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Astonishing Anglo-Saxon Burial Ground Found By HS2 Archaeologists

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июн 2022
  • 'Astonishing Dark Age Burial Ground Found By HS2 Archaeologists'
    Join Dan Snow as he explores this stunning set of discoveries in our brand new documentary ‘Digging Up the Dark Ages’ on History Hit TV.
    Watch the full episode here: access.historyhit.com/what-s-...
    Listen to the exclusive podcast on Gone Medieval here: podfollow.com/gone-medieval/e...
    While working on the HS2 high speed railway project in the UK, archaeologists made discoveries of national significance, uncovering a large Anglo-Saxon burial site in Wendover, Buckinghamshire. Almost three quarters of the graves found contain high quality grave goods, suggesting the site was the final resting place of a wealthy Anglo-Saxon community.
    History Hit has been at the heart of this discovery, with an exclusive documentary exploring the magnificent finds. Intriguingly, the items uncovered are dated to the 5th and 6th century, a period with significant gaps in the historical and archaeological record. The site contained 138 graves, with 141 inhumation burials and 5 cremation burials - one of the largest Anglo-Saxon burial grounds ever uncovered in Britain.
    The discoveries made by HS2 archaeologists will contribute a significant amount to understanding how people in Anglo-Saxon Britain lived their lives, and what culture and society was like at that time.
    Sign up to History Hit TV now and get 14 days free: access.historyhit.com/checkout
    #anglosaxons #dansnow #historyhit

Комментарии • 503

  • @HistoryHit
    @HistoryHit  2 года назад +22

    Remember you can watch the full documentary on History Hit TV! 🎥access.historyhit.com/what-s-new/videos/digging-up-the-dark-ages
    As RUclips subscribers, you can sign up to History Hit TV today with code RUclips and enjoy 50% off your first 3 months!

    • @tomjennings1982
      @tomjennings1982 2 года назад +3

      With a looming global recession, soaring food, oil and gas prices, not to mention a plethora of streaming services already available that people are already cutting back on….why would many people choose to take on more expense when they can watch nearly identical content on here for free?

    • @ianbrown3493
      @ianbrown3493 2 года назад

      I'm assuming you lot are working on adding subtitles to your channel,?

    • @erinmboehm
      @erinmboehm 2 года назад

      Contemplating it- and Magellan tv

    • @sophroniel
      @sophroniel 2 года назад

      What is the song/soundtrack music used at 2:00? I have heard it across many history documentaries and it's awesome, but no one lists the song anywhere!! Please help!

    • @kiralana324
      @kiralana324 Год назад

      is this link no longer active? or has the original video gone AWOL?

  • @jack1428
    @jack1428 2 года назад +33

    Horrendous that a high speed rail line is going to ruin that scenery.

    • @murder13love
      @murder13love Год назад +5

      To save barely any time yet the rail in the south west is awful and desperately needs updating yet it is ignored

    • @bobstacey9311
      @bobstacey9311 Год назад +2

      With out H2S then the history would not have been discovered

  • @derekstocker6661
    @derekstocker6661 2 года назад +13

    Incredible site, the artefacts and the surrounding area are so wonderful.
    When people including me, moaned about HS2 damaging the countryside in the past, little did we know that without the HS2 plans we would never have seen these magical excavated items.
    Thanks so much for this great moment in time on the dig.

  • @girlnorthof60
    @girlnorthof60 2 года назад +12

    The full Doc is even more astonishing! 😍 Cheers History Hit... the gift to yourself that keeps on giving, all year long! 👍

  • @jhbluestar
    @jhbluestar 2 года назад +38

    Hello from Arizona! You all from England are so very blessed with history. Course, I may be partial, well ok VERY partial to England and have been since i was a very young lad. Mom said that if she read stories to us kids that if it didnt have real English/ British history that I wasn't interested. My siblings loved Jack and the Beanstalk etc. I never could figure that out, why listen to fairytales when the Dark Ages was so full of stories and it was all TRUE? Anyhow, if I do make it to England I warn you now, Im not leaving. My dream has always been to be the first Heatherly to return to England (we originally came from the Bristol area so im told and left after Queen Elizabeth 1 died). I was born in America but my heart and soul has always been of England! Thank you for these videos, I love them ALL!

    • @leemichael2154
      @leemichael2154 2 года назад +2

      It's refreshing to hear a yank talk good about the brits considering what we did to you guy's! Our leadership has not been kind to the colonies we created and it's shameful to me personally

    • @jhbluestar
      @jhbluestar 2 года назад +15

      @@leemichael2154 well with all due respect I believe that in fact it was the colonies that caused the separation. For example, the 7 years war or in America it is called the French and Indian War. The colonies begged the King for his help and protection claiming rights as British subjects so the King agrees. However, wars cost money and when the King asked the colonies after the war was won for payments to be made the colonies refused. In my opinion, the King had every right to ask for payments and the colonists acted under Treason. The world owes England for their existence and culture. I wrote an essay as a 3rd grader about "the flag". The teacher had meant the American flag but in my mind the term, "The Flag" could only mean the Union Jack and I went on to explain what I thought the flag represented. The Cross of St Georges in the center and the Red and white bands going to what I saw was the four corners of the oceans or earth. Meaning, without England the world would not have achieved any true form of civilization. I had to redo the essay but my original was given high marks for originality. Anyway, I was born a Yank but I am truly a foreign born Englishman and I am proud of that fact! Thank you for your kind words. May God Bless our Queen and forever Bless England!

