You're Dead to Me - The Bayeux Tapestry
Episode Date: June 24, 2022Greg Jenner is joined by special guests Dr Janina Ramirez and Lou Sanders in 11th-century Europe to take a close look at the Bayeux Tapestry. They explore the history of this famous artefact which is ...in fact, not a tapestry at all! Who commissioned it, and more importantly who made it and where? Is the famous image of the death of Harold II accurate or have we been missing another part of the picture? What are the often overlooked margins of the Bayeux Tapestry trying to tell us and above all, how on earth has this extraordinary piece of history survived all these years?Youāre Dead To Me is a production by The Athletic for BBC Radio 4.Research by John Mason Written and produced by Emma Nagouse and Greg Jenner Assistant Producer: Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow Project Management: Siefe Miyo Audio Producer: Abi Paterson
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the BBC.
This podcast is supported by advertising outside the UK.
BBC Sounds. Music, radio, podcasts.
Hello and welcome to You're Dead to Me, the Radio 4 comedy podcast that takes history seriously.
My name is Greg Jenner. I'm a public historian, author, broadcaster and former nerd on the BBC comedy show Horrible Histories.
public historian, author, broadcaster and former nerd on the BBC comedy show Horrible Histories.
And today we are travelling back nearly a thousand years to 11th century Western Europe to dive into the rich tapestry of tapestries.
The Bayeux tapestry, to be exact.
Except it's not a tapestry. I'll explain later.
To help us learn more about everyone's favourite medieval craft project,
I am joined by two very special guests.
In History Corner, she's an art historian,
broadcaster and author and fellow at the University of Oxford to boot. You may have seen her many
fabulous BBC history documentaries or read her books, including recent hit Goddess and
also her upcoming book, Femina, about the women written out of history. And of course,
you'll remember her from our episode on Old Norse literature. What a hoot that was. It's
the wonderful Dr. Janina Ramirez. Welcome back, Nina. Hello, Greg. I am delighted to be back.
And in Comedy Corner, she's one of Britain's funniest comedians, writers, podcasters and
panel show queens who you will recognise from her acclaimed stand-up shows and countless TV
appearances like Live at the Apollo, 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown and Mel Gedroych's Unforgivable.
Plus, she's a Taskmaster Champion, so a proper brain.
She's a one-of-a-kind in the best possible way. It's Lou Sanders. Hello, Lou.
Hello. Equally pleased to be on here about a subject I don't know a lot about, but that's
why I'm here. It would waste my time if I was an expert in it, wouldn't it?
Well, we wouldn't book you if you were. I mean, it wouldn't be as fun. You'd just tell us some
stuff and we'd go home. uh so the format relies on you I've seen a bit of carpet
before so treat me as one of your own and Lou how are you with history do you enjoy it as a subject
did you enjoy it at school I liked social history I don't like times and dates I don't like times
and dates generally because I can't get it,
like I can't get a hold of it in my head.
But I like, you know, the Black Plague.
I love the Black Plague.
It's everyone's favourite.
No, no.
I like how history affected people.
We're all about the social history on this show,
so that sounds excellent.
And have you heard of the Bayeux Tapestry?
It rings the vaguest of bells.
Is it a man blowing a trumpet or something like that? Is it a boy with a flute?
There's no flute as far as I'm aware. So we might have to show you some, I think, Lou,
maybe to give you a brief introduction. But we'll be talking today about the tapestry
as an artwork. Often people talk about it as a sort of historical source for war and battle,
but we'll be talking about how it was made and by whom.
So, what do you know?
So, this is the So What Do You Know?
This is where I have a go at guessing what you, our lovely listener,
might know about today's subject.
And if you're in the UK, I think you've probably heard of the Bayeux Tapestry.
You might think there are flutes in it like Lou, but you might be picturing pointy men with pointy helmets on pointy horses doing pointy killing on a sort of yellowy brown
background. You may, even though it depicts the famously decisive Battle of Hastings in 1066,
in which William, Duke of Normandy, defeated the English King Harold Gobinson and killed him dead
and thus became King William the Conqueror,
the first of the Norman kings.
And, well, I mean, the tapestry
itself, aesthetically, it pops up loads in pop
culture, particularly on greeting cards and t-shirts
and internet memes, and even on the branding of
a certain funny history podcast.
This one. Yes, that's what our inspiration
is for our artwork. It's even
in Robin Hood Prince of Thieves. Maid Marian
is seen stitching
it at one point, which definitely did not happen. But even if you recognise the style,
you may not know much about the tapestry itself. In fact, it's not even a tapestry.
So let's find out some more about what is it and who made it and why.
Lou, bearing in mind the Bayeux Tapestry is nearly 1,000 years old, how big do you think it is now it's probably a big
boy otherwise why all the fuss so it's probably fitting across one wall the walls in the olden
times probably were a bit shorter yeah so a short i'm gonna go with a short wall. A short wall's length, which is what?
10 metres?
5 metres?
What do you think?
Well, you said 10 metres.
So I'm going to go 8.
Well, you might be surprised by this.
It's nearly 70 metres long.
Oh, I'm a gog.
I'm absolutely a gog.
You look a gog.
That doesn't happen a lot.
That's a lot of work, isn't it?
It's a lot of work.
It's 68.4 metres long, but it's not entirely finished because we're missing a part of it.
So it wouldn't be longer.
It's about 50 centimetres wide.
So it's a very, very long strip, but it's actually not tall, if that makes sense.
Yeah.
I told you it wasn't tall because they didn't have...
I already told you that.
Obviously, your flute reference is perhaps drawn from something else.
Oh yeah, I call flutes knives. That's the thing about me.
So you eat your dinner with a flute and fork, right?
Yeah, I eat my dinner with a flute and fork.
