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Gone Medieval

The Crusades and the Chertsey Tiles

Gone Medieval

History Hit

History

4.62.2K Ratings

🗓️ 24 January 2023

⏱️ 42 minutes

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Summary

The largest group of tiles in The British Museum was found at the site of Chertsey Abbey in Surrey. These fragmented floor tiles depict the fictional killing of Sultan Saladin during the Crusades by Richard the Lionheart. Groundbreaking technological research has now revealed what the tile fragments originally looked like on the floor of the Chapter House, as well as some surprising revelations.


In this episode of Gone Medieval, Dr. Cat Jarman talks to Dr. Amanda Luyster, to find out how the Chertsey Tiles shed light on the impact that the Crusades had on the medieval visual culture of England.


This episode was edited and produced by Rob Weinberg.


The exhibition, Bringing the Holy Land Home: The Crusades, Chertsey Abbey, and the Reconstruction of a Medieval Masterpiece, is at the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Gallery, College of the Holy Cross, Worcester MA, USA, 27 January - 9 April 2023.


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Transcript

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1:33.2

Hello and welcome to Gone Medieval from History Hit. I'm Dr. Kat Jarman.

1:39.4

The crusades are a very well-known part of European history but now some new and quite

1:45.9

important knowledge has come up from our other unexpected sores,

1:49.5

assets of fragmented floor tiles known as the Chertsea tiles.

1:53.9

The tiles were created in the 13th century and feature images and Latin texts.

1:58.4

Texts have remained untranslated until now. Along with an international team,

...

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