I grew up eating real mincemeat pie which means it contained meat. We used mostly venison as the meat. I always get confused by people who don't understand that there's meat and animal fat in real mincemeat. There were several fruits in ours as well. The most common was raisins. You don't eat a big piece of real mincemeat pie because it's a full meal in itself. Having grown up on a farm where we still used scythes and many other hand implements, we used horses to plow, move timber, rocks, and manure..., and we made many of our own products such as skim milk, butter, cheese, bread and other baked goods, luncheon meat, ice cream, etc., I'm always amazed about things that people don't know. We had one tractor but much of our work was done by hand including lots of the chores involved in cutting and making hay. It's taken me years to understand that I was involved in many activities exactly as they had been done for hundreds of years previously. It all seemed absolutely normal to me. 🥴😀
Here in the states, over the pond from you all, I never had a minced meat pie. From my results of my DNA, it say I am 28% Scananavian, Irish, German and British, Mainly, which is pretty much from my birth mother, Biological Father, and grandparents on my mother's side, still trying to find proper grandparents on father's side, and stick on his line currently. But really proud of my heritage.
My grandparents' farm was just the same. Centuries of tradition and skills. Grandad could farm and fix and fettle anything - no repair shops for miles around. No electricity until after WWII. Hand milking. Home butchering and Gran's fantastic meals cooked on a log-fuel range. Fresh warm milk (straight from the cow) with crusty fluffy bread, home-made butter and jam from berries in the hedge-row. Then off to bed in a feather mattress. Unbeatable ! And the Christmas feast...? Don't get me started ! 😜🥰
I LOVED this, one that I had or have NOT seen before and truly enjoyed it, with a bit of catch up on what is being done on sites that had been worked on, and even the cause and id of the Saxon burial.
Thank you so much. I haven't seen this one. I've watched most of the others 4 or 5 times each. I'm glad they will be reviving Time Team this summer. It will be interesting to see who will be back.
@@northwoods3d Yes. Tim Taylor announced it not too long ago. They are trying to raise money on Patreon. They will start with Specials and Updates. Then when they have the funding, they will be going to sites.
@@calebsmommy812 ive hardly watched my tv for months, its always on but im always interneting, i stream most of what i want to watch so maybe its a good thing its not on tv!!
15:55 Ceramica closed in 2011. All this modern extension was demolished as being "uneconomical to repair" and only the original Town Hall building remains.
My father served in the U.S. Army Signal Corps at an air base in England. He saw quite a few damaged bombers crash land, killing the airmen aboard. So close, but so far away.
Very cool Christmas gift folks. Especially fun to seeing the tom-foolery by Tony still can't get past the Brits/English dropping of the oh so proper & wonderful THE to define the object! seeing the after-the-digs is awesome.Every omission has my brain editing your faulty use of the language -A Canadian's opinion!
Wow! The fellow who rented that hall in the late 1400's must have been quite wealthy. Mr. Bush said he rented it for 53 shillings and 4 pence a year, which could also be be stated as 2 pounds, 13 shillings and 4 pence and year. Given that all coinage was made of silver or gold in that period, that was a bit of valuable money to throw around. That equates to 640 silver pennies (pence) or 160 silver groats. It must have taken a chest to carry that in. I suppose it would have been paid with 8 gold nobles and would have been easier to transport. I'm just picturing that guy showing up to pay his rent in pence or groats and the landlord having to count out all of those coins. LOL!
The rule that always works in all relationships throughout the ages. In this short video we consider a story that happened in a very interesting time - in times of the Virgin Queen Elizabeth I, whose exceptional reign has been called The Golden Age of England: ruclips.net/video/VgD-o6GMv90/видео.html
Ive never seen this episode and have never heard anything that horrific actually being found. It proves the snowflakes who say vikings were friendly settlers wrong, and the badger eating her alive just sounds unlikely. Ive never seen a badger chasing humans with anything close to that savagery to eat to the bone while shes alive which means very shortly after whatever the vikings had done. Badgers are timid and not likely to go looking around a site so soon after such horrific events as they dont normally live next door to humans. If she was dead when that happened, id believe it more. That looks like torture over all and im not convinced the skull was from medical aid either.
@@christianbuczko1481 to br fair a 40 person mass grave of vikings was found with thr throats slashed identically which means they all stsred their executioner in thr eye one by one. all cultures had a far lower appreciation for the sanctity of individual life. many vikings lived entirely peaceful non exploratory lives in the haameland of central europe just as many british peasants spent their entire lives being peaceful. neither rigid black and white belief is true, this is millions of people over the better part of a thousand years we are talking about.
as for badgers being timid all i have to say is google the honey badger. they proactively kill venomous snakes and eat honey while being stung til theyre drunk from bee venom. absolutely not timid animals, and though they dont exist in the uk now, skeletal remains of theirs dated to the saxon period have been found all over the uk. those badgers absolutely would gnaw on a human corpse. im not saying the vikings or any other group ack then for that matter would not torture people because they absolutely did but those honey badgers are vicious little bastards through and through
@@joshschneider9766 we dont get honey badgers in the uk. Our types are nocturnal and very rarely seen even if you live near them. They do have jaws like a decent sized dog though so its probably a good thing.
