Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Review of 1066 : The Hidden History in the Bayeux Tapestry

1066 : The Hidden History in the Bayeux Tapestry
BaileysBooks avatar reviewed on + 491 more book reviews


For centuries, the Bayeux Tapestry has been hailed as a written record of the Norman Conquest of Britain after the Battle of Hastings in 1066. This book takes that assumption and quite soundly turns it on its head.

I didn't know anything about the Bayeux Tapestry when I started this book and I finished it feeling very well informed. The author does a nice job of providing information to piece together the earliest history of the tapestry: from the many theories of its artisans to the secret of its preservation in near mint condition for nearly a thousand years when so much else from medieval times has been completely lost to history.

Bridgeford walks the reader through the tapestry one scene at a time, providing historical references of the era, perspective regarding the "accepted" interpretations, and arguments to the contrary that support his theories.

This book is well written and organized. The arguments presented to support this English/French-perspective theory are succinct and well-researched. The author makes a compelling argument to back up all of his points and is willing to concede that there is much about the tapestry that simply cannot and will not ever be known. But after reading this book, it is hard to see the tapestry in any other way except for the way in which Bridgeford presents it.

There are color pictures of the tapestry in the book, but the formatting of the binding causes the edges of the tapestry photos to continue well into the center of the book, making the details of those edge plates very hard to look at clearly. For a book that is all about the interpretation of a tapestry, I was rather disappointed that the pictures of that tapestry were so poorly displayed.

Otherwise, I have no complaints about this book. It was informative and easy to read. It was non-fiction, history, research, and forensics all rolled into one and I am very glad that I read it.