Archaeologists Dig Up The Best Preserved Medieval Village In Britain | Time Team | Chronicle

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  • Опубликовано: 22 янв 2025

Комментарии • 346

  • @L_MD_
    @L_MD_ Год назад +129

    RIP Mick, you are still shining just as bright as you did in life through these episodes ❤

  • @nancyhammons3594
    @nancyhammons3594 Год назад +208

    One of the things that I really like about Time Team videos is that everyone truly loves what they do, the young lady with the cattle vertebra says " Another really nice piece is part of a cattle vertebra". To someone who isn't an archeologist that looks like a small rock, but to her it was a nice find. I think loving what you do for a living is important.

    • @thomasbell7033
      @thomasbell7033 Год назад +14

      Yes, you've hit upon a major part of the show's charm -- they all clearly love what they do, and it transfers to the viewer.

    • @nomadpi1
      @nomadpi1 Год назад +7

      But hundreds of these specialties don't pay a nickle in salary.

    • @ginmar8134
      @ginmar8134 Год назад +4

      ​@@nomadpi1if you love it, they don't care.

    • @Sammythat_B
      @Sammythat_B 11 месяцев назад +3

      Oh man! My ultimate dream job would be a Marine archeologist. If I didn't have kids. I'd move to Florida right now& pursue it.

    • @lynnb834
      @lynnb834 10 месяцев назад +3

      and Phil with that plow... "that's brilliant, that is!!!" LOVE IT!

  • @colleens1107
    @colleens1107 Год назад +145

    Phil’s smug enjoyment in proving Stuart wrong is my favorite part of this episode.

    • @Monaghan
      @Monaghan Год назад +3

      What accent does Phil have out of curiosity? Where in England?

    • @thomasbell7033
      @thomasbell7033 Год назад +7

      ​@@MonaghanI believe Phil is from Wiltshire.

    • @animerlon
      @animerlon Год назад +6

      And John. He really milked the bit about not finding stone, because John said there wouldn't be any.

    • @rimmersbryggeri
      @rimmersbryggeri 2 месяца назад

      @@thomasbell7033 But actually every day is just Talk Like A Pirate day to him.🤣

  • @slappy8941
    @slappy8941 Год назад +440

    The last time I was this early to a Time Team video, Ulnaby was still inhabited.

  • @cindyrissal3628
    @cindyrissal3628 Год назад +147

    I think you should petition the land owner to do a complete dig. I'm sure there'd be some fascinating stuff uncovered...

  • @giuseppe4909
    @giuseppe4909 Год назад +67

    I like all the Time Team stuff, but the combination of Tony, Mick and Phil just can’t be beat 👍

    • @fsinjin60
      @fsinjin60 Год назад +5

      I know it labels me a dim American, but it took listening to this episode for me to realize Tony Robinson was Baldrick.

  • @captainzeppos
    @captainzeppos Год назад +36

    I can picture these fine gentlemen surveying in the field ending their day of hard work in the nearest pub, being content with the day's findings and having 7 pints of local brew. Each.

  • @TheSonicdruid72
    @TheSonicdruid72 Год назад +62

    Phil getting fired up about Stewart putting him in a Barren Trench is so funny. Never seen him like that before

  • @beast4661
    @beast4661 Год назад +64

    I love how these guys are all professionals in their own right but they give each other hell. 😂 That’s a dig I’d like to be on.

  • @peggyw172
    @peggyw172 Год назад +18

    Stuart’s hat, fingerless mits and sweater/jumper are colorful and pretty!

  • @StevenWilliams0302
    @StevenWilliams0302 Год назад +32

    Nice! I think I've missed this episode in my binge a few months ago!

  • @pedenmk
    @pedenmk Год назад +32

    Ahh my favorite grop of blokes are back. I love this program. Put Tony to work will you?

    • @GaryYork-tk2ow
      @GaryYork-tk2ow Год назад +1

      Favourite.

