What I appreciate most about this program is how it builds on prior scholarship in order to establish authenticity of recently discovered artifacts. A truly wonderful 33:44 presentation.
Early medieval, post-Roman, pre-viking Britain has recently become one of my favorite historical placetimes. You got the Britons who were Celtic, but by this time, had varying levels of Roman cultural adoption. Then you got the the Welsh, and the "Old North" of Celtic peoples of Goddoddin and Rheged and Elmet. Then way up top you have the Picts who were almost certainly a kind of Celtic, but different from the others further south and may have elements of an older heritage. Then the "invading" Germanics, the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes. Latin vs. Celtic. vs Germanic, Early Latin Christianity vs. the prexisting Celitc beliefs vs. Germanic. Irish invaders and pirates. Music and poetry and war and a kaleidoscope of kingdoms. It's such an amazing clash of cultures and beliefs and history. No wonder that period birthed so many legends.
I think you'll find that the Britons were just Britons. What we call the Welsh today are the last remnant of the Britons. Celt is a lazy modern term adopted to refer to a group of languages that share some similarities.
@@simonpayne8252 I am familiar with the distinction. But there was I think a difference between those Britons who were largely incorporated into Roman culture in southern England from those that were less so in what we now call "Wales". And for lack of a better term, I used the word "Welsh". I also concede your point about the term "Celt". However, I still find the term to be useful when differentiating between broad cultural groups such as Latin, Germanic, etc. But there is no doubt that the "Celts" were not some homogeneic culture, but many different cultures spanning across millennia and the breadth of Europe.
These experts have been on another show called 'Time Team'. I just love that series, mainly Mick Aston with his colourful pullovers. In this documentary my 'heroes' look so young.
Speaking of ancient artifacts, at 17:35 there's a Blockbuster video store. In the previous century. local inhabitants would enter this structure to purchase a form of entertainment called "Video Tapes" which were inserted into a special machine. Actual viewing required yet another device that projected moving images through a very large glass object called a "Cathode Ray Tube" .
The ring (31:22) was found at a nunnery at Berkley Castle in Gloustershire which was the captial of Mercia. Lesley Webster (from the British Museum) said the ring (with wolf heads) is from around 825. Around that time, the king of that area would be King Aethelwulf of Wessex. Æthelwulf (Old English: [ˈæðelwuɫf]; Old English for "Noble Wolf") was King of Wessex from 839 to 858. In 825, his father, King Ecgberht, defeated King Beornwulf of Mercia, ending a long Mercian dominance over Anglo-Saxon England south of the Humber. The ring (with wolf heads) must be for that "noble Wolf"; the king of Wessex !!
You know you are watching a video about “state of the art” analysis of ancient and medieval archeology when the documentary includes video of the hosting walking into a shopping center with a prominent “Blockbuster video” store front. I don’t know when Blockbuster vacated the UK, but the American LLC ceased operating as a business on November 6, 2013. Before that, Blockbuster was known for its “preservation” of antiquated media content and antiquated media formats, I.e. VHS cassettes.
@kevcaratacus9428 I go every year in summer. it's so beautiful. You can see the Farne Islands and Holy Island from there on a clear day. You will love it , make sure you go.
😊 Visiting England was amazing! It's so interesting how ancient the cities and towns in all of Europe. Here in America, we barely have anything that's 2 or 300 years old.
When technology fails, I'm certain that some archaeologists, 1000 years from now, will be convinced that our society lost all ability to read and write, and we were all rich and wealthy. We all carried around these plastic little boxes so that we could look at our reflection in it's glass. This goes to show you how future societies come up with their "Best Guess" when it comes to past civilizations.
37:50ish..talking about teeth/bone development. ALL my children had teeth very early. The dentist did not believe me when I told him my daughter just turned 5...he said "If she had just arrived as a refugee,he would have to give her age 7 based on the development of her teeth"
Seems like the same thing happens over and over about every 1000 years or so. And nobody ever learns from it. You can literally just change the names of the countries/societies, and it is still pretty much all the same. "Human hyenas, wound up by their hate, snap at the heels of the wise and the great, with no regrets. Well, we're all very cultured, speak in soft tones, sitting in front of a plate full of bones, with no regrets. Let us Prey, State of the world today. Darwin say, "It's nature at work- so it must be ok" "Let us Prey" (Fetters/Nyswonger) The Raisins 1981 Strugglebaby Records
the romans conquered lands and then administered them by installing friendly locals and basically making them fantastically wealthy compared to everyone around them but still subservient to rome. there is clear evidence that this happened during the roman invasion of britain. it makes perfect sense to me that the angle saxon and jut tribe members would do similar.
Everybody is so shocked when they see examples of craftmanship from that era. However even today the best craftsman in the trades etc are of saxon stock.