    • @davehoward22
      @davehoward22 2 года назад +6

      nice to see an american embrace british heritage instead of guessing they are irish or german

    • @jhbluestar
      @jhbluestar 2 года назад +8

      @@davehoward22 fortunately my DNA testing has shown a 94% English/ Anglo Saxon with Scottish and Irish. Less than 1% American Indian for whatever reason...lol. No German whatsoever! Therefore in this day and age I declare myself a misplaced Brit loyal to the Crown!

    • @jonser20cent68
      @jonser20cent68 2 года назад +4

      @@jhbluestar I think the native Americans would have fared much better as British or French subjects than they did under the colonists.

  • @fw1421
    @fw1421 2 года назад +11

    Truely amazing discovery. Smart to put up tents to protect the dig site from Englands frequent rains. I thoroughly enjoyed this video.👍🏻

  • @Ben-cl2co
    @Ben-cl2co 2 года назад +16

    11 minutes is about 11 times to short for a video like this. We need more! 😂

    • @anthonydoyle7370
      @anthonydoyle7370 2 года назад +2

      Small segments like this are just to build up their hits for views, Ben. If they just show the full programme they probably only get one view per person. By breaking it into segments like this they get multiple views per person.

  • @williamrobinson7435
    @williamrobinson7435 2 года назад +24

    This is fascinating. I love the enthusiasm of all concerned, its very life affirming and inspiring! Thanks for this.👍

    • @williamrobinson7435
      @williamrobinson7435 2 года назад +2

      @@THINKincessantly No need to pull your punches.. Tell us what you REALLY think! 🤣👍

  • @cindybryant1584
    @cindybryant1584 2 года назад +9

    I think I have watched every episode of Time Team since I discovered it. Fascinating, especially when they found Anglo-Saxon sites.

  • @Wanderinghippi
    @Wanderinghippi Год назад +8

    You have to credit England for caring so much for its history you hear stories of other countries that find thing and go in at night and smash up what they found so they don’t have to slow down their construction

  • @warriorinagardenianbradbur6109
    @warriorinagardenianbradbur6109 2 года назад +29

    Try to imagine the sights and sounds as you, a Saxon, Roman or Viking warrior sprinted into a melee wielding weapons designed for cutting or destroying other human bodies knowing you must use them well, or similar implements will be used on you.

    • @optimusprinceps3526
      @optimusprinceps3526 2 года назад +2

      " Do I have to ?"

    • @Texeq
      @Texeq 2 года назад

      Valhalla!

    • @tristanpatterson3843
      @tristanpatterson3843 Год назад

      It's the whole reason young boys are drawn to swords and guns. It used to be essential.

    • @warriorinagardenianbradbur6109
      @warriorinagardenianbradbur6109 Год назад +1

      @@tristanpatterson3843 in the uk we still have a by-law which requires males over 14 to practise archery for 2 hours on a Sunday! Seems even more necessary right now 😄

    • @tristanpatterson3843
      @tristanpatterson3843 Год назад +1

      @@warriorinagardenianbradbur6109 Yep, I'd rather be a warrior in a garden as the saying goes.

  • @suzannecooke2055
    @suzannecooke2055 2 года назад +10

    I just love scientific descriptions like "pokey-out bits"!

  • @swagmanexplores7472
    @swagmanexplores7472 2 года назад +7

    Thoroughly enjoyed watching this presentation. 10/10 and instantly subscribed ☺️

  • @daegudiva
    @daegudiva 2 года назад +9

    So interesting. This would make a solid premise for a full episode covering this dig.

    • @stevepritchett6563
      @stevepritchett6563 2 года назад

      Unfortunately, you need to PAY to watch the rest of it. A bit underhand if you ask me.

  • @fuferito
    @fuferito 2 года назад +8

    I'm not conversant on the linguistics of it, but I'm willing to guess that the word, _seax_ to name the typical Anglo Saxon knife, also gave the Saxon people their name.

    • @elwolf8536
      @elwolf8536 2 года назад +4

      Spot on! sons of the knife or people of the knife

  • @russelltaylor7779
    @russelltaylor7779 2 года назад +2

    The person who made the comment "who wants to go to Birmingham" must be a southerner who had never got further than the M 25.

  • @Unboxcityunboxcity
    @Unboxcityunboxcity 2 года назад +2

    This episode is very well done. Bravo

  • @mattsmithson4647
    @mattsmithson4647 2 года назад +6

    I don't know who this 'Matthew Smithson-Shaw' is, but he's handsome and talented and deserves his own TV show.