    • @TheSonicdruid72
      @TheSonicdruid72 Год назад +3

      And the Sheila’s mate! Haha

    • @TheCount01
      @TheCount01 Год назад +1

      @@GaryYork-tk2owto you, yes. To us, it’s favorite. Deal with it. 😂

    • @GaryYork-tk2ow
      @GaryYork-tk2ow Год назад +1

      @@TheCount01 😭😭😭🤣🤣

  • @marciaspiegel5280
    @marciaspiegel5280 4 месяца назад +1

    I love the banter between the archeologists and the finds. Excellent entertainment.

  • @lindahughes2289
    @lindahughes2289 Год назад +20

    Phil the happy, Mick the calm and the energizer bunny Tony are my favorites !!!

    • @fsinjin60
      @fsinjin60 Год назад +2

      I know it labels me a dim American, but it took listening to this episode for me to realize Tony was Baldrick.

    • @georgenewickstrand4434
      @georgenewickstrand4434 4 месяца назад

      Tony is not among my favorites. Phil and Mick, definitely YES!

  • @charlesdavis9937
    @charlesdavis9937 Год назад +71

    I would have loved to be an archeologist. I love history, from ancient to the Renaissance. My family said I should have been a history teacher.

    • @0006trance
      @0006trance Год назад +5

      Same

    • @carolinereynolds2032
      @carolinereynolds2032 Год назад +15

      It's never too late. Amateurs with professionals are digging up dinosaur bones in Queensland Australia right now. And since it seems to me archaeology is almost everywhere in the UK there must be somewhere interested people could have a go.

    • @carylhalfwassen8555
      @carylhalfwassen8555 Год назад +1

      You can do that outside of a better paying job.

    • @katielilie12
      @katielilie12 Год назад +2

      @@carolinereynolds2032 archeology is the study of human activity through the analysis of material remains. Dinosaur bones is paleontology.

    • @thomasbell7033
      @thomasbell7033 Год назад +1

      ​@@carolinereynolds2032At least one of the army veterans we met on the Operation Nightingale dig later went to university and became an archeologist.

  • @rebeccacamacho-sobczak4282
    @rebeccacamacho-sobczak4282 Год назад +13

    The folks here are actually having a good time! It's good to see professionals enjoy their jobs!

    • @anjajordalen
      @anjajordalen 3 месяца назад

      Neurodivergence ftw

    • @Stephanie-hr9mk
      @Stephanie-hr9mk 11 дней назад

      @@anjajordalennormal people with normal jobs not everything has to be your special little brand of rêtǎrdǎtîôn

  • @wabisabi6875
    @wabisabi6875 Год назад +83

    Is there a compilation of Victor's illustrations? This would be a real treasure.

    • @Maddoktor2
      @Maddoktor2 Год назад +13

      If there's a hardbound edition out there, I want it!

    • @TechGorilla1987
      @TechGorilla1987 Год назад +14

      There are many, many works done by Victor Ambrus (both writing and illustration) and most are readily available on line.

    • @wabisabi6875
      @wabisabi6875 Год назад

      Thanks@@TechGorilla1987

  • @deborahparr3451
    @deborahparr3451 11 месяцев назад +2

    I thoroughly enjoyed this lovely documentary. I learned so much. For example, coulter being the cutting part of the plow, and Scots cootyre being a safe place for cows. Colter being a horse herder.
    AND hollow way/holloway being a sunken lane, caused by travel over it compressing the soil. Holloway was my mother-in-law's maiden name, a milliner born in 1899.

  • @WesternReloader
    @WesternReloader Год назад +4

    “I’m sure you’ll manage”. I love the nuance of Johns sarcasm towards Phil 😂

  • @marlenaamalfitano1558
    @marlenaamalfitano1558 Год назад +22

    Thank you for these videos, I am absolutely fascinated.