Literally all European peoples were expert craftsman and produced artifacts of immense beauty and amazing detail. These people were apprenticed from a very young age and possessed knowledge and skills that have been changed or lost over time. Saxon craftsmanship was however incredibly popular and sought after all far beyond Europe - It does have a certain enchanting power and Naivety which is very unique - you can even see other cultures in Asia which attempted to emulate Saxon craftsmanship - from weaponry To jewellery.
Concerning the man who died in battle, I wonder whether he was killed by a single sword stroke or did his opponent just keep hacking away at him until he was dead. I'm just curious.
that seems to have been a kid like maybe a 12 year old or younger. Sad how they acted in those days. He didn't stand a chance, probably tried to defend himself. Also that is why the crippled and kids had weapons in the graves- those were for self defense.
36:40 the woman says they had tooth decay because of a lot of meat, meat does not cause tooth decay, there's nothing in meat that can cause tooth decay, it was starches and sugars obviously maybe combined with some nutrient deficiency
@@GGK2006 I checked the video again she did say they were eating a lot of meat and attributed the dental decay to that but did also say they were drinking mead
No, she didn't. She listed what the people ate and clearly said that the starches in the flour and sugars in mead were to blame. She never said meat caused tooth decay.
What are the odds of these artefacts dug out of the dirt all being so significant as being connected to a king? Is it possible some of them were perhaps more common than we realise?
I have to wonder if these Germanic people's were wearing their spoils of war . Many Romans were eliminated in Germania right before this time period. Maybe they weren't assimilated, but warriors that took trophies.
could be, but those people were already excellent gold smiths and jewelry makers, and that seems to have been brought from early Scythian forebears, who used similar designs. .
I really struggle with people disturbing the graves of a loved one! It’s not a game or a podcast! Someone placed them with their love and now you think you have some license because it’s been 500 years. I don’t think so!
Some 40+ years ago I got curious about my surname, so I decided to go to the library to investigate. Turned out my surname derives from a pre-7th century forename Wulfnoth meaning wolf bold or wolf brave, and is classed as old English/Germanic.
indeed. i hope they treat those bones well while and after photographing and studying them. But as for the gold, the dead did not take it with them. burying it is a waste.
We thier descendants and the whole culture got a lot from them , in dna and in culture and language. Speak for yourself, because you must not be their descendant, i f you try to devalue them. That 's your hate and sour grapes . . the colonies of the Brit empire were all populated mostly by them, and we are their descendants as well.
I very much enjoy all of these Chronicle videos. They are so well done. Quality. It's too bad most of what we have in the States has degraded to garbage. I have Bede's "Ecclesiastical History of England." It is well translated so is easy to read. There is so much in it about the conversion of Anglo-Saxon England. My own ancestry is very much English. My 9th ggrandfather came to America with the Puritans.
Meat doesn't decay your teeth, in fact in most cases it strengthens it and helps to carry away the damaging particals of starches stuck to the teeth during chewing.
The groups of angles, jutes, saxons ect did not come from France. Only Northern Germany, Denmark and Dutch coasts and the nearby areas. They were Germanic peoples
@@juliaforsyth8332 Normandy did not exist at that time and it is far further down on the French coast. Normandy meaning North man was land given to the Viking Rollo the walker by the King of France in a cowardly attempt to try and stop the Scandinavian raids on the country. The group would continue there until Rollos descendant William the Conqueror invaded England as he had a claim to the throne, so the Normandy element joined the saxons far later
@@Gladedancer Yeah they had some Gaul ancestry but also mixed heavily, the original French would have been far more Germanic before they were replaced. The Normans were the viking descendants who did marry into some French lines but many also took norman or sometimes Briton partners. Intriguingly it is said that despite Robert Duke of Normandy having a wife (who has disputed origin due to a lack of documentation leading to the name William the bastard) he also had a relationship with a Briton woman and it is said that this Briton may in fact be William the Conquerors mother. The Britons were a Celtic people who had migrated to France, likely due to the Anglo-Saxon groups arrivals.
you need vitamin A and D for good teeth, and minerals. maybe fish eaters had better teeth. Beef or lamb is more for muscle. but if it's pork, it's basically good for nothing .
American of English descent here . love this archaeological history, it' s also ours. We kept the old Saxon English Tun Moot for our New England Town Halls, from the beginning. All the adult men voted on things and elected thier local leaders, and colonial governors.
With respect, I think it is a stretch to say that New England Town Halls are directly related to old Saxon Tun Moot. (I study 17th Century England.). More likely, New England Town Halls are derived from ship-based cultures of the period, including joint-stock company ships, colonial trading ships, and privateer (pirate) ship cultures, which all had relatively flat democratic governance structures that included all the stakeholders (i.e. people on the voyage who contributed to the well-being of the ship.). It is safe to say that New England settlers had little or no understanding of English history in the Anglo-Saxon period.
Why are these academics always surprised that folk centuries ago looked after one another , the one thing that hasn't changed from the dawn of time is human nature .
Because all there was violence a lot of the time. Because they know more than you and are immersed in it… A big part of human nature is violence. Don’t kid yourself. We live in tame times. We are still animals.
