06 January 2024

Re-analysing old history is valuable: Bayeux Tapestry

Map of Normandy in France and Hastings in England
Khan Academy

Consider the issue of re-writing history over time, even when the original sources was well accepted. When reading Marco Polo’s writ­ing for example, despite it being of endless historical and literary value, historians have recognised mistakes, ex­ag­gerations and omissions.

Now David Musgrove and Michael Lewis suggest we re-analyse the magnificent Bayeux Tapestry re­garding the 1066 Norman Conquest. As its key nar­r­ative, the Tapestry record­ed the clash between England’s King Harold II Godwinson and Duke Wil­l­iam of Normandy. But it omitted key elements: a] other bat­t­les in northern England and b] Edgar Ætheling. Those bits have been largely lost to history.

The Tapestry started with King Edward The Confessor with his leading Earl Harold in Westminster. Harold left for the coast, crossed the Channel and entered Duke William’s court in Norm­andy. The pair then conducted a successful military campaign against rebels in Brittany. Harold made an oath to William, in support of William’s claim to Eng­land’s throne.

The Earl returned to King Edward’s court, where that monarch died and was buried in Westminster. Har­old immediately took the throne, in breach of the sacred oath he made in Normandy. William heard of the betrayal, built a fleet, assembled an army, crossed the Channel and waited for Harold. Harold brought his own force to Hastings, where he was kill­ed and his army defeated; William was crowned in Westminster, Christmas Day 1066.

But the images were open to inter­pretation; even in 1066 there were different views about what led to the Norman conquest. Ambiguity in the Bay­eux Tap­es­try was everywhere

Worse still were the omissions. When Duke William landed at Pev­ensey, King Harold was already engaged in the north. He’d re­cent­ly fought an­other contender for his throne, Norw­egian King Harald Hard­rada, who in alliance with Harold’s own bro­ther Earl Tostig, had defeat­ed an Eng­lish army. Harold then crushed Hardrada-Tostig at the battle of Stam­ford Bridge, a victory later undone in the Battle of Hastings defeat.

Earl Tostig was installed as Earl of Northumbria by Edward the Con­fes­sor in 1055. But the inhabitants of Northumbria rebelled against him in 1065, ?because he was trying to in­tro­duce new taxes in the semi-autonomous north. Remember this had been the Dane­law, under the jur­is­diction of the Vikings. Tostig grumbled, first setting out for his wife’s lands in Flanders, and then to the Scottish king, before ending u with Harald Hard­rada.

NB Harold’s long march south to Hastings wasn’t in the Bayeux Tapestry ?because the Normans were not in­terested in these conflicts. Duke Wil­liam didn't want the inclusion of these battles to cloud the viewer’s understanding.

And what happened to Edgar Ætheling? England had been ruled by the Danish King from 1016-35, then by his sons!! So as Edward’s reign prog­res­sed from 1042, having no obvious heir to Edward caused panic. In­deed efforts were being made to find the kin of Edward’s half-brother King Edmund Iron­side, who’d reigned briefly before losing in a battle. In any case, a Norman king would have been un­acceptable to the English elite.

In 1057 Prince Edward Ætheling came back to England from exile just as Uncle King Edward died. Happily Ed­ward brought his toddler son, Edgar Ætheling. Did King Edward raise him as his natural successor?

Edward and Edgar’s histories were not in the Tapestry at all, except for the deathbed scene of the ailing king, showing Edward touching hands with Earl Harold, alongside the Queen. Did this show King Edward contented that Edgar would succeed him as king?

The Bayeux Tapestry showed Harold being off­er­ed the crown by two members of the Coun­cil of Ministers. He was then anointed king. But Edgar had been stitched out of the Tap­es­try alto­g­ether. Was he seen as too young?

In Jan 1066, after the old king died, England was fac­ing a crisis. Whatever the nature of any promise to Duke William by King Edward in 1051, affirmed by Harold him­self en route to Norm­andy in 1064, they knew William would claim the crown by force. And it was known that King Harald Hardrada might try, via his Scandinavian roots, to take lands claimed in northern England.