  • @flamingogirl57
    @flamingogirl57 Год назад +2

    This channel has become my latest addiction ! 😊 I love these video's and watching the past come to life so to speak !! Bravo !

  • @timothydockery534
    @timothydockery534 11 месяцев назад +2

    I bet these guy's and gal's were such a blast to work around and go to the pub with.

  • @MrScipio72
    @MrScipio72 Год назад +3

    I miss Mick and his colourful jumpers. Thanks for re-upping this one.

  • @voyaristika5673
    @voyaristika5673 Год назад +12

    Thank you! Love these shows.

  • @wiretamer5710
    @wiretamer5710 Год назад +139

    This gradual decline in the 17th century, overlooks the generations stolen by the civil war conscription, Naval press gangs, and the early industrial revolution. It's not hard to imagine every able bodied man disappearing from these villages overnight, never to be seen again.

    • @73honda350
      @73honda350 Год назад +12

      Those were the good old days, eh?

    • @mrbrightside4278
      @mrbrightside4278 Год назад +5

      Naval press gangs in the county of Durham...hardly!

    • @Oh-hardy-har-har
      @Oh-hardy-har-har Год назад

      More like jnfantry and cavalry, but the country-side had well-fed strapping men, as compared to those press-ganged from the city folk 'poor'@@mrbrightside4278

    • @Mercmad
      @Mercmad Год назад

      @@mrbrightside4278 becareful to not feed the WOKE trolls. I'm surprised no mention was made of colonisation and convict transportation.

    • @Swaggerlot
      @Swaggerlot Год назад +8

      You rather mix up a number of changes that actually took place over near 150 years or more.

  • @LaurieLeeAnnie
    @LaurieLeeAnnie Год назад +4

    I’m SO happy that Time Team is doing new digs!

    • @jrjubach
      @jrjubach Год назад +9

      Though this was uploaded to this channel a mere two weeks ago, this episode was filmed back in 2009.

  • @smd2768
    @smd2768 Год назад +2

    I could listen to Phil talk all day. His accent sounds historic to me. Similar to what the early British colonists to North America may have sounded.

  • @YvonneEmmert
    @YvonneEmmert Год назад

    You can see the plots in the ground where the houses were and the people lived . . . Amazing🥳

  • @ditzygypsy
    @ditzygypsy Год назад +11

    The aerial view looks like a kid tried to cover up the legos he didn’t clean up with a giant green rug! 😂

  • @alisong2328
    @alisong2328 Год назад +8

    Phil looks like an extra who wandered in off the set of an 18th century period drama. I love his accent!

  • @NobAkimoto
    @NobAkimoto Год назад +19

    Ah, the good old days before Tony was a Knight Bachelor and was still a commoner like you and I.

    • @murphychurch8251
      @murphychurch8251 Год назад +5

      😂👍
      Yeah, Baldrick wouldn't have dared to imagine that his "descendant" would be a knight. 😆

    • @deborahparham3783
      @deborahparham3783 Год назад +3

      Just a part of his cunning plan. Sneaky little weasel that he is.

    • @RBS.23
      @RBS.23 Год назад +2

      I seem to recall Mr S. Baldrick, MP was appointed to the House of Lords by the Prince Regent.

  • @Allannah_Of_Rome
    @Allannah_Of_Rome Год назад +6

    Uncle Phils laugh gets me!! 😂

  • @dreamway9
    @dreamway9 Год назад +94

    I think this show would be more satisfying if they had more than a couple days to work

    • @RKHageman
      @RKHageman Год назад +36

      They couldn’t.
      One, Ch 4 wasn’t going to fund expeditions longer than that; two, the archaeologists weren’t just hanging about at loose ends - they’re professionals and/or academics from different areas in the UK who have regular jobs to go to Monday mornings. That’s why TT episodes were filmed over the weekend, Friday morning to Sunday evening. And finally, Mick Aston planned the show that way. They’re not intending to completely excavate a site entirely; their goal is site evaluation- finding out the nature of a site and whether it warranted further exploration by local archaeology councils.

