Hidden Histories of Leicester
Hidden Histories of Leicester
  • Видео 11
  • Просмотров 60 584
Hidden Histories - Episode 6b: Ratae Wasn't Built in a Day! (Pt 2)
In part 2 of this episode exploring the archaeology and legacy of Roman Leicester, we examine the lifestyles of Ratae's former residents, uncovering amazing stories of love, life and death in the town.
Просмотров: 2 842

Видео

Hidden Histories - Episode 6a: Ratae Wasn't Built in a Day! (Pt 1)
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.3 года назад
Leicester's transformation from Iron Age settlement to Roman Civitas Capital didn't happen overnight. This film charts the evolution of the Roman Town from its earliest days to the middle of the occupation, using the amazing archaeology discovered to highlight key events and people.
Hidden Histories Live #1: Castle Hill
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.3 года назад
Hidden Histories Live is a snapshot of a current excavations, giving insight into digs from the archaeologists on the dig.
Hidden Histories - Episode 5c: An UnCivil War (pt 3)
Просмотров 2,6 тыс.4 года назад
As the repercussions of the sacking of Leicester play out, the 1st English Civil War comes to a dramatic and bloody conclusion, whilst the people of Leicester attempt to pick-up the pieces of their shattered lives.
Hidden Histories - Episode 5b: An UnCivil War (pt 2)
Просмотров 2,5 тыс.4 года назад
With the King Charles I's Royalist troops surrounding the town and outnumbering its defenders by more than 5:1, Leicester witnesses the bloodiest 48 hours in its over 2,000 year history!
Hidden Histories - Episode 5a: An UnCivil War (pt 1)
Просмотров 4,6 тыс.4 года назад
An exploration of the first English Civil War through its impacts on the people of Leicester and Leicestershire. In this first part of the episode, we examine the causes of the war and how the rivalry between the Royalist Lord Loughborough, Henry Hastings and the Parliamentarian Lord Thomas Grey of Groby was to culminate in the devastating 1645 siege of Leicester.
Hidden Histories - Episode 4b: Devotion, Death and Dissolution
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.4 года назад
Here we continue our exploration of the medieval secular church through the town's lost parish churches and the city and county's links with the English Reformation
Hidden Histories - Episode 4a: Devotion, Death & Dissolution
Просмотров 4,5 тыс.4 года назад
At the heart of everyday life in Medieval England was the Catholic church. In this episode we explore the various Monastic, Mendicant and Military religious orders and how they impacted on the lives of people across the city and county.
Hidden Histories - Episode 3: Two Ladies of Mercia
Просмотров 7 тыс.4 года назад
When the Romans abandoned Britannia in 410AD how did the people of Leicester adapt and change? Did the town fall into darkness, or learn to survive, even thrive? This video explores the legacy of Saxon Leicestershire, through archaeological finds, place names and the lives of two remarkable ladies of Mercia.
Hidden Histories - Episode 2: Celtic Cultural Capital
Просмотров 8 тыс.4 года назад
Long before the Romans conquered Britannia, Leicester was already an important town in its own right - A tribal capital and a cultural hub. This video explores Iron Age Leicester and the surrounding county to understand why it was such an important target for the Roman invaders.
Hidden Histories - Episode 1: Walking the Walls
Просмотров 22 тыс.4 года назад
Although all but vanished, Leicester's defensive walls protected the town and its people for over 1,500 years. This video tour explores the clues and surviving evidence that not only tell us where the walls were situated but also how they influenced the lives and past-times of the town's inhabitants throughout the Roman and Medieval periods.

