Bayeux Tapestry arrives in UK overnight accompanied by police escort

This article was first published by Museums Assocation.

Tapestry undergoing checks after ‘monumental effort’ to ensure safe passage

The Bayeux Tapestry has arrived in the UK for the first time in 970 years, the British Museum has confirmed.

The tapestry was transported by lorry from a secret location in France overnight via the Channel Tunnel, chaperoned by a police escort.

The heavily guarded journey coincided with France’s victorious World Cup clash against Morocco, which saw heightened security and stringent crackdowns across many French cities to prevent disorder between rival fans.

According to the British Museum (BM), the Metropolitan Police Service and Kent Police “transported the 11th-century embroidery safely from Folkestone to London in one of the most significant international museum loans ever undertaken between the two countries”.

A giant image of the tapestry, conceived by the BM’s social media content producer Elliott Wheatland and created by Pixel Sharp, was projected onto the White Cliffs of Dover to welcome its arrival.

The artefact, packed in a large aluminum paravant designed to minimise travel vibrations, arrived at the BM at 2.48am. It was lowered out of the lorry in front of a select crowd, including the French ambassador to the UK, Hélène Tréheux-Duchêne, and the BM director Nicholas Cullinan.

The museum has worked for the past year with France’s Ministry of Culture, including the General Directorate of Heritage and Architecture and the Regional Directorate of Cultural Affairs of Normandy, the UK Government’s Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and the specialised transport company Hizkia to arrange the transport of the tapestry.