Every time the World Cup comes around, or at least since England first and last won it 60 years ago, there’s talk of whether it’ll be brought “back home.” The idea being, of course, that football (or soccer, as it’s called in a couple of the countries hosting this year’s matches) was made in England. However the showdown with Norway goes this Sunday, and indeed how the rest of the World Cup plays out during the week thereafter, something much older — and of much less debatable origins — will be returned to Blighty: the Bayeux Tapestry, which has been kept in the eponymous Normandy town since at least the fourteen-seventies, and most likely centuries earlier than that.
This sizable and intricate piece of embroidered fabric depicts the events leading up to the Battle of Hastings in 1066, the decisive event of the Norman Conquest of England. Legible today as a kind of “medieval comic strip,” as the narrator of this new animated video from the British Museum puts it, the Bayeux Tapestry also reveals “medieval life in amazing detail,” while at the same time “hinting at secrets in its borders.”
For all the scholarly and popular attention paid to it, the work has yet to yield the answers to anywhere near all of its mysteries, nor to lose its fascination through familiarity. It bears, after all, quite a lot of imagery to get familiar with in the first place.
It’s one thing to behold the Bayeux Tapestry through images, however high-resolution, and quite another to behold the real thing. The English have been able to get fairly close to the latter experience since the Victorian era with the aid of the full-size replica, made in 1885, now displayed at the Reading Museum in Berkshire and previously featured here on Open Culture. But this September, the original Bayeux Tapestry will begin its residence at the British Museum, coinciding with the renovation of the Bayeux Museum. (France, for its part, gets a loan of treasures from the ship buried at Sutton Hoo and the Lewis chessmen.) If you get the opportunity to have a look before it’s returned the following year, don’t turn it down; as the World Cup shows us, you can never be sure when the next homecoming will happen.
Related content:
The Bayeux Tapestry Gets Digitized: View the Medieval Tapestry in High Resolution, Down to the Individual Thread
Behold a Creative Animation of the Bayeux Tapestry
The Story Told on the Famous Bayeux Tapestry Explained from Start to Finish
The Entire History of the British Isles Animated: 42,000 BCE to Today
Construct Your Own Bayeux Tapestry with This Free Online App
Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. He’s the author of the newsletter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Summarizing Korea) and Korean Newtro. Follow him on the social network formerly known as Twitter at @colinmarshall.