So maybe we should show you a little bit of it so you can get your head around it. So
producer Abby's going to show you a little a little scrolling action oh that's
that's lovely oh hang on i have seen this before yeah i've seen this before is it at thought park
no but i'm sure it's in my consciousness somewhere so producer abby is scrolling
through a lot oh hang on scroll back scroll back what's that instrument there next to the washing basket
what's he holding a golf club they're actually kebabs a kebab and a fight nothing's changed
so this is a fantastically amazing artwork lou that is uh really important and very
very important for historians to understand 1066 and the Battle
of Hastings. But today we're going to talk about it as an artwork in terms of its creation and
we want to celebrate what it is to make a beautiful thing. So Nina, can you put us out of
our misery? Because actually it's called the Bayeux Tapestry, but it's not a tapestry, which is quite
confusing. It's got a few names. In France, it's called La Tapestry de la Reine Mathilde, which means the tapestry of the Queen Mathilde. That's not right either. And it probably
wasn't made in Bayeux. So why is it called the Bayeux Tapestry? Can you give us some basics,
please? There are major questions we'd ask of any artwork. Who made it? Where was it made?
Where was it first displayed? Who ordered it to be made? And really, we can't answer any of
those. When I was taught about it, it literally was as if it was a text, you know, what happened
in 1066? Who did what? Let's read the Bayeux Tapestry and see if it matches up with the
articles. But it's not how it should be considered. It's a work of art. It's not a tapestry. And it
wasn't made in Bayer it should be called probably
the Canterbury or the Barking embroidery embroidery is stitches on linen tapestries woven on a loom
it wasn't made by Queen Matilda despite it was called the fact it was called La Tapestrie de
Reine Mathilde the person who's most likely to have commissioned it is, in fact, William's stepbrother, Odo of Bayer.
And one of the things we can answer recently, just a really recent study, has proved it was probably hung in the nave of Bayer Cathedral.
And it is massive, Lou. I mean, 70 metres long is huge.
But what art historians have discovered by looking at it is there's a tiny little cross in the middle.
But what art historians have discovered by looking at it is there's a tiny little cross in the middle.
So it's a bit like an Ikea flat pack, you know, start at this point, pin it up and then you can work the rest of it out.
Oh, wow.
But that's only been discovered recently.
And there's still so many other things that I've been working on and we can talk about, but particularly the role of women.
Yeah.
Making it, basically. Making it.
Well, because historically this is understood to be like a document about men doing man things war mostly battles it shows the famous battle of hastings loo which you
may have heard of oh 1066 that one's in there yeah yeah yeah good which was where william
defeated and killed harold gobbinson king of england and so william becomes william the
concrete he was the first norman king of england and there's quite a lot of backstory on this Lou and um I'm guessing you don't know the
backstory do you have you do you know anything about William and Harold well I would have learned
it at a time and then I would have thought this isn't relevant to my life today and just
popped it out you know you just scooped it out the brain yeah yeah don't need that all right well in
that case maybe we need ourselves a super speedy i mean you know the beginning of american tv shows
that are like previously on yeah we'll have one of those i think nina can we have a previously on
bio tapestry there is a real issue going on in england around the year 1066 edward the confessor
is king but he doesn't have any children so there's a succession
crisis but he's married to this woman called Edith and she is part of this family the Godwin family
who have managed over the decades before to basically take over all the kingdoms in England
and Harold Godwinson is there trying to make a play for the Crown of England.
What the Bayer Tapestry shows is before Edward has died, Harold has gone across the Channel
and he has been captured by one of the Counts, Gaia Portue, and then William, Duke of Normandy,
descended from Rollo the Viking. He finds out Harold's in town, goes and grabs him,
makes him swear relics and loyalty to him,
makes him go on different campaigns with him.
Then, back September, we're in England.
Edward has died.
And on his deathbed, they say, he says,
Harold will be my successor.
Harold takes the throne,
but he's already made this promise to William, apparently.
And that leads to all hell breaking loose.
William's like, right, we're going to do the undoable.
We're going to cross the Channel with hundreds of boats and we're going to conquer England.
And that's what the tapestry shows you.
Wow.
OK.
It's pretty busy.
And what's the result?
The result is you speak French.
Un petit peu.
C'est vrai. Moi,. Ah! Un petit peu. C'est vrai.
Ah!
Moi, je parle franƧais un petit peu.
Oh!
C'est trĆØs joli.
Oui, oui.
Oh, bibliothĆØque.
Oui, oui.
C'est Ƨa, c'est Ƨa.
The tapestry, Lou, is really famous because, A, it's a gorgeous artwork,
but also as a historical document, it tells us the story of Harold getting shipwrecked,
getting rescued by William, who sort of gets him out of jail and then takes him on campaign and makes him swear a sacred oath saying, I'm going to be king of England, not you.
Right. And Harold goes, yeah, sure, whatever. Just let me go.
And then we get Edward the Confessor dying, Harold becoming king and the invasion and the death at the end.
So people have, Nina, they've described it as a sort of comic book
it is like a comic book it's one of these things that you know one of the reasons we think it might
be in Canterbury is because a lot of the art they were making at this time is sort of text and image
sort of layered up on top of each other like a comic book I also like to think of it a bit as a
role of film like cinematic film because it's so long and thin and honestly like when you stand in
front of it and it fills up the whole of the room
and you stand in front of bits of it and it is like being in a movie like the ships are sort of
sailing towards you you can see the horses kind of tumbling out of the frames it really feels like
you're watching a movie oh yeah that's nice and if you moved it while you're watching it get someone
to sort of pull it from one end that is a movie
really abby do you want to pull it for us for a second whoa yeah look at it just like a roll of
film so we are scrolling along here actually making me dizzy but it is nice each scene just
turns into the next scene without there being kind of obvious stopping points if you look at
the battle scenes when you get further along the margins start to
break up and the action spills out into the margins so can you see all the dead bodies and
the decapitated bodies that like fallen out into the frame so again it's like the drama's just
burst out and look at that horse tipping upside down i mean that's like action happening in front
of your eyes this is a beautiful piece of artwork,
but in many ways it functions as the kind of way we tell stories today.
Visually, it's great.
Well, Greg, I just wanted to say a picture tells a thousand words.
