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Field of the Cloth of Gold

In the spring of 1520 six thousand Englishmen and women packed their bags and followed their King across the sea to France. They weren't part of an invasion force but were attendants to King Henry VIII and travelling to take part in the greatest and most conspicuous display of wealth and culture that Europe had ever seen. They were met by Francis I of France and six thousand French noblemen and servants on English soil in Northern France and erected their temporary palaces, elaborate tents, jousting pavilions and golden fountains spewing forth red, white and claret wine in the Val D'Or. For just over two weeks they created a temporary town the size of Norwich, England's second city, on the 'Camp du Drap D'Or', or Field of the Cloth of Gold. What drove the French and the English to create such an extraordinary event? What did the two sides do when they got there, and what -- if anything -- was achieved? Melvyn Bragg leads a round-table discussion with Steven Gunn, Lecturer in Modern History at Oxford University; John Guy, Fellow of Clare College, University of Cambridge; and Penny Roberts, Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Warwick. Bragg has written, edited and produced "The South Bank Show" since 1978 for London Weekend Television, for which he has been Controller of Arts since 1990; he's written 19 novels (and won the WH Smith Literary Award), plus 11 histories, biographies and other nonfiction.
Read entire article at BBC Radio 4 "In Our Time"