    • @dreamway9
      @dreamway9 Год назад +26

      Still, my perfect show would be a few days longer 😁@@RKHageman

    • @carylhalfwassen8555
      @carylhalfwassen8555 Год назад +3

      @PaulKinley54Those particular fields would be low yielding because of the stone debris close to the surface. Drought and fertility for nutrients would be concerns even if used as animal forage.

    • @jerrieellis3996
      @jerrieellis3996 Год назад

      ​@PaulKinley54😅

  • @R.J._Lewis
    @R.J._Lewis Год назад +14

    And, ladies and gentlemen, I now present to you the difference between an archaeologists and me, or 'why I'll never be an academic':
    Them: "and here we have the lip of some pottery."
    Me: "funny shaped rock."
    T: "this rock wall isn't a part of a house, but the superstructure guarding the house."
    M: "rocks."
    T: "now, this shiny glazd means the pottery isn't from our target time, but actually the 18th century."
    M: "shiny rocks."

    • @mrdanforth3744
      @mrdanforth3744 Год назад +6

      *picks up lump the size of a postage stamp*
      This is part of a dinner plate 11 inches in diameter, made of red lead glazed pottery in 1327 by a potter named Nine Fingers Aelfred in York. On Coppergate Street.

    • @R.J._Lewis
      @R.J._Lewis Год назад +2

      @mrdanforth3744 "He was wearing a shirt for the fourth day in a row, judging by the obfuscation in the ceramic layers. He always hated that particular shirt, if memory serves."

  • @Loupdelou-ly1ve
    @Loupdelou-ly1ve 9 месяцев назад +1

    This show is my very very happy place 🥰

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 Год назад

    "Bridget always gets the Save!"
    ☀️ I dont always agree with Mick, but I always love him, and Stewart, Helen, Phil ......... and I know Mick soars with the Stars. ✨💛🌙.

  • @melissapyles4750
    @melissapyles4750 Год назад

    The medieval language on your document was fascinating

  • @elaborat6421
    @elaborat6421 Год назад +4

    Great video but the canadian inside me was laughing at "bitter cold" .Minus 50 c is bitter cold 😂 I would be wearing no jacket lol...

  • @Patrick_Cooper
    @Patrick_Cooper Год назад +26

    The Greystokes. I wonder of Tarzan's relatives ever lived there.

  • @Scraggledust
    @Scraggledust Год назад +11

    9:30 the best laugh ever❤

  • @bohdaicitta
    @bohdaicitta Год назад +3

    really interesting site, loved this one

  • @sunnymeb
    @sunnymeb 11 месяцев назад

    Why did you only have 3 days? Wonderful and educational! Thank you

  • @davidstorm4911
    @davidstorm4911 Год назад +2

    a cheeky surprise at 12:19 .. smile and enjoy life

  • @giuseppe4909
    @giuseppe4909 Год назад +3

    “ And just when we thought we had some medieval evidence, over in trench 7, Phil has uncovered a Roman mosaic….”

  • @LewisKlint
    @LewisKlint 11 месяцев назад +2

    Probably a coincidence, but swedish town/village names usually end with -by as well, since that means ''Village'' in swedish. So at first I thought it was an old viking colony. Ulna Village

  • @peterwennstrom1254
    @peterwennstrom1254 Год назад +32

    Ulna by in old norse means Village of Ull ,a norse god ,so this is a viking village.

  • @stevethomas9320
    @stevethomas9320 Год назад +5

    I find it interesting that they built over older houses. There has been some talk of that happening from the earliest human settlements.

    • @ubute
      @ubute Год назад +1

      Layers of civilisation.

    • @harrybond1485
      @harrybond1485 Год назад

      Good way of assuring a well drained site for the new structure.

  • @jenniferlyons4150
    @jenniferlyons4150 7 месяцев назад

    I like that guys hat and gloves!

