BAYEUX TAPESTRY, THE. This venerable relic con sists of a band of linen, 231ft. long and loin. wide, now light brown with age, on which have been worked with a needle, in worsteds of eight colours, scenes representing the conquest of England by the Normans. Of these scenes there are 72 beginning with Harold's visit to Bosham on his way to Normandy, and ending with the flight of the English from the battle of Hastings.
though the actual end of the strip has perished. Along the top and the bottom run decorative borders with figures of animals, scenes from fables of Aesop and of Phaedrus, from husbandry and the chase, and occasionally from the story of the Conquest itself (see EMBROIDERY). Formerly known as the Toile de St. Jean, it was used on certain feast days to decorate the nave of Bayeux cathedral. Narrowly escaping the perils of the Revolu tion, it was exhibited in Paris, by Napoleon's desire, in 18o3—o4, and has since been in civil custody at Bayeux, where it is now ex hibited under glass.
"The noblest monument in the world relating to our old Eng lish history," as William Stukeley described it in 1746, it has been repeatedly described, discussed and reproduced, both in France and in England since 1730. The best coloured reproduc tion is that by C. A. Stothard in 1818, published in the sixth volume of Vetusta Monurenta; but in 1871-72 the "tapestry" was photographed for the English education authorities by E. Dossetter.
Local tradition assigned the work to the Conqueror's wife. F. Pluquet, in his Essai historique sur la vale de Bayeux (Caen, 1829), was the first to reject this belief, and to connect it with the Conqueror's half-brother Odo, bishop of Bayeux, and this view, which is now accepted, is confirmed by the fact that three of the bishop's followers mentioned in Domesday Book are among the very few named figures on the tapestry. That Odo had it executed for his cathedral seems tolerably certain, but whether it was worked by English fingers or not has been disputed, though some of the words upon it have been held to favour that view. Freeman emphatically pronounced it to be "a contemporary work,'.' and historically "a primary authority ... in fact the highest authority on the Norman side." As some of its evidence is unique, the question of its authority is important, and Free man's conclusions have been practically confirmed by subsequent discussion. In 1902 M. Marignan questioned, on archaeological grounds, the date assigned to the tapestry, as the Abbe de la Rue had questioned it 90 years before ; but his arguments were refuted by Gaston Paris and M. Lanore, and the authority of the tapestry was vindicated.
See E. A. Freeman, Norman Conquest, Vol. iii. (ed. 1875), with summary of the discussion to date ; Archaeologia, Vols. xvii.—xix.; Dawson Turner, Tour in Normandy (1820) ; Gentleman's Magazine (1837) ; Bolton Corney, Researches and Conjectures on the Bayeux Tapestry (1836-38) ; A. de Caumont, "Un mot sur . . . la tapisserie de Bayeux," in Bulletin monumental de l'institut des provinces, Vol. 0841) ; J. Laffetay, Notice historique et descriptive sur la tapis serie ... (1874) ; J. Comte, Tapisserie de Bayeux; F. R. Fowke, The Bayeux Tapestry (ed. 1898) ; Marignan, Tapisserie de Bayeux (1902); G. Paris, "Tapisserie de Bayeux," in Romania, Vol. xxxi.; Lanore, "La Tapisserie de Bayeux," in Bibliotheque de l'ecole des chartes, Vol. lxiv. (1903) ; and J. H. Round, "The Bayeux Tapestry," in Monthly Review, xvii. (1904)• (J. H. R.)