Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Editor's Note
- Abbreviations
- 1 Four Windows on Early Britain
- 2 Violence, Penance, and Secular Law in Alfred's Mosaic Prologue
- 3 Summary Justice and Seigneurial Justice in Northern Iberia on the Eve of the Millennium
- 4 Before She Was Queen: Matilda of Flanders and the Use of Comitissa in the Norman Ducal Charters
- 5 A Feast for the Eyes: Representing Odo at the Banquet in the Bayeux Embroidery
- 6 The Count of the Côtentin: Western Normandy, William of Mortain, and the Career of Henry I
- 7 Between Plena Caritas and Plenitudo Legis: The Ecclesiology of the Norman Anonymous
- 8 On the Abbots of Le Mont Saint-Michel. An Edition and Translation
- 9 Rural Servitude and Legal Learning in Thirteenth-Century Catalonia
5 - A Feast for the Eyes: Representing Odo at the Banquet in the Bayeux Embroidery
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Editor's Note
- Abbreviations
- 1 Four Windows on Early Britain
- 2 Violence, Penance, and Secular Law in Alfred's Mosaic Prologue
- 3 Summary Justice and Seigneurial Justice in Northern Iberia on the Eve of the Millennium
- 4 Before She Was Queen: Matilda of Flanders and the Use of Comitissa in the Norman Ducal Charters
- 5 A Feast for the Eyes: Representing Odo at the Banquet in the Bayeux Embroidery
- 6 The Count of the Côtentin: Western Normandy, William of Mortain, and the Career of Henry I
- 7 Between Plena Caritas and Plenitudo Legis: The Ecclesiology of the Norman Anonymous
- 8 On the Abbots of Le Mont Saint-Michel. An Edition and Translation
- 9 Rural Servitude and Legal Learning in Thirteenth-Century Catalonia
Summary
Odo is not just a subject in the medieval embroidery known as the Bayeux Tapestry; he is also generally taken to be its patron. For this reason, the way in which the embroidery depicts Odo of Conteville, who was half-brother to William the Conqueror, bishop of Bayeux (1049/50–1097), and earl of Kent (1067–82), has been of great scholarly interest. Not only have scholars detected evidence of his efforts at self-aggrandizement in certain episodes of the embroidery, but they have also assumed that his perspective on the Norman Conquest somehow influenced the portrayal of this event as a whole. In addition, his role as benefactor of the monastery of St Augustine's in Canterbury, where both style and iconographic motifs suggest the work was created, is thought to increase the likelihood that he was involved in some way.
In trying to understand more fully Odo's relationship to the Bayeux Embroidery, this study will focus on the episode in which he is shown officiating at a banquet held after the Normans had landed in England but before hostilities had begun (fig. 1). The feast has received a certain amount of scholarly attention; its pictorial sources, its representation of food and utensils, and the social significance of this kind of communal meal have all been discussed. At the same time, this scene, the first one of the embroidery in which Odo is identified by inscription, has been described as both ‘propaganda by visual association’, and – since Odo is supposedly represented in the guise of Jesus in the Last Supper – as ‘iconographic hyperbole that … borders on blasphemy’.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Haskins Society Journal 222010 - Studies in Medieval History, pp. 83 - 122Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012