Asked by Jill
A)
The Bayeux Tapestry, one of the most detailed sources that chronicles William the Conqueror’s riseto power, might not tell the whole story. Which of the following
best
explains why?
(1 point)
It does not tell the story of the Battle of Hastings.
It depicts the Battle of Hastings from the Norman point of view, not the Anglo-Saxon point of view.
It does not include a reference to Harold.
William of Normandy is not explicitly depicted in the tapestry.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
It depicts the Battle of Hastings from the Norman point of view, not the Anglo-Saxon point of view.
Explanation: the tapestry was likely commissioned by Norman patrons (e.g., Bishop Odo) and serves a Norman/propaganda perspective, so it’s biased and omits or downplays Anglo-Saxon viewpoints and details.
Explanation: the tapestry was likely commissioned by Norman patrons (e.g., Bishop Odo) and serves a Norman/propaganda perspective, so it’s biased and omits or downplays Anglo-Saxon viewpoints and details.
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