  • @ozdigg9254
    @ozdigg9254 Год назад

    Brilliant, thank you all.

  • @elizasimmons9039
    @elizasimmons9039 Год назад +17

    For anyone interested in Medieval Britain (especially warfare), I warmly recommend Schwerpunkt

    • @aramisortsbottcher8201
      @aramisortsbottcher8201 Год назад +8

      What is that? A channel, a book?
      Also as a German I wonder why it is called "Schwerpunkt", is this a loanword?

  • @MsAnpassad
    @MsAnpassad Год назад +16

    By doesn't mean farmstead, it means village and Ulna is a common name here in Scandinavia, it comes from the sun god Ull. So Ulnaby means Ull's village.

    • @LuzMaria95
      @LuzMaria95 Год назад +1

      *that* makes way more sense than what that lady was saying!

    • @MsAnpassad
      @MsAnpassad Год назад

      @@LuzMaria95 She probably got it mixed up with bo, that means dwelling/home/nest. But at that time, it was more common to use the end "tuna" (example Eskilstuna) for a farmstead, but that actually describes the fenced in area. Tun are the word for the courtyard between houses and are still in use today, even if it's not super common anymore.

    • @abrogard142
      @abrogard142 Год назад

      So I come from a place in yorkshire, england, called 'anlaby'. has that got a meaning via scandinavian roots?

    • @MsAnpassad
      @MsAnpassad Год назад +1

      @@abrogard142 I had to dive deep into my books and the only source I found, was from a runestone in Katrineholm.
      It says the following:
      "inka : raisti : stain : þansi : at : ulai](f) : sin : [a…k] : han : austarla : arþi : barþi : auk : o : lakbarþilanti : [anlaþis"
      (Inga raised this stone after Olov, her heir. He plowed east with the bow and in the land of the lombards, he died.)
      Anlaþis means to end your life/die. But take that possible translation with a grain of salt. The name can have changed a lot if the people living there couldn't pronounce the Norse word anymore.

    • @MsAnpassad
      @MsAnpassad Год назад

      @@abrogard142 I dove deeper and checked out your village. The name have changed over time and it's the village of Óláfr. So yes, it's a norse village. Olof (as we spell it today), is a name.

  • @rayray6548
    @rayray6548 8 месяцев назад

    these are "Burgage Plot" and you can upgrade them to level 2 by selecting the building an clicking on the circular house icon" in Manor's lord.

  • @elliewinn8364
    @elliewinn8364 Год назад +2

    I have never seen so many ads in a video I have watched.

  • @RKHageman
    @RKHageman Год назад +2

    21:25 Hey, there’s Naomi! 🙂

  • @jhosk
    @jhosk Год назад +20

    Three days to tell the story of an entire village?

  • @sandyferreira9800
    @sandyferreira9800 Год назад +1

    I love these videos im a sucker on old history

  • @audreywilhelmsen773
    @audreywilhelmsen773 11 месяцев назад +1

    I need to know if that guy knitted that glorious messy hat himself. And the jumper. And gloves. I really hope he did. 😆

  • @smarcis2
    @smarcis2 11 месяцев назад +1

    Three days?!! You guys should have three months!! Or even three years!! 😀

  • @Munguy-i8j
    @Munguy-i8j Год назад +2

    No village? And the team only had four days to argue.😂😂😂❤❤❤😅

  • @klow12370
    @klow12370 Год назад

    I love this series!

  • @CecilSaxon
    @CecilSaxon Год назад

    Another great show!

  • @Kat-V
    @Kat-V Год назад

    Phil is such a character:D

  • @robertfoerster566
    @robertfoerster566 Год назад +8

    I'm curious, how does a village like that get covered up? Is it simply run off over the centuries and a build up of soil, or did some later farmer/etc cover it all in and use the land on top etc?