That's all. We're all thinking it.
Someone's got to say it.
I think it's about time we acknowledge that and then we can move on.
Now, there's also a very famous scene in the tapestry, Lou,
that shows the death of King Harold.
Do you know that moment?
I wouldn't think so, no.
How do you think he might die?
Well, I think stabbed in the eye.
Is that someone else?
No, no, you're pretty clear.
I mean, so famously, the tapestry has often been said to show that there's an arrow in the eye.
So you are right.
Oh, OK.
It is an eye related injury in fact
we can see it right now if abby zooms in can you see the arrow in the eye oh yeah but it looks like
he's doing it to himself self-inflicted wound he's trying to get compensation have you been injured
exactly he's trying to give himself a little nasty injury on the face so he can claim money
this is the famous death that many people will know.
They will know Harold getting an arrow in the eye.
And indeed, it's a joke on our artwork for our podcast.
Nina, we don't think the arrow in the eye is true, right?
I'm going to say no, because the evidence is mounting up that no, it's not that iconic image.
I mean, the reality is that that's probably not Harold at all.
So what happens on the Bay of Tapestry is there's all these wonderful inscriptions on the top and the inscriptions
are like the captions for the comic so it says here Harold is killed and the guy with the arrow
in the eye his head's underneath the beginning of the word where it says Harold and everyone's
always been like oh great you can frame that Harold face but the reality is that most of the time the end of the inscription is
where the person is actually doing the action so if you look at it Harold Interfectus Est
the Est is hovering above this guy who's lying on the floor having his leg hacked off
oh god yeah right so the earlier source that describes what actually happened at the Bay of Tapestry
describes nothing about an arrow, nothing about an eye.
It says that four different Norman knights,
one of them bashed him to the ground, one chopped his head off,
one slashed his leg off, and another took a spear
and swirled up his entrails with it.
And that's what happened to Harold.
The later idea of the arrow in the eye was probably
invented in the sort of 12th century sources like 100 200 years later where it was seen as a symbol
for somebody who broke a promise a perjurer they get an arrow in the eye as their just desserts
so what's happened is you see that guy with the arrow in the eye when they started looking at it that wool used to stitch
the arrow is not 11th century it's 19th century someone stitched it in later that guy originally
was holding a spear and you can see where they picked out the spear stuck the arrow in and said
yeah that's pretty good that's what you should get if you've broken an oath so it's not Harold at all yeah conspiracy Lou what do you think yeah myth busting all over the place okay
it's back to my phrase it's not always Harold
yeah yeah it's one of your best catchphrases yeah I'll pop up with these catchphrases
here and again yeah that's the thing about history it's it's sometimes not
very accurate but we like a story don't we that's the problem the story's getting away the facts
sometimes and what do you prefer do you prefer a story or a fact i like to know the facts but i
do prefer a story because you can't learn the fact without a story you have to have a starting
point and the story is often the starting point and then you can learn the tree very wise oh
woman after my own heart we have a comic book then of sorts a medieval version a visual artifact
this gorgeous piece of art i mean lou this is a type of art known as opus anglicanum, which is Latin for... Yeah, I know.
Oh no, I said I know too quick.
Now I don't know what it means.
What do you think it means in English?
Arts and crafts.
Pretty good. Not far off, Nina.
Yeah, that's really, that's pretty good.
We'd say that it's craftwork now, wouldn't we?
And that kind of makes it feel smaller in a way,
like a little lady stitching.
And it's not like, you know, an artist in his studio creating great canvases.
But it is. It's craftwork.
And Opus Anglicanum was the making of these embroideries, these beautiful pieces of material, like high fashion.
Think about kind of catwalks today and how much the clothes cost on it.
and how much the clothes cost on it.
The best nuns in England were making the finest garments for the most expensive people, rich people.
Yeah, top nuns making top fashion
and they're stitching it with gold
and they're stitching it with silk and pearls
and everyone's looking very bling.
But that's what Opus Anglicanum is,
the things that these women were specialised in making.
They were haute couture of the 10th and 11th century.
Wow.
Lou, have you ever done any embroidery?
Are you a craftsperson?
And how would you go about making a 70 metre embroidery?
Well, I'd outsource it.
That's such a good answer.'m gonna use that but no i i would like to learn how to make clothes i
suppose but i haven't um i haven't thus far i've got a sewing machine so that's step one i've had
it for about a year and a half and it's not threaded yet but i will get around to it okay
mark my words all right so the tapestry is coming in due course yeah and not tapestry but maybe maybe a boob tube or something the bio boob tube would be great but um yeah yeah so nina all right
talk us through then how is something like this made because it's enormous it's 70 meters long
and it's beautiful so what is the actual crafts process well the reason i was so happy with
lou's answer about outsourcing it
is because essentially that's what the blokes did.
So they outsourced it to the nuns, probably the nuns of barking.
Wow.
It probably took between about two to three years to make.
They worked on it in sections.
And the first section, when they started off, they were a little bit rusty.
They weren't really sure what they were doing they never probably never done a project of
this scale and it was 14 meters long 14 meters of linen and you'd have all the women sat shoulder
to shoulder holding it up you know on frames trying to stitch it and that's a huge exercise
the only people that could do that women in close kind of contact with each other for a long period of time were nuns.
And I like to call it a mistress piece, not a masterpiece.
That's the guerrilla girls came up with that.
But what probably happened is the head of the Abbey in Canterbury, Scotland, he'd come over from Normandy and he was, you know, Mr. Bibliophile.
He'd looked up all the books. got all the images together put them all
onto cartoons onto like pictures that could be sent to the nuns and then they were the outsourced
labour but they had a bit more freedom when it came to the margins I think it's in the margins
where you see the women artists really going for it and showing off their their individuality and
their skill yeah do they get paid for it you think oh do you know what they got paid with
not being killed oh right almost every other monastery and convent was either destroyed had
all its possessions taken was taken over put in other hands barking and canterbury they kind of
were making like a play for like don't don't kill us we're brilliant we're really talented
why don't we work for you instead you're the the new lords. We'll work for you.