    • @lemming9984
      @lemming9984 2 года назад +1

      I agree. What's your phone number....

    • @evegraceless8743
      @evegraceless8743 2 года назад

      I'd very happily marry that guy!

    • @lemming9984
      @lemming9984 2 года назад

      @@evegraceless8743 I'm first!

  • @emilioalcazar-su9vi
    @emilioalcazar-su9vi 4 месяца назад

    Awesome place,finds..love the work of these people,preserving the legacy.. beautiful video!

  • @jimofthejungle02
    @jimofthejungle02 2 года назад +43

    I live very close to this site and honestly this is one of the coolest things (and possibly the only interesting thing in the area) that have ever been discovered

    • @Tam0de
      @Tam0de 2 года назад +9

      If I were you I would go buy a metal detector & start scanning the surrounding areas. You're lucky to be living in a place with so much history.

    • @optimusprinceps3526
      @optimusprinceps3526 2 года назад +3

      I restore and sell ancient Roman coins and small artifacts for a living

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 2 года назад +1

      @@optimusprinceps3526 where at?

    • @optimusprinceps3526
      @optimusprinceps3526 2 года назад +1

      @@shable1436 at my place of business

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 2 года назад +1

      @@optimusprinceps3526 online?

  • @catrinholmes7026
    @catrinholmes7026 2 года назад +6

    I love archeology and am fascinated by the finds, but how will they ever be able to finish this railway?

    • @eileenpritchard9154
      @eileenpritchard9154 2 года назад +2

      So do I, if only I was younger I would love to go on a dig,I really enjoyed this.😊🤗😊🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @1ask2risk
    @1ask2risk 2 года назад +12

    Perhaps the remains with the bent knees was simply buried while in rigor.

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies 2 года назад

      Or his buds didn't feel like digging a bigger hole.

  • @mistyvaughn6356
    @mistyvaughn6356 2 года назад

    I've been obsessed with this Woodhenge for the last few months ♥️

  • @trevorwilson5496
    @trevorwilson5496 2 года назад +2

    This stuff fascinates me to no end

  • @rhyfelwrDuw
    @rhyfelwrDuw 2 года назад +2

    Fascinating!! Wanted to be an archaeologist when I was a child - I think it was because I dug up some Victorian jewellery from my parents' garden lol! My dad sold it or donated to a museum, I think!

  • @tommunyon2874
    @tommunyon2874 2 года назад +10

    So captivating. Makes one want to be there in person working one's own trowel in the earth. Family history/genealogy indicates one side likely reverse migrated from Britain back to Germanic Europe; other side principally from Great Britain & Ireland for generations. Both sides came together in 20th century North America.

  • @g-dcomplex1609
    @g-dcomplex1609 2 года назад

    right on diggers, looks like you are on a great site, keep us updated, regards

  • @prankishsquire2663
    @prankishsquire2663 2 года назад +5

    Volume on this video is all over the place. Other wise very interesting. Thanks.

  • @Nozylatten
    @Nozylatten 2 года назад +9

    I love this channel ❤️

  • @garysmith5641
    @garysmith5641 2 года назад +13

    Really similar to the one found while building our local B and Q in Southend that the builders kept Quiet about , about 500 yards from the Saxon king Burial found in the 90s , for years been waiting for it to be spoken about , but appears the Builders said nothing and just stripped it for the new car park . this is lucky i reckon hundreds get ignored because of Building investers

    • @04williamsl
      @04williamsl 2 года назад +7

      It's been like that for years. I'm sure I read before about bones being found in a bag. They thought it was some missing boys from a few years back, but when they investigated the bones were hundreds of years old.
      Some builders found them, knew if they reported it they would get behind deadline, so bagged them up and reburied them elsewhere.
      Really sad really as it'll never now be investigated properly since a building/houses etc will be on top of them.

    • @JohnyG29
      @JohnyG29 2 года назад

      Why all the random capital letters?

    • @garysmith5641
      @garysmith5641 2 года назад +3

      @@04williamsl no this was about 30 graves , most of them Christian , 3 or 4 were pre christian , as they were facing south North , We also built a Sainsbury on top of a Cretaceous Coastline in Gloucester ,Fossils as big as your head , before we filled it in

    • @garysmith5641
      @garysmith5641 Год назад

      @@JohnyG29 just to annoy nazis

  • @joansavage1857
    @joansavage1857 2 года назад

    This is so amazing!!

  • @Labroidas
    @Labroidas Год назад +1

    While I absolutely love archaeology and history, and think that this is an amazing discovery, there is always a part of me that thinks that maybe we should respect the dead and not open up their graves, because they themselves would not have wanted that.
    But at the same time I appreciate the hard work of the archaeologists to give us a connection to our ancestors.

  • @shotforshot5983
    @shotforshot5983 2 года назад +18

    Amazing state of preservation. In my American midwest region, iron has no hope of surviving that long, even the static positioning of the bones in what appears to be somewhat shallow graves can't happen here due to ground heave and burrowing animals.