    • @justdoingitjim7095
      @justdoingitjim7095 Год назад +4

      A combination of those things, plus vegetation dying, decomposing and turning into soil. Every year dead vegetation adds another thin layer and over time that could be several inches or several feet.

    • @susanbodlak6769
      @susanbodlak6769 Год назад +5

      I am part of a modern farm family which farms land where homes once stood. Every once in a while, a sink hole develops where a basement used to be, and a tractor falls in...the past eating the present.

    • @MXedits_1
      @MXedits_1 Год назад +1

      These answers you are getting are absolutely insane.

    • @annazaman9657
      @annazaman9657 Год назад

      It's turf that covers up the buildings

  • @ashhole984
    @ashhole984 Год назад +1

    I'm American, my siblings and I used to play foot wrestling as kids. That's really interesting.

  • @TomLeg
    @TomLeg Год назад +13

    The village consists of a manor house, a road leading to a green, and a number of tenants' strips of land, extending perhaps a hundred yards from the road. So what is beyond that hundred yards? It's a long way t the next village .. is it all dragons and turtles all the way down?

    • @mrdanforth3744
      @mrdanforth3744 Год назад +5

      Arable land and pasture land. The farm laborers lived in the village and went out to the fields to work. Plowing and planting, and tending flocks of sheep and herds of cattle. Droves of hogs were taken to the woods to feed in the day time. At harvest time the whole village would turn out to bring in the peas, beans, oats, wheat, barley, and rye.
      The woods supplied timber and fire wood. Only the lord of the manor was permitted to hunt the game animals that lived in the woods.

  • @TomLeg
    @TomLeg Год назад +8

    I'd like to see an epidsode where Tony is subjected to a "viva" examination (UK PhD oral examination) . He's had twenty years in the field, he should be able to handle it. Doing it as his "speech" at a graduation would make it double the fun!

    • @plhebel1
      @plhebel1 Год назад +3

      Rite,, I have learned a bit of contempt for his stance on everything,, I know it's made to be "funny" but it's annoying. Watching the earliest time teams Tony is a quiet, respectful, out of place person .

    • @fsinjin60
      @fsinjin60 Год назад +2

      @@plhebel1but it goes with Tony having been Baldrick in Blackadder. He’s the professional spokesmodel in the team with laughs rather than looks

  • @harrybond1485
    @harrybond1485 Год назад

    Tony is an excellant commentator. He knows just how to push enough to receive a proper answer.

  • @SindreGaaserod
    @SindreGaaserod Год назад +3

    What if the name Ulnaby is inspired by the old norse god Ull/Ullr? Ul/Ull/Ulle-names are very common in south-eastern Norway and east and mid-Sweden, and it is seen as a part of Swedish early-mid iron age expansion. "By" is most definitely from the iron age, perhaps later, and means "city in both Norwegian and Swedish.

  • @noeraldinkabam
    @noeraldinkabam Год назад +3

    When you draw something like a plough you want to show all the working parts Iimagine. They didn’t use the books as a ‘how to make it’ manual rather as a ‘this was us’, social media of a sort.

  • @elaine2048
    @elaine2048 Год назад

    Oh boy, I wish I could add to their geophys, this is such an old way of doing it. Geophys can outline items the size of tanks now with pucks the size of soccer balls that you set out for a week prior to work.

  • @queuecont4191
    @queuecont4191 Год назад

    I clicked on for the documentary, but that's Tony Robinson, aka Baldrick! I always knew he had a cunning plan.

  • @asahallberg-vonde2029
    @asahallberg-vonde2029 Год назад +3

    Ull means Wool. Byen in Norway, actually means the City nowadays. In Sweden, is en by, a village.

    • @FenceThis
      @FenceThis Год назад

      yes, but more to the point: in Danish by is simply a generic denomination for dwelling, anything from farmstead or village to city

    • @asahallberg-vonde2029
      @asahallberg-vonde2029 Год назад

      @@FenceThis farmsteds aktuell build a village=by. By in English ist från in Swedish, i think fran i Denmark and Norway.

