The Bayeux Tapestry is instantly recognisable as one of the most outstanding cultural objects to survive from the early Middle Ages. Long admired for its vivid narrative, today many questions intrigue the modern audience. This lecture looks at the tapestry’s creation – was it made by men or women and in England or France? In more recent times you will hear why the tapestry was displayed by Napoleon, why it was cherished by Victorian embroiderers and why Hitler wasn’t able to purloin it.
Timothy brings a lifetime’s interest in Anglo-French relations to bear on this famous object set to become even more celebrated as it enters its next, surprising chapter.