So they secured their survival, basically.
Who do we think commissioned it?
You know, we've talked about men designing it,
but who's paying for it? Who wants it?
Well, the obvious answer is Odo Beyer.
I don't know, Abby, if you can show Lou the scene
where he sat around the table with all his his followers and
he looks like jesus at the last supper oh that's the guy he's done that yeah he's he's done it he's
like i'm number one i'm the most important person and you know this is the kent connection because
i know you and greg both have a kent connection odo was given the county of Kent. That's what he was given by his brother after the conquest.
He owns the county and he owns Canterbury and all the important and rich places that come with that.
So the most likely candidate is Odo.
But there is another candidate and that's a woman.
So I don't know if you want me to go on to that, Greg.
Oh, I don't think Greg minds you talking about a woman.
Well, I don't know.
We've already got two women today and it feels like a lot of women.
So maybe more Mancha.
No, go on then.
Let's hear about the other possible candidate.
Let's hear about Edith.
Let's hear about this nice little lady.
Little lady.
There's only a couple in history, aren't there?
Women weren't in history.
The other candidate is
Edith the Confessor's wife, Edith.
You remember that I said that
Edith the Confessor was married to Harold's sister?
Yeah.
Now poor old Edith has an awful time.
The two battles that take place in 1066,
she loses all her relatives.
Everyone's dead.
Oh boy.
Loses her brother, loses her husband.
She has a bad year.
But she has to then get on side with the new guy, William.
William arrives.
He's like, now I'm king of England.
And she's the old widow.
So one thing William could do is just kill her off,
get rid of her because she's a pain.
But she actually manages to insinuate herself
into his new world, into his new court.
Wow.
Yeah.
And she, as the old queen,
would have been in control of the Abbey at Barking.
And we know that the nuns at Barking put William up
while his house was being built at Tower of London. They said and stay with us William we love you you're fantastic so I think
there's a really good strong claim for the fact that it could have been Edith who commissioned it
to get on the right side of the Normans oh okay yeah clever old Edith it gets deeper and deeper
doesn't it yeah but that's a tough gig isn't it? I mean, you're basically working with a man who just killed your brother.
Your whole family, yeah.
Yeah, it's great to have you here.
And thanks so much for murdering my family and their loved ones.
But yeah, sure.
It's a testament to the will of the ego to want to carry on after everyone's dead.
But yeah, good on her.
Yeah, and she's a candidate.
I mean, so I think most historians would say Odo is the most likely candidate.
And there's a couple of reasons for that, Lou.
One is that we see him fighting in the battle and he's very prominent.
He looks very heroic.
And bishops weren't meant to go to war, Lou, because they weren't allowed to spill blood.
So do you know what weapon he used instead of a sword?
A pen.
The pen is mightier.
No, he used a mace so he crushed people's bones with a mace which he sort of smashed the head in or smashed their sort of you know chest in with a mace but that doesn't spill any blood so he's fine
wow he found a loophole he's known as a warrior bishop uh which are the best best kind of bishops
he has himself depicted christ-like in the middle of the tapestry,
if he's paying for it.
He's sat there looking like Jesus at the Last Supper,
which means, obvious question, Lou,
if you had to celebrate yourself with a fantastic tapestry,
what would you demand if you'd look like?
Or it might have been Odo that commissioned it,
or maybe all the nuns fancied him.
We can't rule that out.
That's true.
Well, I don't know.
I mean, hugging a bear, something fun.
Oh, nice.
Friend to the animals, I don't know.
Right.
So just you in a sort of woodland scene with squirrels and lovely,
adorable bunnies and a bear.
And you're just one with
nature and a big old reefer no i don't smoke but something to show my fun side i don't know
lou how many men do you think i thought that was gonna go a different way i really thought that
was gonna go a different way how many men it's not that podcast i thought it was an
intellectual how many men are depicted compared to how many women is my perfectly innocuous question
i think it's probably two women on the whole thing oh you are close you're really close one woman
three three right okay three what's that mary um can't think of any others to be fair to the guys mary times three
to be fair to the guys yeah there are three women there are 35 dogs 37 ships 190 horses
yeah 623 men yeah so yeah it feels about right that feels about right actually
is that what comedy's like uh no comedy's better now but
yeah there's less horses anyway uh yeah so i'm not sure the bio tapestry is passing the bechdel test
so who are the three women then nina because we've mentioned uh edith who is seen in the tapestry
isn't she it's presence via absence in a lot of ways because every single stitch on the tapestry
is made by women and so you know they are there in it but they're not depicted in it. So Edith
is shown at the end of Edward the Confessor's bed crying everything's very sad but she's there,
she's one of them. Then there's a really I think really moving and quite strange scene which is
once they've landed in Hastings and they start to
decimate the countryside around Hastings, they start building like little strongholds for the
Norman knights to stay in. And there's a picture of castle building. And then there's this burning
house. Two Normans are like burning, torching a house, which is presumably a house of an English
person. And in front, you've got this woman and a child who are running away from the flames and I find that really moving because it's sort
of a victims of war scene it's like this is the impact that the invasion had so I find that one
again quite powerful to have included it and then there is the mystery scene Al Gifu I mean
how many chapters and pages of ink have been spilt over who this woman
is? But it's a good one, isn't it, Greg? It is an intriguing image. That's right. Her name is,
I guess, Elfhiva or Elfgifu. I mean, it's an old English name. She's the only woman named in the
tapestry. And we don't know who she is. She's an absolute mystery. So we're going to show you this now, Lou. And then I want you to look down at the bottom of the page underneath her to see what you can see.
Lou, I'm going to give you a little tip when you're looking at this.
Imagine you're looking at the 11th century cover of OK! magazine.
Ooh, OK.
OK.
OK.
Keep that in your head.
