Bayeux Tapestry arrives in London after epic journey from France


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The fragile 68m embroidered tapestry has left its French home in Bayeux in a high-tech container designed to eliminate vibrations and maintain a steady temperature and humidity, the source said. Photo: AFP

The medieval Bayeux Tapestry arrived in London in the early hours of Friday after leaving France for the first time in more than 900 years on a hugely complicated journey to an exhibition in the British capital.

AFP journalists at the British Museum saw a metal case holding the 11th-century work being unloaded from a truck which had carried it across the Channel in a hushed-up, high-security operation.

"It's a unique moment and it's the product of so much hard work," museum director Nicholas Cullinan told AFP after the tapestry arrived around 3am (0200 GMT). It left its home in northern France on Thursday night.

"It's been very special to have witnessed the arrival of the Bayeux Tapestry, and especially for it to be back on these shores for the first time in probably a thousand years," added Cullinan.

While its exact origins are a mystery, the tapestry depicting the 1066 Battle of Hastings and start of the invasion by William the Conqueror's Norman army is widely thought to have been made in England before being transferred to Bayeux.

A truck carrying the Bayeux Tapestry pulls up to the British Museum in central London early on July 10. Photo: AFP
A truck carrying the Bayeux Tapestry pulls up to the British Museum in central London early on July 10. Photo: AFP

It is believed to be the first time the fragile, 68m (224-foot) embroidered tapestry has left France since then, and the first time it has been moved in over 40 years.

It will be displayed at the British Museum from Sept 10 to July 11, 2027, with 100,000 tickets already sold to the public for the first four months of the exhibition.

The date and details of the move were kept secret until the departure of the tapestry, which was led by a police escort to London from the southern coast in the dead of night.

'Moving moment'

French President Emmanuel Macron, who announced the historic loan last year, hailed the transfer as a celebration of Franco-British relations.

It was a "tangible expression of long-standing friendship and a sign of our shared desire to see France and the United Kingdom build their future together," Macron wrote in The Times newspaper.

"It's a very moving moment," French ambassador to Britain Helene Duchene told reporters at the museum.

A worker prepares to pack the Bayeux Tapestry in a crate for transfer to the British Museum, at the Bayeux Tapestry Museum, in Bayeux, northwestern France. Photo: AFP
A worker prepares to pack the Bayeux Tapestry in a crate for transfer to the British Museum, at the Bayeux Tapestry Museum, in Bayeux, northwestern France. Photo: AFP

The transfer - funded by Britain - is the result of over a year of planning and technical studies, including two test trips with a full-scale reproduction of the tapestry.

Plans to loan it to London had been considered twice before: in 1953 for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II and in 1966 for the 900th anniversary of the Battle of Hastings.

Some experts had voiced concerns the move risked causing irreversible damage to a work already weakened by 30 tears and nearly 10,000 holes.

A 2021 study by restoration experts warned of the "additional risks" that a trip lasting more than two hours would pose to the tapestry.

"An unprecedented amount of thought and planning and care has gone into it," Cullinan assured AFP.

The historic artwork will be displayed at the British Museum from Sept 10 to July 11, 2027, with 100,000 tickets already sold to the public for the first four months of the exhibition. Photo: AP
The historic artwork will be displayed at the British Museum from Sept 10 to July 11, 2027, with 100,000 tickets already sold to the public for the first four months of the exhibition. Photo: AP

The tapestry will remain in its specially made, shock-proof case for a few days to "acclimatise", after which a condition check will take place, explained the museum director.

'Unfinished story'

The British government has agreed to provide insurance coverage estimated at £800mil (RM4.4bil) in the event of major damage to the tapestry.

Peter Ricketts, a former British ambassador to Paris who helped coordinate the transfer, insisted the one-of-a-kind work will be returned to France "safe and sound".

The eye-watering insurance cover "just shows how serious we are about ensuring that it goes back in good condition," Ricketts told AFP before the transfer.

Many scholars believe the tapestry was made by English women artisans in or around Canterbury in southern England.

It was probably commissioned by Bishop Odo of Bayeux - William the Conqueror's half-brother - in 1077 to decorate the new cathedral in his hometown, Bayeux, according to the tapestry's home museum.

The medieval Bayeux Tapestry began a complicated journey from northern France to London on July 9, where the 11th-century artwork is set to go on display at the British Museum. Photo: AFP
The medieval Bayeux Tapestry began a complicated journey from northern France to London on July 9, where the 11th-century artwork is set to go on display at the British Museum. Photo: AFP

"I think it's an incredibly human document... there's so much that people can empathise with and relate with," said project curator Millie Horton-Insch.

The tapestry features 627 figures and 737 animals including horses, dogs and birds, according to the British Museum.

Only six women are depicted on it - one is being possibly assaulted, one crying and one fleeing a burning house clutching a child.

"The Bayeux Tapestry is an unfinished story. Its conclusion eludes us," Macron wrote.

"It is our job to write the next chapter, in a spirit of respect, trust and renewed alliance." - AFP

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