey, it follows the edge of a low-lying channel, which would have formed a fresh water lagoon and would have been the focus for a variety of activities. There is evidence of timber buildings, hearths and wood-lined water pits clustered at the channel's edge.

Leiston Abbey, formerly known as St Mary's Abbey, was founded in 1182 near Minsmere by Ranulf de Glanville, Lord Chief Justice to King Henry II. In 1363 the abbey was transferred to Leiston, and its patron Robert de Ufford, Earl of Suffolk, devoted his last years to the building.

Peter Simoyi, project manager for South East Electricity Substantions Alliance - one of the partners jointly funding the dig, said: “It's nice to think that in the process of connecting a new energy source for Suffolk's future, we have been able to shed light on the county's past.”

Tewkesbury's Medieval Festival

Medieval festival will be the biggest and best yet
24 June 2008
Gloucestershire Echo


Tewkesbury's Medieval Festival is a major event in the town's annual calendar and one that attracts participants and visitors in their thousands. This year the festival takes place on Saturday and Sunday, July 12 and 13 at Lincoln Green Lane, as part of Tewkesbury's Over the Rainbow - a week-long series of events to mark the year anniversary of the summer floods.

This year is the 25th anniversary of the medieval festival and, in celebration, a bigger than ever programme of activities is promised. Following a procession through the town, a full scale joust will be staged by a group named Destrier (the medieval word for a knight's horse), along with a display of skills at arms.

Well-known actor and historian Robert Hardy will be giving a talk on the history of the English long bow. On Saturday evening, Theatre of Alchemy will be staging a spectacular fire show in the vicarage garden and the medieval market is planned to be bigger than ever.

Re-creations of the battle of Tewkesbury in 1471 featuring armies of more than 2,000 re-enactors from all over Europe take place at 4pm on Saturday and 3pm on Sunday. Guided walking tours of the battlefield take place at 7pm on July 3 and 13. For more information, please contact 01684 855040.

If you're trying to get fit, take yourself along to Cascades for an early morning gym and swim. The leisure centre is open from 6.30am to 9am every weekday. As ever, a full programme of films and live entertainment is to be found at the Roses Theatre.

Something that promises to be of interest to Laurel and Hardy fans is on Thursday, July 10 when a new play by Bob Kingdom, Stan Laurel Please Stand Up, is given its world premiere. The play was written with assistance from the funny man's daughter.

The maze of alleyways that lead from Tewkesbury's three main streets has a fascinating story to tell. You can learn how they came to be built and what it was like to live in them in days gone by on a guided walk - for details call 01684 855040.

Over the Rainbow will culminate on July 20, the first anniversary of the floods, with the largest and most spectacular firework display that Tewkesbury has ever seen, a special service in the Abbey, a party in the Abbey grounds and two concerts.

People are invited to gather around the Abbey at noon on July 20 to create a sea of people where the flood waters were last year. Its aim is to prove to the world that Tewkesbury is back in business.

Medieval fair at Oxford Castle

Medieval midsummer fayre
24 June 2008
The Oxford Times


ALMOST 2,000 people took a step back in time for a medieval fair at Oxford Castle. The event, organised by the Oxford Preservation Trust and funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, featured everything from medieval cooking, to ancient games, weapons and warfare.

Oxford Preservation Trust director Debbie Dance said: "It was brilliant. There were masses of people here, people in chainmail, people cooking medieval food on open fires. It was great fun.

Visitors had a chance to learn traditional skills with a medieval flavour. Mrs Dance said: "It took people back in time and was all about things that would have happened in the 15th century."

There were re-enactments of Anglo-Saxon and Viking life from the Wychwood Warriors and 12 foot effigies of King Stephen and Empress Matilda, who were embroiled in a feud in Oxford in 1142.