    • @FenceThis
      @FenceThis Год назад

      @@asahallberg-vonde2029 I don’t know why you’re talking about by in English, and no: there’s no such word as fran in neither Norwegian nor Danish

    • @asahallberg-vonde2029
      @asahallberg-vonde2029 Год назад

      @@FenceThis fra thats it. Thats the same in Denmark, and Norway. I live in Germany, come from Sweden, and my lokal Dialekt do have lots of words from Norwigian, accualy a Part of Norway thouse days. So från in Sweden=fra in Norway and Denmark, von in Germany

    • @asahallberg-vonde2029
      @asahallberg-vonde2029 Год назад

      By in English schöne Grüße, hälsningar Åsa Gunborg Hallberg-Vonde ❤️

  • @elenchus
    @elenchus Год назад +4

    SIR Tony Robinson might actually have had a pretty good life in that era lol

  • @EmilyBoltz
    @EmilyBoltz Год назад

    I love this show

  • @wiretamer5710
    @wiretamer5710 Год назад +12

    30 years of Time Team and still no serious tents and portable shelters for the diggers!

  • @augustopinto2859
    @augustopinto2859 11 месяцев назад

    Since I can understand a bit of Latin is been pleasurable to try to make sense of those documents.

  • @jmmt1968
    @jmmt1968 Год назад +21

    Every now and again, I have trouble with the vision my favorite archaeologists are trying to show me. Try as I might, I see rubble , not walls. I see the village better on the geophys than in the ground, sadly.

    • @deborahbaker4770
      @deborahbaker4770 Год назад +1

      I can’t see what they are talking about either I guess you have to have a certain type of mind a eye’s to picture what they see‼️

    • @murphychurch8251
      @murphychurch8251 Год назад +9

      To be fair, it can sometimes be difficult to spot in the field even for archaeologists, especially when there's a lot going on in the trench.
      I once dug the site of a medieval farm. We could only dig it in three trenches next to each other, one after the other (because we had no space for the soil). So we couldn't see the whole thing at once. We had many big pits, ca. 0.8-1.0 metres in diameter. But it was only when our surveying technician showed me the plan (with a grin) that I could fully see what was going on. It was jawdropping...the pits were huge post holes so on the plan the shape of a very big house (half-timbered, hence the posts) popped up right in front of our eyes. 😳😆 It can sometimes be very surprising to see the stuff on the plans, really, because it's hard to see the forest for the trees. 😂

  • @Ikrell-Laires
    @Ikrell-Laires Год назад

    ahhh .-) as a Norwegian I knew the moment I saw the name of the village that it was of Norse origin .-) cool .-)

  • @clobberella
    @clobberella Год назад +9

    not a spoon, it is a weaving implement

  • @2serveand2protect
    @2serveand2protect Год назад

    Fantastic work, Mr. Robinson.

  • @juliettelynne5861
    @juliettelynne5861 Год назад +9

    Here in America, I get so excited when I hear of a discovery dated here of 1780 or so. Ha! That’s nothing compared to the British!

    • @fiddleback1568
      @fiddleback1568 Год назад

      We have places that date to the 15th Century.

    • @juliettelynne5861
      @juliettelynne5861 Год назад

      @@fiddleback1568 Wonderful!!

    • @1982kinger
      @1982kinger Год назад +5

      I'm currently excavating a site from 1975

    • @ericbrown1101
      @ericbrown1101 Год назад +1

      St Augustine and other sites in Florida date to the 16th century, which is fascinating, but I agree. Visiting England and seeing buildings over 1000 years old still standing is pretty incredible.

    • @cluckieschickens
      @cluckieschickens Год назад +1

      ​​@@1982kingerI have my key chain collection from when I was a kid in the 70s and 80s I look at every few years...