You know the other guy, Bobo or or hobo whatever his name is odo
yeah well we can't rule out that he fancied her can we we cannot rule it out and one of the
reasons you brought that up if we can zoom in here here's elfivo or elfgiva and there's a man
touching her touching her face and he's a cleric so, touching her face, and he's a cleric, so he's religious.
Now look underneath her.
He looks like James Acaster.
He does look like James Acaster.
That's really funny.
James Acaster in a cloak, yeah.
And then if you look underneath Elviva,
can you see a gentleman in the margins at the bottom, Lou?
Oh, yes. Oh, my goodness. What's he up to? What margins at the bottom, Lou? Oh, yes.
Oh, my goodness.
What's he up to?
What is he up to, though?
I'm just going to say what I see.
It's exactly what you think it is.
He's crouching down and touching his balls.
He's completely naked.
He's squatting down.
He's reaching out almost under her skirt.
Yes, yes.
He's completely stark bollock naked and he's squatting and it's a weird scene and
historians do not know what this is about we have no idea elf giver is obviously important enough to
be named uh someone's touching her face but underneath her is a weird little naked man
being creepy so it's quite a strange scene that so we've got we've got a really sad scene nina
we've got as you sad scene, Nina.
We've got, as you say, the victims of war.
And then we have this sort of mystery scandal, almost. Like this woman who, in 1066, was presumably well-known
because they named her, but then we don't know who she is.
And the nuns depicted that.
It's so weird that the nuns would do that.
There's a lot of willies, a lot of willies, actually.
Greg didn't give the numbers of willies, but there's a lot.
And the nuns are doing these scenes.
And there's a lot of scandalous images in the margins that possibly refer to, like,
fables about people raping other people and awful things.
But they all take place in the margin.
You do sort of think these nuns of the 11th century, they're not we might think of as nuns they're sort of noble women they're a bit cheap
also that you know they're worldly a lot of them would have had families before they went into the
right convent yeah when I mentioned think about okay magazine it's because imagine you know in
eight nine hundred years there's just an image of Jordan that survived somehow in an illumination somewhere.
And in 900 years, people are saying, who is this woman?
Who is she?
What's the context?
And the people looking at this, they would have known the context.
They would have known who she was.
They would have known who he is.
They would have known what the scandal was.
But we can't.
We can't know because there just isn't the evidence yeah but i do think it's scandalous the fact he's
reaching into her private space the fact he's touching her when he shouldn't be and the fact
there's this dude below with the big and the thing that we haven't mentioned is he's actually got got five balls and no one's talking about it i think those are very uh very luxurious pubes
i think is what's happening there he's he's oh i see he's not groomed himself downstairs and he's
just very happy to wear it all uh all natural i think he's uh yeah nuns have gone to town on it
they've colored the they've colored the schlong they've made very detailed piece i mean
they've really enjoyed doing that bit haven't they you can tell they've spent a lot of time on that
bit yeah no definition in the face it's all in the wang it's true it's true actually he's got a
really anonymous face but a very specific penis i mean in terms of uh phallus chat we probably should have warned listeners on the way in sorry
listeners nina mentioned it lou but the bio tapestry features 93 penises not enough i'm not
enough sorry yes disappointing for you 88 of them are on horses that's to say they're they're horse
penises they're not they're not human penises riding a horse that'd be very weird yes yes and then there are four and a half guys whose penises are visible like at least four maybe half a penis sort of
visible and some testicles so it's quite honest about natural um body parts yeah i just think as
a general rule of thumb put your bits away and that's just that's just me it's good advice so
yeah i mean i mean nina you mentioned actually that we have possible reasons
why these nuns may have been doing this.
These nuns are barking in Canterbury.
And we have Bishop Odo is our most likely patron.
And then Queen Edith is a maybe.
But the question I wanted to ask Nina is,
should we be looking at the Norman conquest through the tapestry,
but actually aware that the tapestry might be some sort of propaganda tool?
It could be pro-Norman or even the opposite.
There are some sneaky secret clues in there that might be pro-English.
What do you think?
I think Lou summed it up earlier.
You know, it's this balance between stories and facts, but often it's presented as if it's fact.
You know, this is absolutely true.
It's definitely propaganda. It's massive. You don't make something this massive for three years
without it having a serious investment from someone very important and be an end point for it,
where it's going to be hung and displayed and used as a piece of propaganda. So absolutely. But
is it pro-Normanan is it pro-english
it's it's actually quite complicated and like i mentioned with the victim of war scene it gives
you these glimpses that you just wouldn't expect and you don't get from from the text so i think
it's quite layered actually yeah in the margins at the top and bottom lou we see lots of animal
scenes that might just look like sort of happy little cheerful animal scenes but it's not these are allusions to Aesop's fables have you ever read Aesop's
fables did you ever do them as a kid no can't say I did Aesop's fables that many children
enjoy when they're young and then forget and then stumble on later in life uh supposed to have been
created by Aesop an ancient Greek I believe and they are
stories like the fox and the crow and yes I've read some of that sort of stuff yeah there are
these sort of really interesting scenes where high level chatting is going on or very important
moments happening and underneath them in the margins we're seeing the Aesop fables and sometimes
the fables are about pride vanity don't trust people and so it's using ancient greek stories to then undermine
what you're seeing in the main picture interesting that's quite interesting actually not enough art
does that sort of sub-tweeting yeah sub-tweeting that's it that's it gosh. Yes. That's quite clever, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's quite clever. It's like underneath you, what's going on to our eyes and then underneath you. Wow, I love that.
By the looks of it, the nuns of Barking in Canterbury are potentially injecting in some slightly countervailing arguments,
some references to Aesop's fables that might be undermining the
kind of official narrative. What's also interesting is we've got some visual symbolism in the tapestry,
Lou. There are all these lovely hands in there, all done in little different styles. And sometimes
the gestures are very specific. So we're going to do a mini quiz for you, just a little one.
What do you think these gestures mean? So when someone is touching another person's face, what do you think that represents?
Blessing.
Blessing is a good guess.
It's more grief, actually.
It's a Roman thing.
It's an ancient Roman idea.
