France Tried to Get Rosetta Stone and Free Admission for French Citizens in Exchange for Bayeux Tapestry

When the Bayeux Tapestry crosses the Channel next year for a blockbuster run at the British Museum, some in Paris hoped that their compatriots could admire it for free—or at least on the cheap.

The Financial Times reported Wednesday that French officials had lobbied for discounted or free entry for French citizens, a request British negotiators dismissed as a “try‑on” that was “never going to happen.”

The move was highly unusual. While French museums rarely offer free entry even to their own citizens, the British Museum charges no admission to its permanent collection—though special exhibitions often require paid tickets. Still, the request emerged amid a broader cultural exchange: in return for the loan of the 900‑year‑old embroidery depicting the Norman Conquest of 1066, Britain will send across the Sutton Hoo treasures and the medieval Lewis Chessmen.

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French negotiators had grander ambitions initially, according to the FT. They reportedly floated borrowing the Rosetta Stone—the British Museum’s single most‑renowned artifact. That proposal failed: the basalt slab, seized by Britain from France’s Egyptian campaign in 1801, is considered immovable. (The stone, for those forgetting their history, was the key to French philologist Jean-François Champollion’s groundbreaking deciphering of ancient hieroglyphs.)

President Emmanuel Macron has framed the tapestry’s loan as a symbol of renewed Anglo-French amity. The British Museum, whose chairman George Osborne has called the exhibition “the blockbuster show of our generation,” expects attendance comparable to its most popular displays.

The tapestry’s voyage was first proposed in 2018 by then-Prime Minister Theresa May, but was repeatedly delayed over concerns about the artifact’s fragility and logistical challenges. The loan was finally confirmed during Macron’s state visit this summer and is scheduled for display at the British Museum from September 2026 to July 2027—assuming the threads hold.