    • @bombkita
      @bombkita 2 года назад

      Burrowing animals lol, internet scientist.

    • @shotforshot5983
      @shotforshot5983 2 года назад +16

      @@bombkita lol, not internet scientist! Rural archeologist! You'd be surprised how far down some dens can go.

    • @mitchellsmith4690
      @mitchellsmith4690 2 года назад +7

      Burrowing animals do indeed affect acheaology...to include dragging items down.

    • @mondriaa
      @mondriaa 2 года назад +7

      time team as a episode where tanks driving over graves was not a problem for the graves but digging animals did destroy a couple of graves

    • @evanhughes7609
      @evanhughes7609 2 года назад +4

      @@mitchellsmith4690 See also Anatolian archaeology. Bloody gerbils can make a proper mess of the stratigraphy!

  • @grahamturner1290
    @grahamturner1290 2 года назад +11

    Fascinating. May I recommend the Anglo-Saxon, Viking and European stories on the Northworthy Sagas and Stories channel here on RUclips. ⚔️

  • @marksaint-john3722
    @marksaint-john3722 Год назад +1

    Fascinating stuff and so necessary in learning of the past. I do however have a question about the graves of the dead. How are these remains viewed in terms of those being fallen warriors or such. Today we treat our fallen with great respect and dignity. Is there a place within your work to afford these ancients the same dignity and respect? No criticism inferred or intended just interested in that aspect. Thanks for the fine work you are all doing to bring history alive for us all to learn from.

  • @joesanchez979
    @joesanchez979 2 года назад +1

    Thanks 👍

  • @ge2623
    @ge2623 2 года назад +4

    If you look closely at the position of the hands, I think that's a Samsung Galaxy S4 being held in his/her hand which I believe was the cause of death: Texting and Charioting.

  • @eileenlocke7877
    @eileenlocke7877 2 года назад

    Just found yr channel luv it thank u 🙏

  • @c-puff
    @c-puff 2 года назад +19

    I really enjoy these videos on this channel, but they also remind me why I rarely watch television documentaries any more. Seeing a preview at the start of a program I am currently watching that shows me things within the program I am about to watch and front loads everything interesting in the first minute of the show (and often before ever single ad break) is so off putting and eats up so much of a program's run time it's completely insufferable. Not only does it make the documentary less interesting to watch by essentially spoiling itself right at the start and then seeing the same information repeated so many times it stops being interesting and just gets tedious, but I also feel talked down to, as if my attention span won't hold long enough to watch the show so I need to be 'hooked' with reassurances that it will actually be interesting, AND it feels very corporate in that the show is busy padding itself for time.
    This is why I often end up watch 2 hour youtube videos made by passionate historians instead of tv productions these days. And it's been this way for like a DECADE by now.

    • @sniper60605
      @sniper60605 2 года назад +4

      I totally agree C-Puff! Some shows spend half of the show previewing the show! Terrible.

    • @silviac221
      @silviac221 2 года назад

      I couldn't agree more! This video is clickbait.

  • @ItzCoopzFtw
    @ItzCoopzFtw Год назад +1

    Really makes you wonder what else is buried all over the world. Thousands of years to be rediscovered.

  • @superdave1263
    @superdave1263 2 года назад +4

    This archeological site was first discovered in 1938. What took them so long to do an excavation, and now they are in a hurry before the high speed train is built. What the hell???

    • @BriggBuzzer
      @BriggBuzzer 2 года назад

      Super Dave
      Where I live is a Bronze age walkway leading from the town out into the countryside. It was last examined in the 1930s, has never been carbon dated or properly excavated. The does not seem to be any interest in its origins.

    • @superdave1263
      @superdave1263 2 года назад

      @@BriggBuzzer
      Evidently you haven’t researched this subject. Look a little deeper to get the real truth regarding this historical site. I certainly did, and it paid off handsomely in clarifying my questions and understanding of that historical excavation.

  • @johnnieantler58
    @johnnieantler58 2 года назад +1

    Ancient burials and priceless treasure. Oh for a quality metal detector and a ticket across the pond. It’s on the Bucket list. Probably never make it but it’s a beautiful thought.

  • @erinmboehm
    @erinmboehm 2 года назад

    Amazing! Thank u

  • @johnsamu
    @johnsamu 2 года назад +19

    I love the "not certain if this (the sword into his spine) actually was the cause of his death".
    I'm sure it was just a "fleshwound"(Monty Pyhton's black knight) and that he lived happily until dying of old age 😉

    • @leifvejby8023
      @leifvejby8023 2 года назад

      Maybe he was nailed to the ground with it, after his death - to make him stay put.

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 2 года назад +1

      He may have been bringing a shrubbery to someone.

  • @noelryan6341
    @noelryan6341 2 года назад +2

    Regarding the name 'Vortigern' pronounced by presenter as vor-tee-gern (as in germ) as a Gael myself I would say the pronunciation should be More-Tee-Earn because in my humble opinion it describes the bearer as a Mor (sounds like More) meaning 'Big' Tiarna (sounds like tee-arna) meaning 'Overlord' or 'Chieftain'.

