Britain

FIELD DAY

It was a dazzling, 18-day spectacle of jousts, masquerades and feasting amid a sea of specially built tents, banqueting houses and ‘portable palaces’. For King Henry VIII, François I of France and their courtiers it was also the party of a lifetime. Some 12,000 people attended and Henry’s contingent alone had brought food supplies of more than 2,000 sheep, 98,000 eggs, 13 swans and three porpoises, with nearly 200,000 litres of wine and 66,000 litres of beer to wash it all down.

This year marks the 500th anniversary of the extraordinary Field of Cloth of Gold, so named for its extravagant splendour. Historic Royal Palaces is celebrating with an exhibition, , bringing together rare and priceless artefacts for the first time to explore the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Britain

Britain3 min read
Your Letters
The latest wonderful and much-appreciated issue of BRITAIN magazine [Vol 92 Issue 1] arrived today. Reading the excellent article on Cheshire brought tears to my eyes for several reasons. My wife and I were married in Canada in 1966 and flew the foll
Britain6 min read
On the Whisky Trail
Wedged between the shimmering waters of the Moray Firth in the north and the brooding bulk of the Cairngorm Mountains in the south, Speyside is characterised by the wide, meandering River Spey that lends its name to the area. Skinny-legged trees line
Britain5 min read
The Husband Hunters
Hit period drama The Buccaneers, an adaptation of Edith Wharton’s unfinished final novel, follows five spirited American heiresses in pursuit of aristocratic English husbands in the tightly-corseted 1870s. When Wharton wrote her book, she was reporti

Related Books & Audiobooks