Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 30
British Museum Starts £33 Bayeux Tapestry Ticket Sales on July 1
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 30

British Museum Starts £33 Bayeux Tapestry Ticket Sales on July 1

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 30

Summary

  • £33 tickets for the British Museum’s Bayeux Tapestry exhibition go on sale on July 1, with each visit limited to 40 minutes.
  • The 70-metre embroidery, depicting the 1066 Norman conquest, is being loaned from Bayeux in Normandy after surviving there for centuries.
  • The exhibition’s arrival in London is being treated as a major cultural event, though the report notes the tapestry was likely embroidered in Kent in the 1070s.
  • That loan is also cast as a prompt to revisit Britain’s wider medieval heritage—from Durham and Ely to Conwy and Salisbury—much of it cheaper or free to see.

Insights

Why do we queue for a famous loaned artifact while Britain’s own magnificent medieval treasures are often overlooked?
The Bayeux Tapestry shows a Norman victory, but what do forgotten English texts reveal about the conquest’s brutal truth?
How did medieval engineers build soaring Gothic cathedrals that were designed to be a 'heaven on Earth'?