    • @irenejohnston6802
      @irenejohnston6802 Год назад

      We don't know we weren't there. an off point eg. MacAuliffe derives from Scandinavian Irish. Son of Olaf/0lav.

  • @CartoonHistory
    @CartoonHistory 2 года назад +2

    I love these clash of culture stories... when William the conqueror was crown in westminster, the anglo saxons celebrated and shouted. the norman soldiers outside thought they were attacking him and stormed the coronation, and ended up burning the place down...

  • @ihategooglealot3741
    @ihategooglealot3741 2 года назад +9

    "The arrival of Europeans in Britain? " SERIOUSLY? What do you think the pre-roman Briton and Romans were?

    • @AML2000
      @AML2000 2 года назад

      That phrase brings Brexit into sharp focus doesn't it!

    • @ihategooglealot3741
      @ihategooglealot3741 2 года назад

      @@AML2000 only for an obsessive with absolutely no idea about either ancient or modern history I suspect.

    • @adventussaxonum448
      @adventussaxonum448 2 года назад +4

      Saying "Europeans" avoids using the A, S or J words. Don't forget, they were also "economic migrants" too, in BBC speak.

    • @PortmanRd
      @PortmanRd 8 месяцев назад

      Love Roman history, but being from the East Anglia region (and having a surname classed as pre-7th English/Germanic) I just love the history of the Anglo-Saxon invasion/migration. The arguments still roll on even now. Was it a peaceful integration or something more darker?

    • @ianmangham4570
      @ianmangham4570 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@PortmanRdAlways Dark 😮

  • @debbralehrman5957
    @debbralehrman5957 2 года назад

    Thanks

  • @colinb5415
    @colinb5415 2 года назад +2

    I am fascinated with history but I have to ask, why the heck do you need a helmet when your scanning the ground? What`s going to fall on your head, the sky?

  • @astrafaan
    @astrafaan 2 года назад +4

    What do they do with all the skeletons they find - do they re-inter them or leave them in boxes/museums etc?

    • @jay13thstep
      @jay13thstep 2 года назад

      From my limited knowledge, they tag/catalogue each piece so it can be reassembled, and store in small boxes in museums/labs etc. I guess one day they might run out of space but I assume it’s not a huge concern at the moment.

    • @garyyork-zt8om
      @garyyork-zt8om Год назад

      They box them and store them on a shelf alongside the Ark of the Covenant.

  • @future_me_6067
    @future_me_6067 6 месяцев назад

    There was a shield boss with a pointy bit on an Anglo Saxon Time Team somewhere along the way.

  • @lilmike2710
    @lilmike2710 2 года назад +4

    They're standing on ancient battleground where the dead was buried virtually where they fell.

  • @cyankirkpatrick5194
    @cyankirkpatrick5194 2 года назад

    All just amazing

  • @leemichael2154
    @leemichael2154 2 года назад +5

    Dan snow the original gangsta of history! Respect to this guy

  • @Jonathan-tz7ss
    @Jonathan-tz7ss 2 года назад +4

    7:13
    "secret location", I know where that is :O

  • @AndyJarman
    @AndyJarman 2 года назад +2

    Ioan nearly has kittens as the oaf from the press grabs it off the table.

  • @MrEnaric
    @MrEnaric 2 года назад +10

    Fantastic to watch! The cruciform brooches closely the sixth/early seventh century ones from Westergo (Friesland, the Netherlands). They developed in the great almandine fibulae like the famous 'royal' fibula of Wijnaldum (over 300 garnet cloissons featuring a.o. dragons and Wodensmask) and on the other side the fibulae of the Domburg type (some also with masks)' They are now recognised as a form of ethnic Frisian finula form, found in all (old) Frisian shires along the Dutch, German and Danish coastline. The fibulae found in Buckinghamshire might very well have been part of the identity of the wearers.

  • @boycottdisney2024
    @boycottdisney2024 2 года назад +6

    Excellent news I’m a History Student and am interested in archaeology.

    • @martyjansing2675
      @martyjansing2675 2 года назад

      Look up Caral, Peru on the Rio Supe. Fly down with Google Earth or other same function. There you will find 5000 year old stepped pyramids. At the main site, there are 13 sites, you will find multiple structures. One of the sites dates to 5500 ya.

  • @eileenlocke7877
    @eileenlocke7877 2 года назад

    Very interesting I grew up in the chill terns

  • @rgmusicom
    @rgmusicom 2 года назад

    Ironically the first advert that came up for this video was for Nurofen.

  • @thomaswattsjr.7
    @thomaswattsjr.7 2 года назад +2

    "Pokey out bit" must be archeological terminology

  • @sherryrector2275
    @sherryrector2275 2 года назад

    I do also but then agin I love all history and archeological finds.

