Is the disc-shaped object in the "Summer Triumph" tapestry a UFO?
In 1538, the city of Bruges, Belgium, made a tapestry known as the "Triumph of Summer". It depicts a scene of a ruler triumphantly ascending to the throne of power. Curiously, there are some more modern things depicted on the tapestries that are easy to miss unless you look closely. Look at the top of the tapestry, especially on the left, and you'll see many black "hat-shaped" flyers. These flying objects have nothing to do with any of the religious depictions often seen in the sky in other medieval artworks, but instead have the shape of the classic UFOs that are popular on **.
Mysterious medieval tapestries, such as "The Life of the Virgin Mary", created in 1330, depict a mysterious black object that is also reminiscent of UFOs. Both tapestries depict a unique UFO that moves gracefully across the background sky.
The upper part of the "Summer Triumph" tapestry prominently shows several disc-shaped objects in the sky. The deliberate inclusion of the "hat boat" in this artwork can be interpreted as a form of political manipulation. By associating UFOs with the ruling authorities, the intention may be to influence local sentiment and maintain a sacred connection, thus reinforcing the idea of celestial interference in their rise to power.
If the people of that era associated flying saucers with divinity, it means that they saw such objects in the sky and associated them with the phenomenon of divinity. In addition, there are also claims that these unusual hat-shaped objects are just simple and strange dark clouds...