  • @feralbluee
    @feralbluee Год назад +3

    38:02 love the peasant hat :) i wonder if it’s shape had to do with warmth as well as style. it also probably was good at keeping the cowl or hood up on the head and around the ears. (although wouldn’t a drawstring hood be easier and warmer? it seems even peasants had some sort of style to their clothing. women did not wear these hats! i wonder how far back the the difference in male and female modes of dress go (besides the obvious physical needs and differences go). when and why did men start to wear breaches? because of horseback riding in war?

    • @joebombero1
      @joebombero1 Год назад +2

      Remember the Medieval period was also the time of the Little Ice Age where the Thames river would freeze over and market festivals would occur routinely on the ice.

  • @nicodranasien
    @nicodranasien Год назад +6

    3 days…. I really will never understand why the 3 day time limit. I mean as an archaeologist it seems an impossible task to excavate anything in 3 days unless you have 1000’s of workers and machinery which is always difficult wil how delicate archaeology can be

    • @victoria139
      @victoria139 Год назад

      Usually digs have permits especially since this is on someone’s private land and they try to have them in between school terms cause otherwise professors and students would be in classes and also money wise they need food and housing or transportation depending on how far they live from the dig

  • @dalefischer4654
    @dalefischer4654 Год назад +4

    Are there chances of field boundary walls?

    • @fionaanderson5796
      @fionaanderson5796 Год назад

      That's what I was expecting. Not sure if they put a trench over any of them.

  • @MichaelCWBell
    @MichaelCWBell 7 месяцев назад

    I haven’t finished the video yet, but approximately how many metres has this village sunk?

  • @danehardinge8801
    @danehardinge8801 Год назад +11

    it would be nice to know the year/months each recording was made

  • @levioptionallastname6749
    @levioptionallastname6749 Год назад +2

    TONY ROBINSON IS THE BEST, TONY ROBINSON IS THE BEST, TONY ROBINSON IS THE BEST, TONY ROBINSON IS THE BEST!

    • @jeanpeuplu5570
      @jeanpeuplu5570 Год назад +2

      You're feeling OK? The nurses are gentle with you?

  • @IkeaScrabble
    @IkeaScrabble Год назад +2

    Are we forgetting about the 17th century wave of the Black Death in England? Like maybe there wasn't a gradual decline, but, rather, the bookend to the (suspected) 14th century wipeout. Just a thought.

  • @janmcleod8198
    @janmcleod8198 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you. 🇦🇺 😊 45:10

  • @ellendemarie3776
    @ellendemarie3776 Год назад

    What language is the documents regarding the landowners? Is that Gaelic?

  • @freedomspromise8519
    @freedomspromise8519 Год назад

    How very interesting!
    Makes me feel rather inconsequential.

  • @austinnevels7447
    @austinnevels7447 Год назад

    What a surprise! My namesake!

  • @gordonclark7632
    @gordonclark7632 Год назад +1

    All of the Chronicle videos I have watched show that they only have three days. Why is it always three days for the investigation?

    • @urbanurchin5930
      @urbanurchin5930 Год назад

      This is a question only asked by those unfamiliar with the Time Team program. Read an explanation of the three day process on the Wikipedia page.

  • @Rabid-Pinocchio
    @Rabid-Pinocchio 8 месяцев назад

    When this project got underway did they say, 'I have a cunning plan'?

  • @joebaughman5231
    @joebaughman5231 Год назад

    What season and episode was this one?

  • @kelliv2995
    @kelliv2995 3 месяца назад +1

    ❤❤❤

  • @iahelcathartesaura3887
    @iahelcathartesaura3887 Год назад +7

    Oh good, Darlington, Co Durham!

  • @Knards
    @Knards Год назад +1

    has to be a cemetery around there

  • @XlrationMedia
    @XlrationMedia 3 месяца назад

    The timeless art of english foot wrestling

  • @Evrefoix
    @Evrefoix Год назад +1

    I wish timeline would put the YEAR