  • @acustomer3518
    @acustomer3518 2 года назад +2

    all these places should be kept for prosperity but that goddamn railway is ploughing through the land

  • @keithbuckley3220
    @keithbuckley3220 2 года назад

    Wow, another holdup!

  • @crazyeyesc.s1143
    @crazyeyesc.s1143 Год назад

    This would of been a good Time Team episode.

  • @rickwhite4059
    @rickwhite4059 2 года назад

    Great!

  • @calartian85
    @calartian85 Год назад

    Jack Whyte wrote an amazing series of historical fiction that explores this period rolling it up with Arthurian legend. Check out The Camulod Chronicles.

  • @TheEnglish-Saxon
    @TheEnglish-Saxon 2 года назад +2

    Good ole days!

  • @peterwallace9764
    @peterwallace9764 2 года назад

    Bloody unreal hey. 👍🏻👍🏻🇦🇺

  • @JohnOLooney
    @JohnOLooney 2 года назад +1

    9:43 this isnt strange at all , in fact the story is before you - the injury to the spine shows that the victim was paralysed before death as the result of the spinal injury, the weapon is still embedded. This is why the legs are bent and id suggest that this injury was probably some time before death due to infection, the legs then unable to be straighted due to muscle spasm from the spinal cord trauma.

    • @Ellen24493
      @Ellen24493 2 года назад

      I think he went down on the spot and bled out, dying there. No infection. No spasm bending the legs. Left as carrion for nature to gradually reclaim. No burial.

    • @JohnOLooney
      @JohnOLooney 2 года назад

      @@Ellen24493 i guess we will never truly know Ellen

  • @davidevans3227
    @davidevans3227 2 года назад +2

    is RUclips putting more adverts into programmes generally??

    • @davidevans3227
      @davidevans3227 2 года назад

      are saxons named after their knife??

    • @davidevans3227
      @davidevans3227 2 года назад

      i love how well teeth can survive.. and in such good (clean- ish) condition.. (it does put me to shame, although my dentures are wonderful lol)

    • @schoolingdiana9086
      @schoolingdiana9086 2 года назад +1

      Yes. All accounts are having ads added now. You can’t opt out for your channel anymore.

    • @davidevans3227
      @davidevans3227 2 года назад +1

      @@schoolingdiana9086 ..thankyou, it's not just me then, it definitely seems much worse than it used to be.. and enjoying a nice bit of relaxing classical or something, i find impossible..!

  • @kariannecrysler640
    @kariannecrysler640 2 года назад +1

    My dear Dan Snow… I hope you have someone to kiss you until your knees go week for this video!!!❤❤❤
    You deserve it! Love 💕 this one

  • @warwarneverchanges4937
    @warwarneverchanges4937 2 года назад +2

    Wonderful finds, too bad they dont have more time to work on the site.

  • @stevendaniel8126
    @stevendaniel8126 2 года назад

    Fascinating......

  • @frasermay7825
    @frasermay7825 2 года назад +3

    Read Alice Roberts book 'Burial' if you're interested in the not so Dark ages. A brilliant, well researched book/

    • @OzarkRose
      @OzarkRose 2 года назад

      Thank you for the suggestion. I will find a copy to read.

  • @Greenpoloboy3
    @Greenpoloboy3 2 года назад

    So much out there, still hidden

  • @WORKERS.DREADNOUGHT
    @WORKERS.DREADNOUGHT 2 года назад +2

    I am not sure the Roman period can be seen as one of stability v a dark age of chaotic violence. In the 3rd century the Empire was going through an emperor of year & almost all died violently. Britain Brexitted & then returned, then British troops went off to fight in Rome. Everything sounded a bit chaotic all round

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies 2 года назад

      The "pax Romana" was not very peaceful. When you get into the details of history, the Romans were constantly putting down rebellions, repelling invasions, invading another territory and the good ol' Roman civil wars to fill in the quiet times. It may have been peaceful for the city of Rome and the Italian peninsula, but out in the empire not so much.

  • @mountainholler290
    @mountainholler290 2 года назад

    Oooh that's gotta hurt !

  • @mrlister2000
    @mrlister2000 2 года назад

    It's such a shame Time Team aren't there. They'd have that site cleared in just 3 days!
    Is Phil Harding there as he is an expert in Anglo-Saxon?

    • @gchecosse
      @gchecosse Год назад

      He's an expert on the stone age isn't he? He's been excavating Waterloo (the battlefield), you can find lots of videos on RUclips

  • @thomaspierce9374
    @thomaspierce9374 2 года назад +2

    Couldnt watch 11 minute video without 4 freakin advertisements. RUclips sucks nowadays.

    • @CBCycles
      @CBCycles 3 месяца назад

      That many I that short a time is the direct fault of the channel itself

    • @thomaspierce9374
      @thomaspierce9374 2 месяца назад

      @@CBCycles I agree. Not blaming the person who posted.

  • @eileenlocke7877
    @eileenlocke7877 2 года назад +1

    Luv the Saxon times

  • @petersaunders747
    @petersaunders747 2 года назад +2

    Why are they wearing Hard Hats? Are they expecting something to fall out of the sky and hit them o the bonce??

