1066 : the hidden history in the Bayeux Tapestry

by Andrew Bridgeford

Ebook, 2006

Status

Available

Call number

942.02/1

Publication

New York : [Place of publication not identified] : Walker ; Distributed to the trade by Holtzbrinck, 2006, ©2004.

Description

The Bayeux Tapestry was embroidered in the late 11th century. As an artefact, it is priceless, incomparable - nothing of its delicacy, texture, let alone wit, survives from the period. As a pictorial story it is delightful: the first feature-length cartoon. As history it is essential: it represents the moment of Britain's last conquest by a foreign army and celebrates the Norman victory over the blinded Saxon Harold. Or does it ?

User reviews

LibraryThing member john257hopper
A well researched and highly readable history and analysis. The author rejects the traditional view that the tapestry is pure Norman propaganda, though it can superficially be read in that way. He detects traits of sympathy for the English side in the depiction of Harold saving two Norman soldiers
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from drowning and arguably negotiating for the release of his brother Wulfnoth, rather than communicating King Edward's supposed wish for William to succeed him, as the Norman version had it.

The author's view is that the commissioner was Eustace of Boulogne, who was a lukewarm ally of William, but later fell out with William's brother Odo. The tapestry may have been a peace offering to Odo when they made up.

This seemed plausible but the later analyses of the unknown figures named in the tapestry such as Turold (who he claims was a jongleur who may have authored the Chanson de Roland) seem to interpret the evidence a shade too far beyond what can rationally be surmised. The same went for his theory about Aelfgyva, who he thinks represents Canute's English wife Aelfgifu of Northampton. But they, and the whole book, made for fascinating reading.
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LibraryThing member nmaloney
Though I believe this book could have been more accessible, it is definately worth a read if you are interested in history of this period. The fact that a textile, such as the Bayeux Tapestry not only survived the ages, but also still tells a tale is fascinating.
LibraryThing member johnleague
I am an unabashed Anglophile, and as such I have read more books about British history than I have about American history. I also know just enough about history to be a danger to myself and others, but I know my limits. Still, I think it is arguable that the Norman invasion of England in 1066 is
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one of those few events in world history that marks an inflection point, one at which everything that came after it was informed by it. The Bayeux Tapestry is an impressive historical and textilic artifact that forms the basis of much of what historians know or think they know about the Norman invasion.

Andrew Bridgeford is one of those chaps who probably drove his teachers crazy in school asking questions like, "But how do we know that's what really happened?" Here, Bridgeford reconsiders everything that is accepted about the tapestry and presses each point with questions until they confess to their fallacies or clam up. Thankfully, his book is also the only I know of that examines how the tapestry survived for 900 years through the tumult of history.
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LibraryThing member k8_not_kate
Andrew Bridgeford's "1066: The Hidden History in the Bayeux Tapestry" ran hot and cold for me, but for the most part was very interesting and offered an excellent analysis of the tapestry. The positives are that Bridgeford examines not only the story the Bayeux Tapestry tells (that is, the Norman
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invasion of England), but he also examines a bevy of hidden meanings and subtexts that may or may not be present in its famous pictures. He also gives a very captivating account of the tapestry's life since its creation, including a few close shaves while in the hands of Napoleon and, later, Hitler. The style is light and offers the right amount of analysis for a popular history. I also felt Bridgeford presented his opinion on some of the more mysterious aspects of the tapestry's creation and purpose in a balanced though still persuasive way.

One minor negative is that Bridgeport has a habit of getting over dramatic at times. Nothing too distracting, but now and then I felt it detracted from the otherwise scholarly-yet-readable tone of the book. Also, the occasional chapter drags. I'm more forgiving of this in unflinchingly textbook-like histories but this book is clearly meant to be for the casual historian. I could have done with a bit less information on the four mystery characters of the tapestry (the dwarf Turold; Aelfgyva; and the knights Wadard and VItal). They weren't totally uninteresting, they just could have been explained more briefly.

One very pleasant and surprising thing I got from "1066" was a spirited overview of the political situation in England following the death of Aethelred the Unready through to the ascension of Edward the Confessor. This is a sadly neglected period in the way of accessible histories. While I had already read a good dry, scholarly treatment of the era ("Unification and Conquest" by Pauline Stafford), I like to combine such books with a more general, lighter treatment: it helps me remember details and keep everything straight. Bridgeport provides us with that popular-history treatment in his chapter on Aelfgyva. I now have a much better handle on this pre-conquest stretch of time. I would even recommend reading just that chapter to help fill in the gap between Alfred the Great and the conquest even if you're not interested in the tapestry's whole story. Of course, if you are interested, I highly recommend reading the whole thing.
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LibraryThing member FPdC
Before reading this book, in February 2006, I had never heard of the Bayeux Tapestry, and if I had not stumbled over it in Westminster Abbey's bookshop, it would have been very unlikely I would ever noticed its existence in a normal bookshop, medieval english history being as far away from my
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interests as the grammar of ancient phoenician... Once said this, I can only be thankful for having discovered this book and the marvelous story it unfolds. Well known to all britons, the Bayeux tapestry is a fragile and exquisite embroidery (reproduced in the book in full colour and in its entirety), remarkably large (about seventy meters long by circa half a meter wide), and whose very survival, from the date of its creation in the second half of the eleventh century, has being nothing short of miracolous. It depicts the story of the Norman conquest of Britain in 1066, and this book is about the tapestry, the conquest, and much else. Written in a lively and engaging style, it starts by telling the story of the tapestry itself (or what is known of it), from the first inequivocal reference to its existence in 1476 (some four hundred years after its creation) through the dangerous times of the religious wars in France, the Revolution, the 2nd World War and the Nazi ocupation, until its present day location in a museum in Bayeux. After this, the book turns into the story depicted in the tapestry, telling what seems to be a rather consensual reading of it, and finally it gives the author's interpretations of certain more obscure aspects of the tapestry (Count Eustace's role, Turold the dwarf, Ælfgyva's episode, Wadard and Vital's significance) in a way that does make sense in relation to the rest of the story told by the tapestry, which is shown by the author to have several reading layers and to be rather removed from the linear piece of Norman propaganda that more convencional readings have postulated. An enticing book about a marvelous work of art, and historical document, whose close observation would by itself be a very good reason to visit Normandy!
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LibraryThing member Harrod
Quite engaging
LibraryThing member EowynA
Most of the book is a detailed discussion of the various scenes in the long embroidery, with relevant historical context. His take on it is that it was Not commissioned by Archbishop Odo of Bayeux (as most scholarship up till now tends to agree upon), but rather that it was drawn by at least a
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sympathizer for the Anglo-Saxon side, possibly a Frenchman but not a Norman, rather than just propoganda for the Norman side, and stitched by Anglo-Saxon ladies. It may even have been commissioned by Count Eustace II of Boulogna. I will let the author make that argument.
I particularly liked the scene-by-scene discussion of the tapestry, and what particular scenes may imply.
Another tidbit I found fascinating is that the dwarf depicted, Turold, is not only one of the very few named people in the piece, but he bears the same name as the purported author of the Chanson de Roland, which was likely written about the same time that this was stitched, and perhaps in about the same place. The author makes the case for the possibility that Turold was named because of a connection with the Chanson. Again, not definitive, but worth considering.
There are plenty of footnotes and references for those who want additional clarifications, but since they are bunched at the end, don't impede just reading the story as it unfolds.
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Language

Original publication date

2004

ISBN

0802719406 / 9780802719409

Local notes

This catalogue record is generated as a result of Non Print Legal Deposit processing
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