Bronze Age Runnymede: Excavations at Runnymede Bridge

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024

Комментарии • 37

  • @markadams9227
    @markadams9227 3 года назад +2

    Excellent! I worked at Runnymede as a volunteer in 1984 and 1985, fascinated to see the videos of the excavation and some faces I haven't seen since, brought back a lot of memories.
    The experience of working there had a big impact on me, I've worked in archaeology ever since and the approach used influenced some of my work.

  • @laurence7181
    @laurence7181 4 года назад +7

    Wonderful. Fascinating documentary, beautifully made. Thanks to everyone involved.

  • @Survivethejive
    @Survivethejive 5 лет назад +2

    This was really well made and brings the place to life as well as making some poignant points...especially the lady at 30:00

  • @JohnVance
    @JohnVance 5 лет назад +10

    The graphics in this are really awesome

    • @djtwo2
      @djtwo2 4 года назад +1

      But pretentious, uninformative and useless.

  • @nonsibi1087
    @nonsibi1087 2 года назад +1

    In my experience working in archaeology, I found that trash deposits were places where the truth is to be found with little bias compared to buildings, shelters, and, especially, literary evidence.

  • @cargumdeu
    @cargumdeu 3 года назад +1

    The Ankerwycke Yew -possibly England's oldest - has been suggested by some to have been the Axis Mundi of local tribes and real site of the signing of Magna Carta much later, it stands on the opposite bank near Magna Carta Lane. on public land.
    There's some evidence the Thames may have changed shape and the Tree was once on an 'island' on the river. I have no idea of the true historicity of this but the living tree at least 2-3000 years old is a site to behold. Meanwhile on the other side of the river where MC is commemorated there's nothing of interest particularly.

  • @grahamfisher5436
    @grahamfisher5436 3 года назад +1

    A place to watch the spring tides come up through London.
    A time of refreshing the land by their gods .
    kind of a Harvest festival of the river
    as we go to watch the Severn Bore travelling along...

  • @davidfish591
    @davidfish591 3 года назад +1

    That was great! Bronze Age people collected old stuff just like we do. That blew me away. We’re the same. Thank you so much for that insight. All the best from Washington State.

  • @helenhunter4540
    @helenhunter4540 2 года назад

    Lots of 21st century assumptions: "appeasing" the river. "Proving your social status by throwing your most precious possessions in the river". "Possessions " is itself an assumption.
    The cartoon showed only males working.
    Etc etc etc.

  • @larrybesel9423
    @larrybesel9423 Год назад

    This is a wonderful documentary! I would really like a documentary which explained the technology/skills needed to achieve this level of technical and cultural achievement!

  • @andrewirvine324
    @andrewirvine324 7 лет назад +6

    Surely if you put the skull on the post, the odds of it falling into the hole when the post rots are tiny.

    • @modelleg
      @modelleg 5 лет назад +1

      Boatbuilders would put a votive coin beneath the mast, similarly.

    • @abrahamdozer6273
      @abrahamdozer6273 3 года назад

      Maybe, the post was just a few dozen centimeters tall. I can't imagine why but I can't imagine why a skull would be displayed, either.

    • @amazinggrace5692
      @amazinggrace5692 3 года назад

      I think the skull was placed in the hole as one would place something valuable or protective.

  • @silviac221
    @silviac221 3 года назад +1

    Simply fantastic. I've already subscribed

  • @billsmart2532
    @billsmart2532 6 лет назад +5

    Weird film, archeologists explaining/justifying their work on the Runnymede site. No cohesive information.
    I liked the cute little German lady comparing the excavation to a strip tease, she seemed to have sex on her mind!!!

    • @abrahamdozer6273
      @abrahamdozer6273 3 года назад

      That's one of those fundamental things that makes us human throughout the ages.

  • @KirstenBayes
    @KirstenBayes 6 лет назад +2

    The copper and bronze ages are fascinating: watching culture move from egalitarian neolithic farming societies to the heirarchical, warrior societies we'd still recognise today.

  • @-meganeura
    @-meganeura Год назад

    Archeologists are so romantic, they used cremated bones in pottery to act as a flux and glass former., it´s called bone ash and it is still used today on porcelain, glazing, etc...

  • @martincarroll8637
    @martincarroll8637 3 года назад

    We are only beginning to piece together these curiosities, imagining it’s people and interpreting their struggles but particularly so as cultures intermingled to perhaps share ideas. We have of course a universal language uniquely identifying our species, when water, food warmth and shelter, overcomes our instincts to defend, just as our inquisitive nature chase’s away our shyness, helping us realise, that actually it’s possible to get along, well sometimes.

  • @richardpope3063
    @richardpope3063 4 года назад +3

    Great introduction for lay people, like myself; they do exist.

  • @ursulapinsker378
    @ursulapinsker378 5 лет назад +3

    Totally annoying music !

  • @scout3279
    @scout3279 4 года назад +1

    Couldn't get past the music

  • @JOHN----DOE
    @JOHN----DOE 6 лет назад +4

    The overdramatic, inappropriate music (Tchaikovsky??) is so annoying as to make this unwatchable. It's a pretty empty documentary to start with (they didn't find any interesting objects; they analyzed a lot of dead animal bones, and their conclusions are lot of politically-correct contemporary ideology way beyond what the evidence supports), and you can't jazz it up with ridiculously intense background music.

  • @jellevanschaijk05
    @jellevanschaijk05 7 лет назад +2

    I love pizza

  • @petefl1818
    @petefl1818 3 года назад

    England and Wales and for that matter Scotland didn't exist in the Bronze age they evolved over hundreds of years after the Romans left Britain thousands of years later. To mention these country's during the Bronze age is putting them and the Bronze age into a false context. It makes you wonder what else is put into a false context by people not being able to get out of the box of putting things into a modern context.

  • @fartymud
    @fartymud 4 года назад +2

    Started to fall asleep for the poor choice of using classical music for a Archeological documentary? Sets the atmosphere of viewers into weather to change the channel or not.

  • @jsmcguireIII
    @jsmcguireIII 5 лет назад

    Pretty inconsequential study.

  • @boobunn4151
    @boobunn4151 6 лет назад +2

    meh they were all to busy virtue signalling to tell us anything.