But historians know that after King Harold’s death at Hastings, and the advance of the Norman army north, London’s citizens chose Edgar as king. So Edgar was excluded from the Bayeux Tapestry for another reason: it was politically expedient to remove him.

William was crowned

King Edward with Earl Harold

Norman ships

Death of King Harold

Battle of Hastings

Bishop Odo of Bayeux, William’s half-brother, played an important role in making the Bayeux Tapestry, as an advisor at Has­t­ings. In written records, Odo was less prominent than he app­ear­ed in the Tapestry, so the actual needlework was prob­ab­ly carried out under Odo’s patronage for self glorification. If the Bayeux Tapestry was to glorify Odo’s role in the Norman Conquest, then it was politically wise not to show Prince Edgar's legit­imate future in his acc­ount.

Historians believed the Tapestry accurately showed a version of the Norman conquest that suited a situation soon after the Battle of Hast­ings in 1066, when the Nor­mans were trying to appease the English, not domin­ate them. The Tap­es­t­ry had been rooted in the politics, until the politics changed! By 1069–70 with the Harrying of the North, Wil­liam’s pat­ience with the Eng­l­ish ended. The embroid­ery’s version of the Conquest was by then unfashionable!

After William the Conqueror’s death in 1087, Edgar got further into Anglo-Scottish politics, leading an English army north with King Wil­l­iam II’s backing, and having his own nephew enthroned. After that he became a crusader in the Holy Land, returning via the Byz­antine and German empires. Yet Ed­gar remained an undocumented fig­ure, because the Tapestry omitted his story.

Was history written by the victor, not just on the field, but also for posterity? Read The Bayeux Tapestry by Dr  K Tanton. Photo credits: Bayeux Museum.






27 comments:

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

A topic I know nothing about, thus found this an interesting read

roentare said...

History is always written by the winners. That is how my teachers to "examine" any discrepancies in scripture and history materials.

River said...

History is usually written by the victors, I can't imagine the losers writing about being defeated. Not back then anyway. Maybe in modern times they could write about how they lost and what to do next time to ensure a victory? And hope their foes don't read it...

Margaret D said...

Makes we wonder who else was left out of history...good read Hels.

jabblog said...

History is complicated and frequently subjective. 'Facts' are skewed by opinion and emotion.

Hels said...

Jo-Anne

I recognised all the details on the Bayeux Tapestry, and the history that surrounded it, but I had no idea at all that the history might have been recently re-examined. If you have the time, read the History Extra reference by Musgrove and Lewis at the top of this post.

Hels said...

roentare

Our history teachers also recognised that there were discrepancies between formal records on one hand and in public reports on the other. This was particularly true once ordinary authors (not royals, archbishops and admirals) got access to books and newspapers. The trouble was that in many countries, dissenters were likely to find themselves gaoled... or hanged.

Hels said...

River

History is usually written by the victors, agreed. But what could the losers have done anyhow? After a war, for example, the losers were either dead, impoverished or in exile. After a mass murder in a university or school, who was going to believe black students against the KKK or racist police?

Hels said...

Margaret

ahhhh a lot! When PhD students seek a great topic for their thesis, I suspect they are warned not to take on bitterly controversial themes, if they can help it. I suppose the "1066 Norman Conquest" was so long ago, there aren't too many angry people left to debate modern changes. But imagine publishing a forbidden thesis on the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, leading to WW1.

Hels said...

jabblog

Historical facts are indeed skewed by opinion and emotion, perhaps more so today than ever before. I find myself doing it myself and I am not a formal governmental record keeper. eg My grandfather's parents were killed in one of the Ukrainian pogroms, so I will not hear a word today against Russia. The trouble is that they died 100+ years ago.

Deb said...

"Harold’s long march down south to Hastings wasn’t in the Bayeux Tapestry, because the Normans weren’t in­terested in these conflicts. Duke Wil­liam would not have wanted the inclusion of these battles to cloud the viewer’s understanding". Omissions were certainly as important as inclusions.

Hels said...

Deb

Omissions of information about events are certainly very difficult to discover, let alone to prove. The best historians can hope for is to _eventually_ find written or oral records that have been hidden away in the meantime.