@@joshschneider9766 its not just viking history they try to rewrite, they do it with most and means evils of the past will be forgotten and therefore mistakes repeated. The romans, saxons, normans and celts were all as vicious as are modern armies, germans, japanese and even allied armies doing similar.
YES THE ORIGINAL BIBLICAL CHRISTIANS CHRISTMAS WAS IN JUNE NOT DECEMBER....BUT ODDLY MANY SO CALL CHRISTIANS TODAY STILL CELEBRATE THIS 25TH DECEMBER PAGAN SUN GOD HOLIDAY INSTEAD OF CHRISTMAS. JESUS WAS BORN IN THE SUMMER NOT IN WINTER!
I grew up eating real mincemeat pie which means it contained meat. We used mostly venison as the meat. I always get confused by people who don't understand that there's meat and animal fat in real mincemeat. There were several fruits in ours as well. The most common was raisins. You don't eat a big piece of real mincemeat pie because it's a full meal in itself. Having grown up on a farm where we still used scythes and many other hand implements, we used horses to plow, move timber, rocks, and manure..., and we made many of our own products such as skim milk, butter, cheese, bread and other baked goods, luncheon meat, ice cream, etc., I'm always amazed about things that people don't know. We had one tractor but much of our work was done by hand including lots of the chores involved in cutting and making hay. It's taken me years to understand that I was involved in many activities exactly as they had been done for hundreds of years previously. It all seemed absolutely normal to me. 🥴😀
Here in the states, over the pond from you all, I never had a minced meat pie. From my results of my DNA, it say I am 28% Scananavian, Irish, German and British, Mainly, which is pretty much from my birth mother, Biological Father, and grandparents on my mother's side, still trying to find proper grandparents on father's side, and stick on his line currently. But really proud of my heritage.
minced meat was for a pasty mincemeat was for Christmas when I was young
Canada. mom made the best mince meat cookies.
My grandparents' farm was just the same. Centuries of tradition and skills. Grandad could farm and fix and fettle anything - no repair shops for miles around. No electricity until after WWII. Hand milking. Home butchering and Gran's fantastic meals cooked on a log-fuel range. Fresh warm milk (straight from the cow) with crusty fluffy bread, home-made butter and jam from berries in the hedge-row. Then off to bed in a feather mattress. Unbeatable ! And the Christmas feast...? Don't get me started ! 😜🥰
@margaretmcallister5422 wel I'm going to eat my sandwich an lay on my mat dreams of that meal dancing 😊
God bless those brave men.
Not surprised this one is so rare...it's quite raw as compared to the other episodes. Thanks so much!
I LOVED this, one that I had or have NOT seen before and truly enjoyed it, with a bit of catch up on what is being done on sites that had been worked on, and even the cause and id of the Saxon burial.
Airman Warren Pease's parents had a great sense of humour. What other first name would be so fitting with a last name of Pease? "War and Peace"
So grateful to find this one again!
Many thanks for posting.
Was hard to find! thanks for the sub!
How neat to hear/see the next chapters! Thanks much.
Thank you so much. I haven't seen this one. I've watched most of the others 4 or 5 times each. I'm glad they will be reviving Time Team this summer. It will be interesting to see who will be back.
Time Team is being brought back?!? Awesome! Loved this series!
@@northwoods3d Yes. Tim Taylor announced it not too long ago. They are trying to raise money on Patreon. They will start with Specials and Updates. Then when they have the funding, they will be going to sites.
@@northwoods3d i think its an internet based thing? not on tv, but im not sure about that, but new time team anywhere is good news,
@@markorollo. yeah, it's crowd funded on their RUclips channel rather than on tv
@@calebsmommy812 ive hardly watched my tv for months, its always on but im always interneting, i stream most of what i want to watch so maybe its a good thing its not on tv!!
15:55 Ceramica closed in 2011. All this modern extension was demolished as being "uneconomical to repair" and only the original Town Hall building remains.
My father served in the U.S. Army Signal Corps at an air base in England. He saw quite a few damaged bombers crash land, killing the airmen aboard. So close, but so far away.
Brilliant! Thanks for posting this, I've been looking for it for years.
I love hearing from the diggers, and about the production side.
