Potted History (Mildenhall) | Series 17 Episode 6 | Time Team
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
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The team visits the heart of Wiltshire for one of their most ambitious projects ever: to investigate an entire lost Roman town. Hidden under acres of wheat, Cunetio would once have been a bustling market centre.
Series 17, Episode 06
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#TimeTeam #BritishHistory #TonyRobinson
Imagine how beautiful it would be to go for a hike with Stewart
It was him that got me into hiking
I would so love one of those.
Or a dig with Phil!
@@edwardmckenzie3402 agreed, I would MUCH rather go for a hike with Phil LOL
If I was a good 20-30 years younger, maybe....
Simply a delight, and I so miss Mick Ashton XX
Saw Mick once, him and his wife. She was driving their Morris Minor through Barrow Gurney just south of Bristol where I used to have a studio. He was wearing one of his trademark rainbow jumpers. The car came to halt and an animated discussion ensued, don't know what it was about. Made my day anyway.
And Robin and Victor.
It is so dizzying trying to get my head around a town that thrived for longer than my own country has existed, and is now just a few acres of level dirt. Simply astonishing.
Phillipa always brought a cheery presence when she helped the team. I've long been wondering why the show didn't maintain a stock of tents onsite. I could understand some of their remote sites being difficult regarding bringing extra equipment, but they've had so much rain tipping down at times that it would have seemed a no-brainer to have tents enough to protect 4 trenches, not just one.
Yuk!
I guess you are much smarter than they are.
I used to o deer that too.
I would assume its because its just easier to have a local company deal with it if needed? For a production like this the people in charge of planning would contact the local tent company well in advance and have an agreed upon plan and price.
Same as they would do for hotels, food or anything else really. Only haul what you cant get locally.
@@nicholastrawinski Sorry cannot be done. These folks just aren't bright enough.
Usually forget to say thank you. I love all the time team programmes and they hold my interest during covid restrictions and hiding from the plague indoors. Thank you!
Dane here - if the Swedish equipment broke, it means it's working as intended.
Ooooh! Shots fired! :)
I wondered where the Scandiwarriors were lol
Ooh burn! Haha
So do the swedes have their own version of Lucas Electric, prince of darkness?
Funny because part of Sweden (Skåne) once belonged to Denmark, lol
If you don’t love Phil Harding, there’s something wrong with you. What a treasure he is.
I agree with you 100%
A brilliant episode!! The interaction between everyone is absolutely delightful. It’s such a happy story! You always leave me wanting more. Great job!
It’s funny how Phil’s accent became quite strong once reminiscing on his past in that area, loved it! Also, I’m wondering if the hoard was actually hidden by the community from the tax man? I could see them keeping the money from taxation.
As a non British person, I always found it hard to place Phil's accent. I always assumed he was a pirate...
@@thomasjongepier6017 Not hard to see why you get "pirate" from Phil, he grew up in Wiltshire. The classic "pirate accent" comes from actor Robert Newton (played Long John Silver and Blackbeard), who grew up in Dorset, the next county south from Wiltshire. Newton's accent is called West Country. Some Brits could undoubtedly tell Dorset from Wiltshire, but the rest of us just hear pirate.
@@nevyen149 I did not know that, thank you :)
Well I suppose his accent would be more pronounced, this is home county for uncle Phil.
@@thomasjongepier6017 I always thought he seemed like he fell out of a Dickens novel.
Really appreciate the explanations with modern graphics
lol Phil sounds traumatized by all coins found... sounded like the sea captain's speech from Jaws the motion picture.
Roman Hoarder: "Ha ha no one will ever find my coin stash.."
I was going over some genealogy and found ancestors from Mildenhall in the middle ages. Interesting to see the territory and know they would have been coming across coins and potsherds.
Loved to see a little spotlight on John's team and on Phil's heritage in this episode, gave it a real personal touch!
Nice one Folks and Tony, I really did like the Latin version of "Three days to do it in"!