Who knew that there were JFK assassination files kept in secrecy? Even if they were to be eventually released, who of us would be alive by then?

My name is Erika. said...

The Bayeaux Tapestry in on my list of things of I would love to see. And I think so much history is biased; I guess that's why to be a good historian you have to research so many original documents. And one problem is that old documents don't always exist. Thanks for this cool post. Happy weekend Hels.

Hels said...

Erika

yes indeed. Even if a historian is fortunate enough to find original, contemporary records, there is no certainty that they have not been biased or destroyed.

Oppenheimer acknowledged during the hearing on his security clearance in 1954 that the Americans had killed 70,000 citizens with the two bombs dropped on Japanese cities. By 1977, the Japanese reported a total of 210,000 or more who had died from radiation poisoning post-bombs. Americans noted that exposure to the levels of radiation prevalent at Hiroshima and Nagasaki did correlate with a higher cancer rate, but nothing like the Japanese found.

hels said...

Erika
Do go and visit the Bayeux Museum in Normandy and allow plenty of time to walk the length of the material. The Tapestry will only be moved when the Museum is closed for renovations.

Parnassus said...

Hello Hels, I wonder if the tapestry is complete, or if some parts are missing. I am putting that book on my list--it sounds fascinating both as history and detective work. Still, it does not surprise me that a commemorative work of art should not be relied upon as a primary historical document.
--Jim

Hels said...

Parnassus

Yes.. the last 2 panels of the Bayeux Tapestry (which is actually an embroidery) were indeed missing, probably from the earliest decades. There is now no way to know what fell off or was cut off, but I have never heard it was a significant part of the overall story.

What _is_ known is that many changes were indeed made over the centuries eg the colours of the wool stitching faded or the linen tore. Possibly we can assume that some changes were made to alter how the original political or military events were displayed.

I like the historian who said that the tapestry was more than just a historical record; it was actually created with threads of political propaganda and artistic expression. But these biases are not greater than in other historical record, visual or verbal.

Parnassus said...

Hi again, The link to the Tanton article did not work for me, but I found what is possibly the same article at:
https://smarthistory.org/the-bayeux-tapestry/

This seems an excellent summary of the political history and the production techniques of the tapestry itself. I at first thought you were referring to a book, and when I looked for Bayeux Tapestry I noticed several newer books with subtitles like "A Hidden History" and "A Reinterpretation." I am going to try to get one of these book-length discussions on my next trip to Ohio.
--Jim

roughterrain crane said...

Interesting post!
I hope you have a great 2024!

Hels said...

Parnassus

The Tanton article, published by the Khan Academy, is very interesting but it focuses on uniforms, weapons, tactics and animals.
The modern papers you cited are more relevant to this discussion because they focus on hidden history and reinterpretations of past records. I am assuming those papers were not yet published when I was learning Early British History in 1990, so thank you.

Hels said...

roughterrain

it is fascinating how history doesn't always stay permanently fixed, yes. Which part of history are you most interested in?

Fun60 said...

I have yet to see the Bayeaux Tapestry but would never assume that a primary source could be totally accurate.

Mandy said...

Thank you for this fun reminder of a fascinating part of history. We visited Hastings and the 1066 battlegrounds in 2022 and loved it. I also visited Bayeaux in 2014 but was sadly there when the museum was closed. But you're correct, I did not know about Edgar. It's good that his story is being uncovered

DUTA said...

Are the pictures on your post taken from the embroidery of the Bayeux Tapestry, depicting the conquest of England by the Normans (at the battle of Hastings)? Lovely drawings!

hels said...

Fun60
The embroidery is so long and so fabulously detailed, I assumed it was totally unbiased. In my more trusting years, it never occurred to me that money and tons of worker hours would include mistakes, political and military preferences, and clear omissions.
Visit Bayeux if you can.. well worth the effort to get there

hels said...

Mandy
We quite right. If Prince Edgar was the legitimate heir, he was written out of the history altogether.
It always pays to read more than one primary source.

hels said...

DUTA
I wasn't allowed to take the photos myself, but I had no trouble finding accurate photos in the Museum itself and later on-line. The events before, during and after the Battle of Hastings were beautifully depicted.