The Bayeux Tapestry - new threads on old linen

The Bayeux Tapestry - new threads on old linen

Dr John Morewood looks in more detail at the history of the famous Bayeux tapestry, originally created in the eleventh century

By SAHAAS Events Team

Date and time

Tue, 21 May 2024 19:45 - 21:15 GMT+1

Location

Dagnall Street Baptist Church

1 Cross Street St Albans AL3 5EE United Kingdom

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event
Eventbrite's fee is nonrefundable.

About this event

  • 1 hour 30 minutes

Most of us are aware of the brilliant depictions from the 223ft embroidery known since 1729 as ‘The Bayeux Tapestry’. It is now generally accepted that it was produced in England, probably at workshops connected to St Augustine’s Abbey, Canterbury, and dates from the first decades after 1066. In this talk we look at some other fascinating aspects. How was it manufactured? Where are the embroidery errors? What restorations were made and how have these distorted our understanding of the story it portrays? We also consider where the embroidery may have been before its first recorded appearance in Bayeux in 1476 and how it was saved by, of all people, the German Commandant of Paris in 1944.

John Morewood is President of the St Albans & Hertfordshire Architectural & Archaeological Society. He has run historical tours on Norman rule in both England and Normandy.

This lecture will be available in person at Dagnall Street Baptist Church and online via Zoom.

This is our first talk at Dagnall Street Baptist Church, our new venue, rather than the previously advertised Marlborough Road Methodist Church. Do come along and tell us what you think of the facilities over refreshments following the talk.

Attendance is free to members; £5 for non-members. Please click on the button above right, and register your option. You will then receive confirmation of your registration by email return. Registration closes at 3.30pm on Tuesday 21 May.

All those registered will be emailed the Zoom joining instructions by 4pm on the day of the lecture. If you have not received this by 5pm, please contact us using the email address below. NB. If you are registering two or more members to attend via Zoom, and want each of them to receive the link in their own email inbox, these details need to be entered at registration.

If you have any questions, please email Gill Girdziusz via lectures@stalbanshistory.org


Image above: At the start of the tapestry King Edward the Confessor sends his brother-in-law Harold to Normandy (Wikicommons)

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