I do think the overall strength of the show is the amount talent on display, and how well they work as a team guided by Tony to show it . They are indeed a 'Team' in my book.
based on the general amount of pottery fragments collected, the romans must have been the clumsiest empire history has ever known
I like to think they were trying to make a mosaic tiled floor everywhere 😊
Hi there from Hornby Island B.C.
Way to go Phil!!! Oh how I loved seeing Phil give Tony a lesson on the correct name of the English town... 😅. Tony acts so high and mighty all the time and it was loverly to see Phil take him down a peg. Bet Tony has never been to this area of England before where Phil grew up in this area. Way to go Phil!!!!
I didn’t ask for an address for it 😂😂😂 classic
How do you end up owning a farm with such a history, beneath your wheat paddock? That's the concept that blows my mind: it has just been sitting there, all that time.
Loved it.
Hello Barry! 😄
Unique character overload 😀
Just one Cunetio!
Did the demolition of Roman stone buildings provide stone for Norman keeps?
I’ve never heard anyone mention or ask this, but so curious where these enormous structures went.
This one is really good.
Splendidad
Excellence
Wonderful
Joyous
😛
What a great episode!
In Walsall there is an area called Caldmore the locals call it Carmore again the D is not prnounced
Hard to believe that such a massive wall just disappeared into a field….
8:22 Greetings from Sweden.
you might think that the Swedish could have anticipated rainproofing their fancy computer...
They did just not the exported ones😊
The 3 day thing always drove me nuts. lol
That guy should've covered the computer= water and computers,aren't the best of friends lol
There’s a reason the sun use to never set on the British empire. I live in a former British possession West Virginia USA. I wish we valued knowledge and competence here the way our British relatives relish it.
Sorry a USA boy myself I thought the reason you were saying because it's always cloudy an raining 😊
What kind of coin is that you are using? Though I've been there, I'm not British. Thanks
They looked like pennies
Great content but spoilt by far to many embedded adverts.
Hard times, maybe have to go dig them pennies up 🙄
How do you loose/leave so many coins?!
It was a hoard someone stashed. They obviously died before they could return.
A pot of gold
The REAL treasure of Mildenhall was the story Roald Dahl wrote about it.
Ian, what an unsung hero. Such delicate skill with the digger! May he rest in peace.
And I *love* those episodes where we get not only Phil Harding (local hero!), but also the inimitable Stewart Ainsworth and John Gater!
Er... To my knowledge Ian Powlesland is still alive - and well I hope so!
@@jeanpeuplu5570 Sadly the primary Excavator Operator on this, and most digs, Ian Barclay, has since died.
My head immediately goes to the little bank employee who gets the call or email saying they want fifty five thousand one pence pieces.
25:05 "I never thought I'd be taking English lessons from Phil Harding." Time Team is such a treasure, and witty moments like this make it so fun! Bravo!
It is pronounced Mine-all according to Phil!😆
the amusing irony is dna testing for a different episode confirmed that Phil is a member of the originating celtic gene line in the united kingdom, which means he is a direct descendant of the celts LOL
"Why is it always me..."
"Because you'll do it."
Pretty much sums up Time Team. :)
never thought that it just could be all of them a - hamming it up -? so as despite all that rain to make it sound they all are having fun out there?
@@benediktmorak4409 You've never been on a dig with archaeologists before, have you? :) They're so happy to find three stones together, or a piece of old pot, that rain is barely noticed unless it's filling the trenches.
@@eshbena in all that rain, every day rain,rain,rain?
Loved hearing Phil talk about working after the Cunetio hoard was found. And the accent 'wars' between him and Tony. MYN'L - MILDENHAL - MYN'L....
Maybe there are mines nearby, hennce the Mynl.?
funny that they had that war tho, considering the pronunciation of, say, Leicester or everyone's fav, Woostah, er, I mean Worcester (Im not even sure I spelled that right)
Another fantastic episode. Lovely to see an old photo of Phil. And, yes, brilliant work from the geophys team. Thanks very much!