So if someone's reaching out to touch a face, that's their grieving.
What if their fingers are outstretched, but the thumb is up like that?
Please don't strike me.
It's awe and respect.
So if someone's shown doing that, they're in the presence of someone awesome and respectful.
And they're like, oh my God, this person's so important, which is nice.
I should know that one.
Yeah, you must see that all the time, right?
Yeah.
The whole front row of the audience were all like that.
Yeah.
Fingers out, thumbs up.
It's Lou Sanders.
I love her.
Okay, what about a closed fist, thumb out, little finger like that?
Phone you later.
No, it literally is that, right?
It looks like this.
Is it?
It looks like the phone call.
That's the medieval symbol for eavesdropping.
Wow.
So when you're listening in on something you shouldn't be listening in on,
the way you show that in art, in medieval art, is to do this.
Oh, interesting. But it does look like the phone medieval art, is to do this. Oh, interesting.
But it does look like the phone call sign, doesn't it?
I quite like that.
I've got a lot of people pointing at other people,
and that is, do you know what that is?
Nice to see you, to see you nice.
Yeah, Bruce Forsythe.
Weirdly, he's in it all the time.
No, that's to indicate who might be talking in the scene.
Oh, that's good. That's to help us, the time uh no that's to indicate who might be talking in the scene oh
that's good that's to help us the viewer understand who's who's doing the chatting
and then the final one is when uh two characters touch fingers what do you think that is oh i've
no idea it's basically a sacred command um might be related to some sort of order to go and do
something or maybe a sacred relic so yeah there's all these little clues in the tapestry that are really subtle but they're really lovely um and people
might have understood them at the time as being quite obvious it's amazing because they didn't
have podcasts at the time so they didn't it's amazing that they they sort of got that isn't it
how did they know anything yeah you've talked nina about kind of the art you've talked about
some of the materials it's gold
thread it's linen how many colors is it 10 colors 10 colors they're all made with natural dyes it's
not the same as other Opus Anglicanum because other Opus Anglicanum would have had gold and
silk and jewels woven in it's actually quite simple and that's why I think it was doing
something completely different I mean I don't want to overblow this but the barotapestry is the most amazing miraculous survivor there is nothing
else like it you know the fragments that you have that survive from around the time they're like
tiny like this and they're not very interesting this thing shouldn't have survived so under
Napoleon they didn't think it was worth anything and they just used it to wrap up munitions in a barrel.
They just threw it over.
It was just used like kind of wrapping material, you know, packaging material.
It was basically a tarpaulin on a cart, wasn't it?
It was used as basically a covering on a wagon for some cannonballs
by Napoleon's soldiers.
Yeah, and then it's been all used and abused.
It was on a roller.
And so, you know, you were saying they could roll it out like a film.
It was on a roller at one point,
but that meant that the whole outside of the last scene is lost
because that was the bit that was constantly kind of being rolled
back and forth and pulled out.
So it was really badly damaged through that.
And then the really good one, during the war,
part of the Nazi party that was charged with stealing artwork,
one of the things they wanted was charged with stealing artwork,
one of the things they wanted to grab was the Bayeux Tapestry because they sort of thought it was this fabulous product
of Western European civilization.
And so they nearly got, the Nazis nearly got their hands on it.
But the codebreakers at Bletchley Park intercepted a message
that said the Bayeux Tapestry was going to be nicked.
It was put in the basement of the Louvre.
And by the time the people commissioned to take it
back to Germany were sent to France,
the first landings on the Normandy beaches happened
and France was being liberated.
So they didn't get their hands on it
because it could be lost like so many other artworks.
So it's remarkable the fact it survived at all.
It's remarkable for what it is, 70 metres of embroidery.
And it's just, I mean, I just think it's fascinating.
I just think it's such an important object.
And let's just talk a bit more about the making of it,
because the technique used was called pricking and pouncing.
Lou, what do you think pricking and pouncing is?
Well, the pricking's obvious, no? With the needle, is it not?
And then pouncing, well, there's got to be the other part
where you put the thread, I don't know.
Back through, loop it back through.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But pouncing maybe is a longer one or something.
Pricking, you make hundreds of tiny holes
in the drawing of the parchment
and then you blow a powder called the pounce onto it.
So it's ground up charcoal and cuttlefish.
So it's basically like cuttlefish, and you grind it up,
and then you blow it through the holes.
You go through the actual holes you've made with the tiny little needle,
and then you join the dots with the brush and the ink.
So it's this sort of really important sort of manual crafts.
And how did you think I was going to guess that with all the cuttlefish stuff i just thought you'd know lou i mean we both grew
up in kent did you not pounce and prick your way through the saturday evenings
nina do you want to tell us about the fact that we can identify maybe even individual hands in it
when we say hands i mean like individual women doing specific work I mean there had to have been probably 10 12 people working at any one time what's interesting about
you talking about the pricking and pouncing Greg is that this idea that you know cartoons are
arriving from probably from St Augustine's in Canterbury I think sent out to the nuns the nuns
have to take those drawings put them on the linen and then make sense of them
interpret them but they cannot get a lot of freedom with that because you you know each
individual stitcher each individual embroiderer is going to bring their own style to the way they
do figures i mean the foliage is the bit i get so excited about you know we mentioned it was a bit
like a comic book well the only breaks in the scenes are these trees that sort of wrap over
and break up the sequence of events
but if you start looking at the trees they're beautiful and that's where you can see different
hands at work so different women do trees differently they do leaves differently they do
you know faces differently i think you know of course it's a collaborative work so they
have a lot of room to kind of um yeah express a little bit of their own skill really so you're
saying maybe 10 to 12 women they they're working in 10 different colours.
We're looking at potentially something like 45 to 50 kilos of wool,
like in terms of weight, like the amount of fabric required.
It's huge.
What's really interesting is there's a modern replica in Reading.
And it was made in the 19th century, Nina, by the Leek Society.
There's a lady called Elizabeth Wardle and the Leek Society,
and they had a go at copying it.