  • @schoolingdiana9086
    @schoolingdiana9086 2 года назад

    Don’t we already know that Rome started out trading/commerce for several years before they decided to take over? Likewise, as troubles in Rome grew, they slowly started removing troops from England; it wasn’t just a “everyone suddenly left all at once” scenario? I’m confused why the positing of questions we already know answers to widely.

  • @martingilvray06
    @martingilvray06 2 года назад

    I have issue with what we are taught regarding this time period . There is another view of this time period which Academia seems to stop books being published etc . In brief the Norman invasion was the Celt reinvasion .

    • @philipfreyaborn8288
      @philipfreyaborn8288 2 года назад

      The Normans were Danes who had been settled in N.France for150 years .. more similar to Anglo-Saxons than Celts .... more so on the Y chromosome

    • @schoolingdiana9086
      @schoolingdiana9086 2 года назад

      “Norman” literally means “north men.” Most of them were from Norway. I’m descended from several of them, straight back to Harald Fairhair (first King of Norway). My white grandma’s maiden name was Waller, aka Våler, family from the village and peninsula in Norway of the same name by way of Normandy (came over with William the Conqueror) and then the states-where she married my Creek and Seminole grandpa.

  • @lezbarker2673
    @lezbarker2673 2 года назад +1

    I often wonder where they buried the bodied after large battles. There must have been many skirmishes and battles we haven’t heard of and they must have buried the dead together somewhere

    • @SarahlabyrinthLHC
      @SarahlabyrinthLHC 2 года назад

      There was a certain time in history when the bodies were allowed to rot and the bones gathered and ground for fertiliser for the crops. Thus the line in the fairy tale "I'll grind his bones to make my bread."

    • @Rusty_Gold85
      @Rusty_Gold85 2 года назад

      Or cremated to remove the smell of rotting flesh and attraction to bears and Wolves (not extinct yet) and Ravens . A fire would be quicker to dispose of bones into ash for fertility too. A whole let less sympathy then

    • @lezbarker2673
      @lezbarker2673 2 года назад

      @@Rusty_Gold85 I looked it up and the farmers did use the bones for fertiliser that’s pretty weak. Then they were robbed of everything I saw stories of French soldiers in Russia waking up naked and freezing as their own soldiers had looted their bodies. One wrote of being awake and just looking into the eyes of the person robbing him. War is just stupid or maybe God if there is one invented it to keep the population down. Imagine if the millions didn’t die in the world wars how many billions of people would there be on earth. It’s crazy when you think about it no Black Death or plague we could have seen the industrial era 200 years earlier and now we could be in a real mad max type situation 😆 the world is crazy.

    • @outinthesticks1035
      @outinthesticks1035 2 года назад

      ​@@Rusty_Gold85 have you ever tried gathering enough wood to cremate a body ? it takes a lot . I did it with a dog that I thought might have been rabid . I don't think anyone would put that effort into cleaning up after a battle

  • @jacksongunner7122
    @jacksongunner7122 Год назад

    You get the feeling sometimes that England is just one large graveyard. Everywhere you dig some dead guy pops up.

  • @grrr.9998
    @grrr.9998 2 года назад

    Wasn't that the guy from the Peruvian Hipsters with the metal detector?

  • @emmilypalmer9269
    @emmilypalmer9269 2 года назад +3

    This guy is so over the top I can’t get enough I’m hanging on EVERY WORD…. A SPEARhead! @4:09 🤟plz don’t stop 😂 omg @5:01 I love you more every second of what is the best part of my day so far 🤟♾@5:06 ok Stop it. Stop it now. No please don’t. EVER. One more 🙏 @5:20 With so much love. I love you Brit’s. So much. SOOOOO BLOODY MUCH!!! And more spears heads! @5:50🙌💪👏👏😎

  • @evanhughes7609
    @evanhughes7609 2 года назад +9

    Not sure about the shield wall as a combat option this early (5th/6th C); the shields are significantly smaller than in later periods, and the shield bosses seem to be designed as much for offensive combat as for protection of the hand holding the shield.
    This suggests a more fluid, open style of combat where the warrior deflects an opponent's weapon with the small shield (or punches the opponent with the boss) and follows through with spear, axe or seax.

    • @beth7935
      @beth7935 2 года назад

      Punch-blocking is a thing? I did that cos I'm too wimpy to hold a big shield, lol, but I know swordfighting in the SCA (Society for Creative Anachroism) is very much under the "Creative" part of the name, & I don't know a lot about _actual_ historical combat, but it's fascinating.

  • @anglewoden
    @anglewoden 2 года назад

    Dan Snow, the term 'Dark Ages' is a reference to how little written evidence there is for that time in the Anglo-Saxon era, what do you think it was?