I love that Phil gave Tony directions to the Mildenhall I know in East Anglia! I love that different regions have different pronunciations of the same spelling.
...and the East Anglian one has a river Kennett nearby too, just to confuse further :)
@@JasonCliftJones LOL!
By strange coincidence I was born in Savernake hospital which is up the hill from this site just across the A4 into Marlborough. My paternal grandfather from Wiltshire, was born the son of a Wiltshire man and a Cambridgeshire woman. It was relatives of that great-grandmother who centred upon the town of Soham also had connections across that part of Cambridgeshire and into the neighbouring county of Suffolk.
It has always amused me that to the east of Soham there is the Suffolk Mildenhall. To the south of Mildenhall, back into Cambridgeshire, you will find the parish of Kennett. To the south west of Mildenhall - and also to the south-east of Soham, just over half way from Soham to Kennett, you will find Chippenham.
You will understand that to a Wiltshire lad, that was a might confusing!
@@JasonCliftJones Now I can understand why the Kennett in Wiltshire is so named - it is an Early English variant on the name of Cunetio. I wonder how the ones in Cambridgehsire came to get their names?
I'm afraid the answer to that seems lost to history.
Victor's beautiful paintings really do bring history to life. I always understand a site better after seeing one of his creations.
We miss him ! great artist!
If you live in Britain and I guess you don't have to go to Herculaneum and Pompeii to find all kinds of Roman sites.
Indeed..falling over them to this day! Latest is from Stonehenge, where it's been discovered as being even more massive!..With what is astounding, there were approx. 4 thousand people around the Henge, all celebrating the sacred sites Winter Solstice...
True. We have a Roman town next to our village and even an Iron Age hill fort. Someone even plundered some pillar bases in the 18th century from the roman town, which still adorn a wall along the Main Street.
I always enjoy Tony's introductions, this one was one of my favourites. He is so funny 😂
Not sure where he got the verb of his Latin tag, though. There are several verbs for “dig” in Latin and the one he used isn’t one of them.
Tony is interesting - asks the archaeologists the best questions so he can do his speaking
As a Swede, I'm embarrassed that "water got into the computer" - that's totally unacceptable! Outdoors machinery must be able to operate in outdoors conditions. A little rain!? Bah!
Probably you've got that little glitch sorted now ☔...only a test trial in Wiltshire...
love from Scotland😁
Given the laptop had a little perch to sit on, I feel it only needed somewhere to attach an umbrella and it would have been fine. Failing that, some clingfilm...
Likely the Computer was a local model. Not prepared for exterior moisture.
@@bethbartlett5692 See 11:56 - it's an ordinary laptop sat on a little 'table' to the driver's front right. So it'd never cope with actual rain. It only needed something to keep the rain off, but presumably still let the driver see the screen.
*_"As a Swede, I'm embarrassed"_*
No worries, brilliant invention, idiot users! You should have never trusted us with such technology! We're as likely to sacrifice a goat to it as use it properly.
{:-:-:}
I am an American. I have never even been to the UK. The oldest known structures within 500 miles of me are old, but not Roman old. The Romans never even got to my continent (as far as we know). And yet, I find these Time Team stories fascinating and I love to watch them. I even get a special thrill whenever I see Tony Robinson and Phil Harding together. I know that the story they uncover will send a buzz into my brain.
im Aussie l know how that feels (and l agree Tony and Phil are favourites)
Bet time: Stewart will ask Tony for a extra hmmm 10mins by the end of this episode for One Roman Coin! Any other Bets?? ( no bets on Phil’s hair & hat. Micks jumper) And rain is out lol
My brother's house was built in 1723, a bit before the USA was formed.
@@CH1LDOFTHEMOON As someone who appreciates things from the past, that blows my mind!
Romans punked out!