Do you want to tell us about that?
It's a fantastic thing.
So they made it in the 1880s.
It was sort of designed to be a sort of co-op, if you like,
to empower women embroiderers, to give them a sense
that they have their own possession of this art form of embroidery.
So each of the women was sent a strip of linen
and they had to embroider their name under the bit that they did,
which is so different to the original.
But it's kind of cool.
It's like, look, we're going to have our names etched on this now.
It's a very, very close replica.
And each of the members of the Leek Society
had an example that they're working from but
what's really interesting if you go and see the reading example lou you'll be looking for those
willies you'll be looking for those little naked guys unfortunately they've got underpants on in
the reading exam wow now now i thought when i first heard about this i was like oh yeah prim
victorian women they couldn't simply couldn't bring themselves to draw a penis no no no I first heard about this. I was like, oh, yeah, prim Victorian women.
They couldn't simply couldn't bring themselves to draw a penis. No, no, no.
The fact is, it wasn't the leak ladies who, you know, edited out the penises.
It was the male curators at the Victoria and Albert Museum who sent them the photographs in the first place.
They put the little underpants on. So, again, it kind of makes us think maybe Victorian women
weren't as prim as we like to think they were.
But it's a very, very cool thing.
And it means you can sort of see a really close replica
in Britain as well.
Yeah, it's beautiful.
And the colours are lovely and vibrant as well.
So you can pop along to Reading Museum and see it.
Indeed, you can see the bio tapestry online.
You can scroll through the whole thing on the internet,
which is a lovely thing to do. So we've been doing it during this podcast and there is obviously
latin text so i wanted to ask nina oh sorry i thought that was a question for me oh well go
on then lu yeah latin and all the question i was going to ask her she and by all means feel this
one lu how many people do you think spoke latin at the in 1066? Oh I will defer to Lena in the end. I mean it's not many right? Yeah because it's the language of
the church so the people that would have been able to have written it read it they'd have had
to be educated within monasteries within convents so yeah we're talking about church people but
normal everyday people would have in England they would have spoken old English still
in 1066 whereas in Normandy they would have spoken a sort of old French and so what I think is
important about the Bay of Tapestries it is a springboard it's a jumping off point you'd have
had it there officially hanging in the cathedral but then you'd bring the you know the bards and
they'd be singing the most popular song of the the bards and they'd be singing the most popular song
of the version of events and they'd be singing it in the vernacular language so people would
understand it so you know this thing isn't static it's dynamic it's supposed to be used and and you
know it might have traveled around it might have gone on tour there is actually a sort of one
theory nina there's a sort of musical element to this yeah this is so fascinating greg and the
reason i'm really excited about it is because I was recently making a documentary in Egypt.
And I was looking at Egyptian freezers with this really animated academic.
And he's jumping around. He's telling me all about the procession that it shows.
And what he says is, can you see how the spears or the things they're holding break the frame at regular intervals and he said I
think it's because it's supposed to be a rhythm it's supposed to be showing the rhythm of dance
of movement of the people in the freeze and I was like that's exactly like the Bayeux Tapestry the
Bayeux Tapestry has also got we think these sorts of indications that could have been kind of rhythmic
beats things for the kind of you know whoever the the bard was that was riffing on it.
They could hit the points, hit the points in the scenes.
I think, you know, people of the past weren't boring.
They liked a good party.
They liked to be entertained as well.
Make it animated, make it fun, you know.
Yeah.
So maybe when you were looking at it as a medieval peasant,
maybe it's a bit like watching the kind of the Disney version,
the sing-along version of Let It Go in the Frozen movie.
The little karaoke snowflake bouncing along the words.
You can sing along.
I can see how you spent your evenings, Greg.
I've got a toddler.
I've got a toddler.
I watch a lot of Frozen.
It's very good.
Frozen 2 actually underrated.
So maybe there's a sort of experiential element.
Maybe people are sort of, you know, sniffing herbs.
Maybe there's embers going on.
Maybe there's monastic chanting happening in the background.
I mean, Lou, you're on tour at the moment.
Have you ever considered bringing in monastic chanting or herbs into your set?
Well, I do burn someā¦
Witches.
What's it called?
No.
Let them off.
No, this Paolo Santo, like it's a stick of wood and it smells really nice and it's good for clearing
i used to burn sage and so i do do a bit of that before sometimes light a candle i don't really
chart but chant but i have done stuff like that put it this way i've been to a couple of retreats
you know you've tried some stuff you've tried some stuff yeah even an artwork might have been
experienced in more a kind of not just a visual way but actually
sensory like you may be to smell it or even hear people engaging with it would have been really
quite exciting perhaps this is why i get frustrated going to museums and galleries a lot of the time
because you'll see a medieval artifact and it's in a glass box and it's white surroundings and
there's like nothing there but actually these objects they would have been surrounded by
all the senses they
reproduced the coronation of Henry II in Gloucester Cathedral a couple of years ago
and they put crushed herbs on the floor of the cathedral which is how it would have been and the
smell when you went in you're standing on this rosemary and all these things and your feet are
like stimulating the herbs and I was like this is. This is how it would have been, you know,
smells, sounds, sights,
the light of stained glass kind of bouncing off things,
candles, you know, it would have been sensory.
You have to see them in that environment.
Wow.
What do you think, Lou?
Have we talked you around?
Do you like the Bayeux Tapestry now?
Yeah, I like it.
I like it. And for my gigs now,
I might start bringing in smells
and other sounds and lights and stuff
you know lights i do have i am lit but you know you just stand in the dark yeah and some horse
dicks and weirdly i was saying before we started recording i have got a story in my show about
giving a horse a boner so you know there is crossover uh i don't know if i should ask you
about the giving a horse a boner i feel like i wasn't trying to i think it's important to um
you were you were just alluding to the fact you're an expert okay no i just
you know i can't help it people get excited to meet me
all right well i mean we've talked a lot about um tapestry, which, of course, is an embroidery.
And I think that means it's time for us to wrap up the main chat and for us to get into some nuance.
