Highlands Ranch High School - Mr. Sedivy
THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY VI
ATTENDANTS HAVE SERVED IT |
THEY HAVE PREPARED A MEAL. BISHOP BLESSES THE FOOD
AND DRINK
|
Fowl sizzling on spits, pork boiling in a pot, the aroma of fresh
bread baked in an outdoor oven:
William and his followers eat well on English viands. A cook passes the food to indoor
servants who array it on shields
and serve their masters. Bishop Odo of Bayeux, half-brother to the Conqueror, says
grace.
BISHOP ODO, WILLIAM, ROBERT |
THIS MAN HAS ORDERED A DITCH DUG AND CASTLE AT HASTINGS
|
A servant stands by to refill wine bowls. After the meal, the Norman
lord holds a council of war with Odo and another
half-brother, Robert of Mortain. A soldier, holding a spear, orders fortifications
built at Hastings. First rule of Norman occupation:
build a castle to defend the territory. Workmen shovel dirt and stones for a mound
to support the wooden keep;
HERE WILLIAM HAS HAD NEWS OF HAROLD |
HERE A HOUSE IS BURNED |
Another workman digs a ditch, or moat. A seated William hears a messenger
tell of Harold hastening southward.
William orders homes burned, knowing Harold's compassion for the people.
HERE THE SOLDIERS HAVE GONE OUT FROM HASTINGS |
With the news that the Anglo-Saxons draw near, the duke dons full battle armor; a
squire brings his Spanish charger -
a present from King Alfonso of Aragon. An anxious night gives way to a chill dawn
as the army moves out.
AND COME TO BATTLE AGAINST KING HAROLD
|
Uttering prayers for victory, veteran Norman knights mount their sturdy
war horses
and ride to destiny at sunrise on an immortal day: October 14, 1066. Leading his
army with mace in hand,
William meets the knight Vital, who brings news of the enemy's position.
HERE DUKE WILLIAM ASKS VITAL WHETHER HE HAD SEEN HAROLD'S ARMY |
The English - also about 7,000 strong - occupy the hill of Senlacnear
Hastings.
From Telham Hill, hardened Norman knights blanch at the sight across the valley:
thousands of spear points bristle
behind a phalanx of wooden shields. The Normans thread marshy land and climb a brambly
slope.
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Mr. Sedivy's History Classes
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