Комментарии

  • @ronbork684
    @ronbork684 Месяц назад

    Very interesting and well researched videos. Thank you for sharing them with us. True indeed were the inspired words that the Apostle Paul spoke to the assembled Elders from the congregation in Ephesus, "I know that after my going away oppressive wolves will enter in among you and will not treat the flock with tenderness, and from among you yourselves men will arise and speak twisted things to draw away the disciples after themselves. " Acts 20:29,30 These wolves grew rich and powerful at the expense of the common people, as they taxed them, sold them indulgences, and defrauded them with prayers they claimed would free the immortal souls of their loved ones from a fictitious placed called Purgatory. Courageous indeed were men like John Wycliffe and his followers who dared to expose these wolves that Christ Jesus warned would come to them in sheep's covering. Matthew 7:15-20 William Tyndale courageously exposed them by also making the Bible available in the common language. How much of the Church's income was lost when he exposed the falsehood of their non-scriptural teaching of the immortal soul doctrine, as he reportedly wrote to Sir. Thomas More, "By putting departed souls in heaven, hell or Purgatory, you destroy the arguments whereby Jesus and Paul taught the resurrection. If a soul is already in heaven, then what need is there of the resurrection?"

  • @clivenimmo3155
    @clivenimmo3155 3 месяца назад

    Thoroughly Enjoyed.😊

  • @mmm-yt5rd
    @mmm-yt5rd 4 месяца назад

    Leicestonian here - just found this series - FANTASTIC - can we have MORE?

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester 3 месяца назад

      Thanks! ☺️ I’m currently writing the next episode. As tends to happen, the more I research, the more I discover and then the longer the episode! The next one will be a 4-parter and hopefully out in the next couple of months. 🤞🤞🤞

  • @TerenceMe-ps2hx
    @TerenceMe-ps2hx 4 месяца назад

    Really enjoying your historical knowledge. Great viewing 👍

  • @maryelisabeth7167
    @maryelisabeth7167 4 месяца назад

    Absolutely fascinating.

  • @pravinparmar4392
    @pravinparmar4392 5 месяцев назад

    Lovely presentation locations.

  • @pravinparmar4392
    @pravinparmar4392 5 месяцев назад

    Another rich and informative episode 👍

  • @pravinparmar4392
    @pravinparmar4392 5 месяцев назад

    Excellent and informative history of Leicester, nicely presented.

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester 5 месяцев назад

      Glad you enjoyed it! Hoping to get the next episode out later this year 🤞😃👍

  • @peterphilstacey4698
    @peterphilstacey4698 7 месяцев назад

    Leicesters name will change again , under new occupancy , culturally it is unrecognisable , it is inevitable,

  • @postiepaul
    @postiepaul 7 месяцев назад

    The street, now no longer there, between Richmond St. and Bonners Lane, next to the old Gateway school was indeed called Fairfax Street. (Not to be confused with Fairfax Road of course.)

  • @postiepaul
    @postiepaul 8 месяцев назад

    Bromkinsthorpe is still cited on house deeds in West Leicester.

  • @dickiesmig9021
    @dickiesmig9021 8 месяцев назад

    Fascinating, loved this film and look forward to watching more. Thank you.

  • @Upperroad4480
    @Upperroad4480 9 месяцев назад

    God gave that vast ammount of land in the north and east midlands to norse people because they were family minded.they weren't drunk half the time like a****-s****'s,and were much more capable in war.before william of normandy was setting on pevensey beach,the flag of the whole of england,from abercorn and edinburgh southwards,was represented by the danbrog flag.

  • @Upperroad4480
    @Upperroad4480 9 месяцев назад

    I still think that the north and the east midlands should be covered by a danbrog.im glad ethelfled didn't get to set foot as a ruler in the Yorkshire boundaries.God clearly didn't want her there as her character was wrong.only someone with a Yorkshire birth should be considered as a leader in yorkshire.as for those people who were a****-s***n",they only wanted a female leader because their hormones through their penis wanted it.

  • @Upperroad4480
    @Upperroad4480 9 месяцев назад

    Thorpe is pronounced torp.im glad the danish group was covered,I was about to get volcanic.

  • @Upperroad4480
    @Upperroad4480 9 месяцев назад

    Paganism was noted as superstitious hogwash with the murder of little children in front of statues or oak trees.

  • @Upperroad4480
    @Upperroad4480 9 месяцев назад

    Paganism was noted as superstitious hogwash with the murder of little children in front of statues or oak trees.

  • @Upperroad4480
    @Upperroad4480 9 месяцев назад

    The church wasn't a hit with the people? So they didn't want that free hospital treatment,orphanages,hostels for poor travellers,good workhouses and schools started by Saint basil of Caesarea Cappadocia,in 389AD,starting with the free pre- funded hospital.?