The nuance window!
Now, this is where Lou and I take a little break.
We do some cross-stitch, perhaps, and we allow Nina two minutes to tell us something we need to know
about how to think about the Bayeux tapestry so I'm gonna get my stopwatch up Nina and without
much further ado can we please have the nuance window I want to take these two minutes to really
kind of go underneath the skin of what we've been talking about throughout this because
what I've tried to do through our conversation and what I've tried to do in the way I look at the Bayeux Tapestry and think about it is to look at it in a different way
in a way that I was never told how to look at it so I was always told the right way the empirical
truths of history you mentioned at the beginning dates and facts and information that I believe
that history is far more subjective like that history than that history is the collection of all people, their creativity, their individuality, their difference.
And now the way that we do history is changing. So history is written for the people that are consuming it at the time.
When we needed a world where people were going across the globe, colonising, the slave trade was operating.
The historians gave readers stories of explorers and great adventurers. When you needed to get warriors to fight the queen and country or king and country, you would tell them stories of warriors, of heroes that had gone to their death.
But we are not living in those times. We're living in a new period where we're trying to find a little bit of equality in the world it's still a thin veneer painted over most of the globe but well how do we do history now
and this goes right back to the thing lisa at the beginning i really believe it has to be social
history it has to be history that reframes the narrative i'm reframing it by putting it around
those few women that we can find but just by shifting the frame
it's the same history it's the same evidence it's the same facts but it's a different way of looking
and I think you can't be what you can't see and historians have a responsibility to put people
back into the narrative that have been excluded from it previously and that's two minutes thank you so much great passion i love nina's passion i absolutely agree as ever with everything
she said this has gone very well this show isn't it brilliant well we've had a lovely old chat
about the the biotapestry which means it's time now to see how much our lovely comedian
has remembered it's time for our quiz so what do you know now
this is the so what do you know now yeah everyone always forgets about the quiz they always have a
nice time and then they go oh no the quiz we've got 10 questions for you. Here we go. Question one. The Bayeux Tapestry is not a tapestry. What is it?
It's a...
Embroidery.
Embroidery, of course, of course.
Question two. The Bayeux Tapestry is now in Bayeux, but where was it most likely made?
Kent, probably in, you know, Canterbury or somewhere like that.
It was, yeah. Question three. The
tapestry depicts which major historical battle? Oh I do know this one. The Battle of Hastings.
It was 1066. Question four. The tapestry is often said to show Harold Gobinson getting an arrow in
the eye but how is he more likely to have died? Oh all the bits chopped off. It was all the bits.
Question five.
Although the tapestry is a mistress work, not a masterpiece,
previously attributed to Queen Matilda,
it was almost certainly crafted by which women?
The nuns, of course.
It was the nuns, the nuns of barking.
Question six.
One theory says that Queen Edith commissioned the tapestry,
but who do most scholars think was the
patron? Little Bobo. Odo. His name is Odo. I love that you call him Bobo. I'll give you half a mark
for that. Odo. Bishop Odo of Bayeux. Question seven. The surviving tapestry is roughly 50
centimetres wide and nearly 70 metres long. Roughly how many years do we think it took to make?
Three. Three years years it was three uh
question eight the tapestry contains references to which famous collection of ancient greek stories
oh yes the one um the one about animals and fables and it's called have you got the name there
aesop aesop yeah oh no it's very similar to a moisturizer called aesop and Aesop? Yeah. Oh, no. It's very similar to a moisturiser called Aesop.
And that's why I should remember it.
Okay.
I'll give you half a mark because you remembered fables and you remembered animals.
So I'll give you half a mark.
Okay.
Question nine.
There are only three women shown in the Bayeux Tapestry.
Can you name one of them?
Well, it wasn't Mary.
No.
It was that one that no one knows about with a man wanking underneath her.
And then it was Edith.
Yes.
Yes.
Question 10.
This is for 9 out of 10, which would be very good.
In the 19th century, Elizabeth Wardle and the Women of the Leek Society
reproduced the tapestry in Reading, but their reference images edited out 93 what?
Schlongs.
It was Schlongs.
Ding-dongs.
9 out of 10.
Very good.
Lou Sanders, very strong. You made it quite easy for me and i do appreciate it no no no we had a lovely old chat uh are you pleased with that
score yeah i'm glowing fab and listener if you need more dr nina in your life then check out
our episode on old norse literature it's's an absolute hoot. And if you want more episodes about art endangered by Napoleon, then you can listen to our Napoleon
episode or our episode about the Chevalier de Saint-Georges. And remember, if you've enjoyed
the podcast, please leave us a review, share the show with your friends, make sure to subscribe
to You're Dead to Me on BBC Sounds so you never miss an episode. All that's left for me to do is
to say a huge thank you to our guests in History Corner.
We have the magnificent
Dr Yanina Ramirez.
Thank you, Nina.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I'm doing my awe gesture
at the camera.
Awe and respect.
Big fingers, big thumbs.
Yeah.
And in Comedy Corner,
we have the superb Lou Sanders.
Thank you, Lou.
Thank you for having me.
What a lovely show.
And to you, lovely listener,
join me next time as we weave another tale
of history and hilarity
but for now
I'm off to go and stitch
some bonus underpants
for the men
in the You're Dead To Me
podcast artwork
bye
You're Dead To Me
was a production
by The Athletic
for BBC Radio 4
the research was by
John Mason
the episode was written
and produced by
Emma Neguse and me
the assistant producer was Emmy Rose Price Goodfellow.
The project manager was Saifah Mio. And the audio producer was Abby Patterson.
Hello, I'm Dr Michael Moseley. And in my podcast, Just One Thing, I'm investigating some quick,
simple and surprising ways to improve your health and
life. From a cup of coffee to increase fat burning. Maybe a nap to boost your productivity.
Or how about a bit of dancing to big up your brain power. So to benefit your brain and body in ways you might not
expect, here's just one thing you can do right now. Subscribe to the podcast on BBC Sounds.