These episodes always seem to come up when I need them most. Thank you Time Team 🙏❤
I am an American and my name is Mendenhall. Supposedly this is our ancestral home.
I suppose the question becomes: how is it pronounced? ;-)
@@donaldwatson7698 Mendall, obviously 😁
Midal.
Phil cracks me up! "I didn't want an address for it." In answer to a piece of Roman pottery. @5:33
Time Team start’s my day out with a smile and engages my brain! I’m happy happy happy!!!!
I haven't seen this one before. This was amazing how much was just under their feet.
Clifford here, from Tucson, Az & I just found this program & I love it ! As a lay-archaeologist, I like how you folks “attack” a site & moreover, I like how the maps are outlined in dark lines where you are going to dig & “we” the viewing audience can follow along , also the sharing of your finds , makes one feel as if they are right there w/you! Great work , love your show , keep up th good work ! CHEERS !!
what clown didn't say put a cover over the PC a bloody carrier bag would have done with tape to keep it closed
Always a great episode when the banjo music comes out 😂
28:46 ...
I miss Stuart! This series has really brought landscape archaeology to the limelight, at least for me!
❤
I often find Stuart and Henry's work the most interesting.
I FINALLY got to hear Phil say "Ohh Arrr", just like a real Pirate !! lol
what always amazes me, and for that i only can say - chapeau - to each and every Expert, they can say from a piece of shard the size of $$ coin, what it was, where it came from and what it was used for. excellent one does not learn that in books alone!
Just a Yank, but I spent a wonderful and unexpected two weeks at Mildenhall/Lakenheath in the early ‘90’s.
That's the other Mildenhall!
Thank you for another great video. See you next week. Cheers mates. 👍🇬🇧😊🇺🇸
What happened to the walls? It didn't appear that there was any kind of "debris field" around the footprints from the collapse of the walls. Was this one of those situations where the wall was repurposed elsewhere?
I would think so. That much stonework doesn't just disappear so it probably went to the local towns to build houses (or other walls).
@@BoingBB After all, why dig it up and dress it when there is plenty just out there already ready to go? :)
New episode for you tube, I appreciate it. Thank you
The watercolor artist is talented...love his work.
Victor Ambrus 🙂
Victor sadly died in 2021.
There are various books showing his work available, and many (over 300) other books where he did the illustrations.
Born László Győző Ambrus he fled his native Hungary to Britain after the failed 1956 Revolution against Soviet domination. More information is available on Wikipedia.
*_"Et habemus tres dies in quibus ad faciendum est."_*
{:o:O:}
the irony of phil giving tony english lessons is, about a year later i believe, dna testing confirmed that phil is directly descended from the first genetic line of celts to enter the united kingdom 20,000 years ago.
We've seen them cold, we've seen them wet, but I've never seen them with hands completely white from cold before! (When Tony and Stewart are in the field talking about trench BB.)
The cockles of my heart are warmed just by watching these awesome characters.
I love the pronunciation differences! Reminds me of when people are confused by the backwoods pronunciations of place names in my home state, where Hurricane is pronounced "HER uh cun"
Such a brilliant show 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Lol uncle Phil back on his home stomping ground.
Time team digs up some ancient history of Phil Harding! you can tell he has a connection with the place, even his comments when the digger takes the first cut. Hes happy to be on his own patch.
Love the Stories. Great job you all are doing. Thank you.
Lovely episode. Phil is so funny.
Nice job TT! Love phils and tonys banter
Basically every time I watch one of these old Time Teams, I want to say that was one of the best I've seen. But this one really was! Just a great watch... Endless thanks for posting all these!
Phil is a living hobbit.
It's hard to wrap your head around the fact you found 55,000 Roman coins in one place! =====man
This was a good one! ✨
Never thought of Phil as young. That was so cool !!
He was quite fit.
@@barbmcconnaughey3070 ohhh arrre barb
@@barbmcconnaughey3070 Was? Have you seen the legs on that man when he's in shorts? His wife is a lucky lady.