  • @karlmarlow1854
    @karlmarlow1854 9 месяцев назад

    Seen u on itv... First I heard your voice n thought I recognise that voice... its him... Jim Butler lol

  • @minui8758
    @minui8758 10 месяцев назад

    Very very slight corrections from an ecclesiastical historian. The Dominicans follow the Rule of St Augustine - they were founded by St Dominic but he wrote no rule. They also lived in Priorys not Friary’s like the Franciscans which is why Holy Cross - the current Dominican church in the city is a Priory rather than a Friary. The priory rule holds for Augustinian Friars Hermits as well as the Friars Preachers.

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester 10 месяцев назад

      Many thanks for your clarifications - really helpful. So, although the Dominicans were friars (hence, the “Black Friars”, they actually lived in a priory under a prior? Is that correct? Best wishes, Jim

    • @minui8758
      @minui8758 10 месяцев назад

      @@HiddenHistoriesofLeicester exactly so. Think of Holy Cross in Leicester today. Dominican house full of friars but called a priory and has a prior. Same goes for the Carmelites or Whitefriars at - Ayelsford and in Kensington and the Augustinian Friars at Hoxton priory… and by implication old pre ref St Katherine’s and St Clements in Leicester. The only mendicant orders to call their houses friaries are the ones inspired by St Francis of Assisi. So the Order of Friars Minor, the OFM Conventual, the OFM Capuchin, and the newer OFMs founded since John Paul II. It’s a major post reformation error tho that’s absolutely all over the place in Nichols and his equivalents for other counties, and the VCH almost always gets it wrong. Don’t blame yourself for not picking it up. This history requires a certain familiarity with Catholic law and traditions which isn’t common these days… plus you’re fighting against a million post reformation sources that simply got themselves confused because there weren’t any actual friars left to correct them

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester 10 месяцев назад

      Many thanks - that’s really helpful!! If ok, next time I venture into the realms of the medieval church, would you be happy for me to check my terminology etc with you in advance?

    • @minui8758
      @minui8758 10 месяцев назад

      @@HiddenHistoriesofLeicester please please do. And I’m in Leicester so do reach out if you wanted to do a video inside the medieval parish church’s - id be so happy to help put something together to explain the liturgical point behind the various features if you got to doing a video inside st Margaret’s/St Mary de Castro/St Nicks - less obvious stuff like the functions of Easter Sepulchres and piscinae and those distinctly Gallican and Anglo Saxon church features are a particular obsession

  • @peterlowe6064
    @peterlowe6064 11 месяцев назад

    Great video but they would not have had metres! Come on!

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester 10 месяцев назад

      Are you referring to the measurements I give for the height, width and foundations of the walls?

  • @karlmarlow1854
    @karlmarlow1854 Год назад

    Where are you... not seen nothing from u... still waiting.. Thanks Jim Butler

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester Год назад

      New episode being actively researched written. 😃 Hoping I can get it finished, filmed and out in March! 🤞🤞🤞🤞

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester 10 месяцев назад

      Karl - Have you seen my Hidden Histories of Leicester Facebook page? There’s some films on there about the Reformation and Counter-Reformation that I did for English Heritage that I can’t post on my RUclips Channel 👍 Hopefully they’ll keep you entertained until I get my next episode published! 🤞

    • @karlmarlow1854
      @karlmarlow1854 10 месяцев назад

      I'm looking it up now, thanks, Jim....

  • @doubleL_S
    @doubleL_S Год назад

    Anymore content coming?

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester Год назад

      Yes! 😃 I started writing the next episode this week actually! 😱 Still researching as I go, but hoping I can get it finished by the end of Feb 🤞🤞🤞👍

  • @thisisbob1001
    @thisisbob1001 Год назад

    Hi

  • @spinynorman8217
    @spinynorman8217 Год назад

    Excellent ,but the planning system shouldn't be let off the hook for the horrors of modern Leicester. A city a shadow of its former self.

