The Scotsman

Macron’s diplomatic arrow hits target with offer to loan the Bayeux Tapestry

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS

French president Emmanuel Macron mounted a diplomatic conquest of Britain yesterday with the announceme­nt that the 950-year-old Bayeux Tapestry will finally be loaned to the UK.

Ahead of a summit between Mr Macron and Prime Minister Theresa May today, it was revealed that the 70m tapestry depicting the Norman victory in the Battle of Hastings in 1066, would follow the route of King William the Conqueror’s longboats across the Channel.

The tapestry – which has never left France and has only twice left its home in Normandy – is expected to be displayed at the British Museum in around five years, after checks on its condition.

At Prime Minister’s Questions yesterday, Mrs May welcomed the loan and said “the maximum number of people” will be able to see the work.

Dr Levi Roach, medieval historian at the University of Exeter, said there could “scarcely be a better symbol of the close yet fraught ties that have bound the two nations together” as the UK prepares to quit the European Union.

A French government official said: “This loan is under considerat­ion, because there will be several months of restoratio­n work at the Museum of Bayeux.

“It will not be before 2020 because it is an extremely fragile cultural treasure which will be subject to major restoratio­n work before being transporte­d anywhere.”

Although the first record of the tapestry is in the Bayeux Cathedral inventory of treasures in 1476, it is believed it was stitched in England by nuns of St Augustine’s Abbey in Canterbury.

It is currently on display in a darkened room in the Bayeux Museum in Normandy.

The British Museum said it would be “honoured and delighted” to display the tapestry.

Its director, Hartwig Fischer, said: “This would be a major loan, probably the most sigthe

0 The fragile tapestry is housed in darkened galleries in Normandy’s Bayeux Museum nificant ever from France to the UK.”

However, rival bids to host the tapestry have already been made. At PMQS, Bexhill and Battle MP Huw Merriman said that Battle Abbey would be an appropriat­e location, at the site where Saxon King Harold is said to have been slain by an arrow through the eye. Home Secretary Amber Rudd also suggested her Hastings and Rye constituen­cy should be in contention.

Mrs May said: “I am sure we will be looking very carefully to ensure that the maximum number of people can take the benefit of seeing this tapestry.”

Prime Minister will meet the French president at Sandhurst Royal Military Academy today.

The loan will be on the agenda as well as efforts to combat terrorism and promote work to map the human genome.

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