Very cool Christmas gift folks. Especially fun to seeing the tom-foolery by Tony still can't get past the Brits/English dropping of the oh so proper & wonderful THE to define the object! seeing the after-the-digs is awesome.Every omission has my brain editing your faulty use of the language -A Canadian's opinion!
Camera angles are beautiful
LOOOVED this ! 😍 THANK YOU and CHEERS !!! ❤
This was wonderful! Thanks!
Wow! The fellow who rented that hall in the late 1400's must have been quite wealthy. Mr. Bush said he rented it for 53 shillings and 4 pence a year, which could also be be stated as 2 pounds, 13 shillings and 4 pence and year. Given that all coinage was made of silver or gold in that period, that was a bit of valuable money to throw around. That equates to 640 silver pennies (pence) or 160 silver groats. It must have taken a chest to carry that in. I suppose it would have been paid with 8 gold nobles and would have been easier to transport. I'm just picturing that guy showing up to pay his rent in pence or groats and the landlord having to count out all of those coins. LOL!
I think the rent was paid to the Archbishop of York for the underlying soil. It was probably the lease.
Tony doesn't need a co-host. .
Original air date was December 19, 1999
Ohhhh arerr Toney merry Christmas and stone the crows!
Did they ever do an Orkney episode on that chamber? I think I was more excited than John lol.
ruclips.net/video/Cg2ctdef3PI/видео.html
Can you upload the Bosworth special?
great update!
The rule that always works in all relationships throughout the ages. In this short video we consider a story that happened in a very interesting time - in times of the Virgin Queen Elizabeth I, whose exceptional reign has been called The Golden Age of England: ruclips.net/video/VgD-o6GMv90/видео.html
Baldrick
Why does he think mince pies didn't have meat.
Most modern ones are just fruit. My mom used to say they had meat, so I wouldn't eat it😊😊😊
I'm not sure I wanted to know what happened to that poor Saxon lol
Ive never seen this episode and have never heard anything that horrific actually being found. It proves the snowflakes who say vikings were friendly settlers wrong, and the badger eating her alive just sounds unlikely. Ive never seen a badger chasing humans with anything close to that savagery to eat to the bone while shes alive which means very shortly after whatever the vikings had done. Badgers are timid and not likely to go looking around a site so soon after such horrific events as they dont normally live next door to humans. If she was dead when that happened, id believe it more. That looks like torture over all and im not convinced the skull was from medical aid either.
@@christianbuczko1481 to br fair a 40 person mass grave of vikings was found with thr throats slashed identically which means they all stsred their executioner in thr eye one by one. all cultures had a far lower appreciation for the sanctity of individual life. many vikings lived entirely peaceful non exploratory lives in the haameland of central europe just as many british peasants spent their entire lives being peaceful. neither rigid black and white belief is true, this is millions of people over the better part of a thousand years we are talking about.
as for badgers being timid all i have to say is google the honey badger. they proactively kill venomous snakes and eat honey while being stung til theyre drunk from bee venom. absolutely not timid animals, and though they dont exist in the uk now, skeletal remains of theirs dated to the saxon period have been found all over the uk. those badgers absolutely would gnaw on a human corpse. im not saying the vikings or any other group ack then for that matter would not torture people because they absolutely did but those honey badgers are vicious little bastards through and through
@@joshschneider9766 we dont get honey badgers in the uk. Our types are nocturnal and very rarely seen even if you live near them. They do have jaws like a decent sized dog though so its probably a good thing.
@@joshschneider9766 its not just viking history they try to rewrite, they do it with most and means evils of the past will be forgotten and therefore mistakes repeated. The romans, saxons, normans and celts were all as vicious as are modern armies, germans, japanese and even allied armies doing similar.
7:04 - Why have a medieval celebration, if some can't be part of it because they prefer grass over real food...
YES THE ORIGINAL BIBLICAL CHRISTIANS CHRISTMAS WAS IN JUNE NOT DECEMBER....BUT ODDLY MANY SO CALL CHRISTIANS TODAY STILL CELEBRATE THIS 25TH DECEMBER PAGAN SUN GOD HOLIDAY INSTEAD OF CHRISTMAS. JESUS WAS BORN IN THE SUMMER NOT IN WINTER!
Live chicken torture explains Prince Harry...
I dont think ive seen this
pretty tough one to find! got a few others that ive not seen here, upping them soon.
@@RigmodsModding you wouldn’t happen to have the Journey to Stonehenge special, would you??
30:46. Nice chemtrails.
'aliens'
dolt
Torture of a live chicken is more than I can take. I can’t finish it.
The past is another country. No doubt things we do will horrify people in the future, and we have no idea which things we do will be horrifying.
Chirst thats a nervous dispostion you have there.
well that's ust normal in the middle ages...they usually tortured people every Saturday lol