  • @flipmode5512
    @flipmode5512 Год назад

    Great interesting video 👍

  • @andrewb9790
    @andrewb9790 Год назад

    Thank you so much for this. My Father was associated with and Chairman of The Leicester Civic Society for a long time; I spent many an hour with him looking at stuff like this in our City!

  • @TheProdigy1982
    @TheProdigy1982 Год назад

    Fascinating stuff

  • @christiegrows2022
    @christiegrows2022 Год назад

    So interesting thanks

  • @karlmarlow1854
    @karlmarlow1854 Год назад

    Wens rhe next episode cry cry lol

  • @karlmarlow1854
    @karlmarlow1854 Год назад

    I love ❤️ your channel

  • @karlmarlow1854
    @karlmarlow1854 Год назад

    Are you doing anymore of Leicester Jim.....please reply thanks Love these videos...need more buddy

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester Год назад

      Hi Karl! The quick answer is ‘Yes!’ 😃👍🏻 The slightly longer answer is, ‘I’m not sure when!’ 😬🙈 I work freelance which means I have to take the jobs when I can get them and for the past 18months I have been run-off my feet (which is a good thing as it pays the bills! 😉). I already have the next episode half written and loads of other episode ideas in my head, so plenty more stories I’d still like to tell! I’m hoping things will calm down a bit over the autumn so that I can get some more episodes written. 🤞🤞🤞In the meantime, I do some guided walks and cycle rides linked to the episodes, so keep an eye on Facebook @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester and Twitter @HiddenHistorie3 for details of those. 👍🏻 Thanks for the support - it really is appreciated! Jim 😊

    • @karlmarlow1854
      @karlmarlow1854 Год назад

      Thank you for replying.... and I've have now joined u on FB.... Thanks again.. all the best Karl...

  • @bean210666
    @bean210666 Год назад

    I wonder if you could do an in depth plague special about the big plagues we had?

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester Год назад

      Hi! The problem with doing an episode on the plague is that, although we know Leicester would have been affected by it, there is very little archaeological evidence discovered thus far*. Having said that, a recent discovery is a suspected plague pit, but until the scientific analysis comes back, we won’t be sure - and that could take a couple of years. (*previous mass burials have turned out to be earlier or later than the 14th century Black Death and linked to things like famine as opposed to plague). However, I will have a scout around the wider county and see what evidence I can find and if there’s enough, I will happily write an episode on it! 😃👍🏻

    • @sarahalborn6986
      @sarahalborn6986 2 месяца назад

      @@HiddenHistoriesofLeicesterlol😅

  • @YarnsfromaSecretGarden
    @YarnsfromaSecretGarden Год назад

    I love this channel so much.

  • @WingDingMcKing
    @WingDingMcKing Год назад

    neat

  • @traceysneath5285
    @traceysneath5285 Год назад

    Who built these amazing structures?????

  • @traceysneath5285
    @traceysneath5285 Год назад

    Turret gateway built 1422 just like that, no explanations as to how it was built in such an early time period baffles me and I never get any answers 😮 love this great job

  • @StuartWalker1
    @StuartWalker1 Год назад

    Thanks Jim, very interesting information about the town of my birth

  • @becmiberserker
    @becmiberserker Год назад

    Outstanding stuff! I will enjoy working my way through these.

  • @theshedtramways
    @theshedtramways Год назад

    Please when will there be more as these are fantasticly presented and informative.

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester Год назад

      All I can say is, as soon as I possibly can! I’ve started writing a couple of new episodes and even filmed part of one, but I have been a bit of a victim of my own success in the day job, meaning that I’m being pulled in all directions and having very little time to spend on making the films. My current contracts are due to end in July and August so, whilst still hoping I have enough work to pay the bills, I’m hoping I’ll be able to spend some time finishing these new episodes! 🤞🤞🤞 For the latest updates be sure to subscribe her and also follow me via Twitter @HiddenHistorie3 or on Facebook @HiddenHistoriesof Leicester, where there are also details of guided walks, rides and other events I do. 🙂

    • @theshedtramways
      @theshedtramways Год назад

      Thanks for the reply. You have to pay the bills first. Good luck with the day job. Just to let you know I watched you film the first of the two ladies episode at the back of our house, I was surprised ther was no mention of the saxon village at the back of Glen Parva Manor.

