Bayeux Tapestry Museum
A disappointing experience
Just recently I have been interacting with the Bayeux Tapestry Museum (BTM) and have come away with my fingers burnt. Although the person acted with professionalism there was a certain edge to their views.
Background
I'm a 1066 Battle enthusiast and have been researching the Battle for some 10 years now. I have copies of the four 11th cent. reports ( Bayeux Tapestry - book by DM Wilson, Carmen - Bishop Guy d'Amien, Gesta Normannorum Ducum - William of Jumièges and Gesta Guillelmi - William of Poitiers). Also I have 12th century works from Orderic Vitalis, Wace, Henry of Huntingdon and have accessed William of Malmesbury and the Chronicle of Battle Abbey online. As an oddity I have also read the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles for the time period in question ( Book by Michael Swanton)
My choice of battlefield, Ashes Wood, near Battle Golf Course, has been under investigation by the Forestry Commission since October 2018.
My choice of battlefield was made solely on the assumption that the terrain shown on the Tapestry was based on real life. My submission to the Forestry Commission was based mostly on my interpretation of the Tapestry. Let me explain:-
For me, the last ten scenes of the Tapestry ( all showing part of the Battle) fall into 4 church service times ( Tierce (09:00), Sext (12:00), None(15:00) and Vespers (18:00)) or "frames"
All references can be found here :- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayeux_Tapestry_tituli
Tierce(09:00) Scenes 51, 52a ( Norman knights strike out and surround Huscarls in shield wall)
Sext (12:00) Scenes 52b and part of 53 ( Norman knights finishing off isolated Huscarls)
None ( 15:00) rest of Scene 53, Scene 54, 55 and 56a ( Norman knights attack men on ridge, rout and subsequently rallied by William)
Vespers (18:00) Scenes 56b, 57 and 58 ( Harold and remaining Huscarls killed and the Fyrd scatter)
Recent Correspondence
Just recently I learnt that the Tapestry was stored in nine panels and I wondered if those panels coincided with my frames. So, I contacted the BTM and they were very helpful in telling me me about the "scenes". I reminded them that I had asked about the panels not the scenes and I explained the reason why ( detailed above).
So they came back with the info and we got into a discussion about a copy of my submission to the Forestry Commission. It turned out that the person didn't realise that the distance between the the Abbey battlefield and the proposed site for the "Malfosse" (Oakenwood Gill) was 1.2 km. They then requested further evidence for my theory of two distinct engagements ( one starting at Tierce and the other at None) Well, I gave them the following :-
From the Carmen ( translated by Kathleen Tyson )
Also, we
have the lines 363 and 364
Line 363 Ex inproviso diffudit silva
cohorts
Line 364 Et nemoris latebris agmina prosiliunt
Translation
Suddenly, a company [of English] emerged from the forest
And the column rushed from wooded cover.
From Gesta Guillelmi ( translation by Davis and Chibnall)
"
Full of zeal the Normans surrounded some thousands who had pursued them and destroyed
them in a moment, so that not a single one survived".
Although not explicitly stated in these three paragraphs,
William states in Para 19 that starts on page 131:-
" 19. Emboldened by this, they
launched an attack with greater determination on the main body of the army,…”
This to me indicates that Paragraphs 16 through to
and including 18 deal with an engagement that lacked the presence of King
Harold II.
I also mentioned Orderic Vitalis:-
“Reaching the spot they all dismounted from their horses and
stood in dense formation on foot”
Surprisingly enough Orderic has the combatants dismounting
from their horses and forming a shield wall which is exactly what Huscarls are
trained to do. I think this sentence is quite revealing as one would not expect
the lower orders to have access to a riding horse let alone be able to form up
in a shield wall. So, in my opinion, what Orderic is describing here is the
arrival of Huscarls as depicted on the Bayeux Tapestry in scenes 51, 51b and
52a.
The response was quite scathing, telling me that Huscarls didn't exist and the people being described were thegns ( using a 1992 quote from Nicolas Hooper).
They even went on to question my assumption that the terrain depicted on the Tapestry was real and it was somehow "an iconographic view". They also dismissed my arguments above from Orderic, William of Poitiers and Guy d'Amien.
So what do you think? Have I done enough to convince you that the whole thing needs looking at again ? Let me know in the comments ( good or bad).