Lifesize replica of 70-metre work, which cost museum £16,000, was part of sale of late drummer Charlie Watts’s estate
In 1872, a photographer from the South Kensington Museum – now the Victoria and Albert – travelled to France to take pictures of the Bayeux tapestry, the most famous piece of medieval art in the world.
Photography was in its infancy and the images of the 70-metre (230ft) work depicting the 1066 invasion of England by William the Conqueror and the Battle of Hastings, including the killing of King Harold, were produced on glass plates and coloured by hand, a process that took two years.
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