Bayeux Museum: Unraveling the Bayeux Tapestry's Epic ...
You know that feeling when you're trying to piece together a massive historical event, flipping through textbooks, maybe watching a documentary or two, but it
www.wonderfulmuseums.comThe Bayeux Tapestry is a over seventy meters long embroidered cloth that shows William the Conqueror's 1066 invasion of England. It likely commissioned by Bishop Odo of Bayeux and is housed in Bayeux, Normandy, though some historians argue it may have been done in England. Its scenes are captioned in Medieval Latin. The work is linen embroidery rather than a true textile tapestry and it features 58 episodes with hundreds of figures and narrative details. The first known written reference appears in 1476 in the Bayeux cathedral treasury, establishing its long-standing historical presence. Today preserved in Bayeux, the tapestry remains a key artifact for understanding the Norman Conquest through visual storytelling.
You know that feeling when you're trying to piece together a massive historical event, flipping through textbooks, maybe watching a documentary or two, but it
www.wonderfulmuseums.comThe Bayeux Tapestry shows in pictures the events leading up to the Norman conquest of England by William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, and his 1066 defeat of King Harold Godwinson at the Battle of...
www.worldhistory.orgThough it is called a tapestry, the Bayeux Tapestry is not a tapestry, which were woven, but rather an embroidered “pictorial hanging” made of 18"-tall linen that is roughly 230 feet long.
www.uwosh.eduThe medieval masterpiece—embroidered on a 230-foot piece of linen—depicts a royal betrayal that changed history.
www.mentalfloss.comLearn about the Bayeux tapestry which depicts the Norman Conquest of England, a landmark historical event.
nazmiyalantiquerugs.comThe original Bayeux Tapestry The Bayeux Tapestry is preserved and displayed in Bayeux, in Normandy, France. Nothing is known for certain about the tapestry’s origins. The first written record of the Bayeux Tapestry is in 1476, when it was recorded in the cathedral treasury at Bayeux as 'a very long and narrow hanging on which are embroidered figures and inscriptions comprising a representation of the conquest of England'. The Bayeux Tapestry was probably commissioned in the 1070s by Bishop Odo...
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