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester Год назад

      Ha, you must have wondered what that weird guy was doing at the back of your house for what seemed like forever (There were lots of out-takes)!! 🙈🤣. The trouble I have as I research each episode, I could almost write an episode on each place! So, in order to try to spread the stories as wide as possible, I try not to spend too much time in any particular spot. For Glen Parva, for that episode, it had to be about the Glen Parva Lady. However, I may well return at some point to highlight aspect of both the Saxon and Medieval village 👍🏻🤞🙂

    • @theshedtramways
      @theshedtramways Год назад

      @@HiddenHistoriesofLeicester the length is good and your presentation is excellent, I know nowadays everything is soundbites as people seem to have short attention spans ( I blame tik tok etc) but ther half hour is great. Again thanks for the excellent work.

  • @andrewmarch7891
    @andrewmarch7891 Год назад

    Thank you so much I have much to learn about the city and county of my birth.

  • @andrewmarch7891
    @andrewmarch7891 Год назад

    Thank you so much for something I knew nothing about.

  • @andrewmarch7891
    @andrewmarch7891 Год назад

    Thanks again Jim, have any of the remains found under Vaughn way been saved?

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester Год назад

      It depends which bit of Vaughan Way we’re talking about. During the creation of the underpass in the 1960’s there was no legal requirement for archaeological excavations in the way there is today. So, although some of what was found was recorded and saved, I suspect huge amounts were lost, sadly. Some of the material that was found made it into Jewry Wall Museum (and will hopefully return when the museum reopens!). Having said that, if you want to go and touch actual Roman stuff today, head into the church yard of St. Nicholas’s, where there are numerous bits of Roman pillars lying around. They most likely formed part of the colonnade around the Forum, and when they were dug-up in the 60’s they kind of got dumped there by the builders and have remained ever since! With regards to the recent excavations on the old Stibbe site, these didn’t extend as far as Vaughan Way itself. However, the curvature of the wall discovered closest to the Road, suggests that if any other parts of the theatre survive, that’s where they’ll be. Other items discovered under Stibbe will definitely be making an appearance at Jewry Wall (eventually! 😉) 👍

  • @andrewmarch7891
    @andrewmarch7891 Год назад

    Brilliant; I grew up and was educated (if that's an adequate term) in Leicester, St Mary's Fields; Coldecote, Gartree High, and Guthlaxton Grammar. Yet I remember nothing about Leicester's part in the uncivil wars was ever taught. Shame on the education system.

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester Год назад

      Similarly, I grew up in the west end of Leicester in the 80’s and 90’s and so my primary schooling was all pre-National Curriculum and then, when the National Curriculum came-in in 1987, was when I went to (Newarke - now Fullhurst) secondary school, and the Civil War didn’t feature in either. So, when I almost stumbled across the 1645 Siege, I knew I just had to tell the story! Really pleased you enjoyed my retelling of it! 😊

  • @carolineskipper6976
    @carolineskipper6976 Год назад

    Having recently watched some videos by Matthew Morris about some of the roman archaeology in Leicester, this video has built on what I learned there. Great stuff!

    • @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester
      @HiddenHistoriesofLeicester Год назад

      I’m please you liked it and feel my videos compliment Mathew’s excellent films as he continues to be an invaluable source for me whenever I’m researching my episodes. 🙂👍

  • @carolineskipper6976
    @carolineskipper6976 Год назад

    Still can't believe I didn't know any of this! Thanks for laying it out so clearly and geographically.

  • @Chamiogirl
    @Chamiogirl Год назад

    What an interesting and informative video, so good to meet you at the Braustone Park History tour. I had a view looking over Castle Gardens when I worked for William Baker Ltd, a hosiery company.

  • @carolineskipper6976
    @carolineskipper6976 Год назад

    Having been brought up in Leicester by history loving parents, and having covered the English Civil War in history lessons at school, I can't believe how lacking in knowledge about the Civil War in Leicester I am. Thank you for this detailed account!