@@eshbena We we’re discussing “young” Phil.
I hate autocorrect 😤
Omg the coin horde episode!!
Fascinating! A tax-collecting center, for sure, with high walls because presumably the Romans were still guarding against un-reconstructed Brits who weren't bowing down to the Roman Empire and who posed a threat to the Roman coin horde.
I think everybody on this show has a different accent. The strangest one, of course, is Phil's. When he said "Oh aye, oh, aye!" he sounded like someone I've heard before, either on "Upstairs, Downstairs" or maybe on "Downton Abbey". I imagine a lot of immigrants from England to America came from his neck of the woods! I thought he was from Oxford, though, is that near Wiltshire? And as long as the English weather holds out, or pours down, John won't have to worry about losing his job.
Phil was born in Oxford probably because that was the nearest maternity hospital to Marlborough in 1950! He's a Wiltshire lad to his bones.
Phil was born in 1950? He’s my age! Wonder when his birthday is…could he be a Cancer or maybe a Leo? Or maybe a Taurus….
I would really like to see this whole place below the field.
Did anyone suggest maybe that's where they were making the coins?
Usually when there is coin production there is lots of blanks and badly formed/stamped coins found also dies, edges and such. If you think of any form of manufacturing there's always rubbish associated with it and they didn't find that.
my like turned the likes from 599 to 600 :0) great time team as i loved watching it :0)
And now there are 8 thousand!
Great closing!!! Go Phil! 😘
(So they're in, pronounced: "Minehall") correct? lol Live in Dixie USA, we have a town called *Rulerferd,* but spelled "Rutherford". 😁
Awesome job John and GeoPhys Team! + Stewart.
Yes, but the other Mildenhall, in East Anglia, is pronounced the way it looks. Confusing isn't it? lol
@@BoingBB
Would be if you didn't know, but I totally get it. Folks here continue a butcher town name out of pure Tradition!
Ya know, they do compare Southerners to the Brits ...
(The accent actually)
😁 Phil fit right in East Tennessee (Mountains)
...and They still make "pure Pot Still" for sure.
Come to think of it, Phil would love Appalachia! 😂
I'm on the other end of the state, "Delta" - Mississippi River side.
🍀💚🍀
If you look at the village noticeboard and that of the parish church it is even written - Minal!
First aired 23rd May 2010 UK
This could have been an army training centre. High walls built to attack. Offices for the administration and wages for the men, hence the lower value of the coins. Why build such walls in a safe district. If nothing to protect, something to train attacking against. If it had been a market, surely more buildings to store goods and field enclosures if animals.
So cool. We used to live in Bredgar village. Roman coins were found there. The kids at primary school got to dress up and go on blue peter and we all bought the first day cover stamps.
So the geophysics team walked a very impressive 55km to survey the entire 27 acres. I am old'fashioned so-and-so - how many bushels per hectare is that? :-) (this is just as confusing as the local timber merchants that sell 4"x2" by the metre length)
😂
It would be great if you could dig 5 days when large projects like this find come up.
Always a brilliant tv show and lovely to view the substantial hoard ,in fact I feel that it was the best tv program at that time ever,we all miss it and Mike Ashton !
Philippa is awesome. Classy and very knowledgeable.
What has happened there since this episode was aired? Has the site become a major training ground for archaeology students? I hope the entire site has been declared plow-free.
Probably switched to oil seed rape.
Still a field for crops, judging by the February of 2021 satellite images.
You do know realize it’s keeping them as cropped fields that’s preserved them, yes?
@@Invictus13666 People don't seem to understand agriculture has preserved more archeological sites than developers. In most of TT's videos, I've observed that it is the farmers who seem to give the heads up to the team of the when, where, how and what, giving the team enough information to plan their avenues of approach.
@@nbk9372 yes
love phill,,,5 minutes,,dont want an address with it 😅😅😅😅