  • @duckpuddles
    @duckpuddles 2 года назад +13

    Very similar to our 5th/6th century cemetery in Lincolnshire. the cruciform brooch that was gilded is nearly identical to one of ours. most of out graves were crouch burials as they were mainly women of high status. Men were buried prone with a shield boss similar to these, I thought that the nipple on the shield boss ]may have been used to catch the enemy sword and divert the blow leaving the right arm free to deliver the coup de grace.
    ruclips.net/video/IYY5TeCyYzI/видео.html

    • @GB-nu6ow
      @GB-nu6ow 2 года назад +2

      Thanks for the link - it's Dr Alice 👍👍👍

    • @duckpuddles
      @duckpuddles 2 года назад +5

      @@GB-nu6ow Why does my heart beat faster whenever I see her! To cap it all she said that her favourite object in the whole series was the little boar's head helmet mount with red garnet eyes that I found with my new XP Deus detector. So Ivory rings from Africa dated to the same 6th century period and red garnets from Sri Lanka all 100 yards from my front door. It is a comfort for my Danish wife and I to feel that out ancestors are close by!

  • @bigtex4058
    @bigtex4058 2 года назад +2

    Dudes beating the crap out of each other. Plus ca change...........

  • @elainechubb971
    @elainechubb971 2 года назад +4

    I was a bit surprised to see the staff at the Cardiff center handling the artifacts and bones without gloves. Is this normal practice? Is it because the metal objects are still encrusted with soil and whatever elements they've picked up over the centuries?

    • @lenabreijer1311
      @lenabreijer1311 2 года назад +7

      Gloves are no longer used because the lack of tactile sensation caused more damage then gloves prevented. Clean hands are fine.

    • @elainechubb971
      @elainechubb971 2 года назад +5

      @@lenabreijer1311 Many thanks for your response! I was not aware of this.

    • @allysmith2284
      @allysmith2284 2 года назад +2

      They’ve been in the dirt for centuries….. a clean human hand should be fine!

    • @Tom-uv7ry
      @Tom-uv7ry 2 года назад +2

      There's always one you're that one telling the professionals how it's done

    • @elainechubb971
      @elainechubb971 2 года назад +4

      @@Tom-uv7ry Actually, I was expressing (obviously not very clearly) my ignorance and asking for information.I got that from Lena Breijer and Ally Smith. Thanks to both of them.

  • @jackreacher5667
    @jackreacher5667 2 года назад +13

    Mixed emotions about these sites, yes we learn things from the remains , but then the artifacts are stored in a box and hardly ever shown to the public, as are the skeletons that are buried there.
    What ever happened to respecting the dead ?

  • @oxon8871
    @oxon8871 2 года назад

    Looks a bog standard Early Saxon cemetery, apart from evidence of a violent death which is rare.

  • @cyankirkpatrick5194
    @cyankirkpatrick5194 2 года назад

    Hello, do you have anything about the one's before the Celt's that starts with E I'm not going to risk the chance of misspelling that word no no and heck no the Celt's started in lower Europe? 🤨 I left a question mark. I know they were in parts of France which wasn't really called France I don't think it really had a name.

    • @outinthesticks1035
      @outinthesticks1035 2 года назад

      I think I recall that the celts came out of eastern Europe. I am not sure and could stand to be corrected. we of western European ancestry tend to be a bit myoptic but it seems most prehistoric European cultures developed is Siberia , south west Asia or eastern Europe and spread west

    • @cyankirkpatrick5194
      @cyankirkpatrick5194 2 года назад

      @@outinthesticks1035 Interesting and thanks.

    • @schoolingdiana9086
      @schoolingdiana9086 2 года назад

      Boudicca’s tribe? That would be the Iceni peoples.

  • @stevorobo7455
    @stevorobo7455 2 года назад +3

    Goes to secret location, reveals company name's in industrial unit 🤷🤦🤣

  • @felixcat9318
    @felixcat9318 2 года назад

    At the very least that wound would have paralysed the victim from that point down.
    Because the weapon remains impaled into the spine of the victim, death occured around the time of the wound itself.
    It cannot be known if the death was hastened by other means or if it was soley related to the spinal wound.

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies 2 года назад

      I don't think he moved around much after that spear point stuck in him. High odds it punctured or severed the big vena cava vein that runs along the left side of the spine. If it happened in a fight his blood pressure & pulse rate would be jacked up, You'd be out in minutes if you were calm and so much quicker under battle stress.
      Prison inmates use that "trick" if they want to kill someone faster. They'll invite the target guy to play basketball and make sure he's breathing hard and heart racing, then they stab him as many times as they can. Its rare when a prisoner survives an attack under those conditions but I know of one who did. Doubt he'll ever play basketball in prison ever again.

  • @trstquint7114
    @trstquint7114 Год назад +1

    Imagine being hit by a spear, your friends trying to pull it out, but only the wooden lance comes out creaking. You shrink in pain, you die, and you are buried. With that piece of iron in your spine.😭

  • @user-sm5zx2nb1i
    @user-sm5zx2nb1i 10 месяцев назад

    Honestly digging up a grave yard for a high speed train ,it should be a scenery to see the bones and all.