Pax Romana backfired across the Empire. Subjugation and pacification left an indigenous population unschooled in martial skills. When savage incursions from Pictland could not be defended, the Romano Britons were easily seduced by the Germanic warrior-traders they hired to die for them. The canny Anglo-Saxons decided to take the land for themselves. Internecine wars left the established English Heptarcy vulnerable to the warlike Danish trader-pirates and the Danelaw eventuated, leading to an Anglo-Scandinavian golden age. A thousand years later, an effete society is about to be supplanted by a warlike radical invasion by sea, and a new, ignorant and primitive dark age is upon us.
Pretty much history repeating itself, because people fail to study history and learn from it. Thus history is ignored, but feelings rule the day aided by ignorance
Unlike in the medieval times, today everything is made with plastic none of which will be dug up a thousand years from now to reveal how life once was.
The Anglo Saxon s didn’t bring the Dark Ages. Islamic war and slavers caused trade to almost cease across the Mediterranean, and people had to start trading via landmass.
There were many things all over the world that brought about the Dark Ages. Ya can't blame JUST Islamic cultures and slavery. Slavery was ALL OVER the world. Doesn't make it right it is just a fact and our history whether we like it or not. Ya cannot just blame one culture or one act. There were many things at play and many different cultures all over the world that played their parts.
I beg to differ, it was sudden change at first, then a gradual acceptance of Christianity and Roman culture. Case in point, why did the Romanized Celts in western Britain emigrate to Brittany: They were escaping the sudden takeover by the Anglo Saxons.
When the Anglo Saxons moved in was the land empty.the only graves were Saxon . ?? who named the area controlled.i.e. Essex Sussex .. was there a problem between the occupiers and the natives??
Unlike in the people of rest of the Western Roman Empire - Gallo-Romans and Franks in Gaul, Visigoths in Spain, Ostrogoths in Italy etc. - the Romano-Britons put up a considerable fight against Germanic incomers. It took about 150 years before the Anglo-Saxons achieved the upper hand over the natives.
The point of them looking after disabled is that humans nature is NOT all 'greed and war' as people often say. We also cooperate and are kind. and that is very important, because it means a non-capitalist society IS and already HAS been possible.
Sorry my friend......there will never be a "Communist Utopia". You can undoubtedly find a good person in most scenarios but generally speaking people as a group are NOT inherently good......at all. These Neo Marxists will claim they can "do Communism the right way" but it's impossible. Even done "the right way" would require 100% government control and that will just pave the way to another disaster with a Psychopath in charge.
So outdated. There are much better docs on here about what Probably happened. This is the old Victorian twaddle 'Wave upon wave of warriors' Really? Did they disappear on landing? .There is No evidence at this time to suggest anyone 'Invade' Nor is there any proof that the country fell apart after the Romans left. Things happen Gradually, it isn't like shutting or opening a door!
Can you imagine a Muslim archeologist in a Muslim country saying anything like "this famous Islamic historian may be our best primary source from the period. However, his work was highly biased by his Muslim faith, so we should take it with a grain of salt"? If the answer is no, then that tells you that something is deeply wrong with 21st century Western civilization!
I can't find a date for when this programme was recorded. Since 2010 a lot of tbings have changed And a lot of this info is missing relevant facts . Such as a lot of what thsy refer to as saxon jewellery is not totally saxon. But a composite of original Roman, re used Roman used to make saxon jewellery Romano/ Saxon..
@@darkstarr2321 its crazy how fast ( because of new technology) archaeology, is changing. I started working for the museim archaeology unit almost 35 years ago. When resistivity and magnetic surveys were improving and updating old ideas. Since then especially from 2010 onwards technology seemed to improve almost overnight each month each year . We used to set up before any digging using the old levels and staffs, sorting a benchmark from which every new layer every artifact would use to record the exact details. Now there are geo surveyors who turn up & set up a machine that scans the whole archaeological site using satellites while we ( field archaeologists) clear off for 15 mins and have a coffee . It's like something you see on tv when cops a few recording a crime scene. Plus changes in dating finds and analysing soil from undisturbed layers of archaeology, & core samples The results are amazing, compared to when I started the limitations, the time it took the varying results. Now everything seems possible. When belgic settlers started farming, what thsy farmed , what animals they kept , the changes throughout the decades re weather, hotter wetter than usual, any changes to their usual routine. Times of trouble or lack of labour due to "plagues " etc The changes , its all happening so fast. GPR , and Lidar are two of my favourites. But thankfully nothing as of yet has been created that replaces people like myself the humble field archaeologist and our trowels , our experience are still needed to 'dig stuff up" ;)
@@darkstarr2321 its crazy how fast ( because of new technology) archaeology, is changing. I started working for the museim archaeology unit almost 35 years ago. When resistivity and magnetic surveys were improving and updating old ideas. Since then especially from 2010 onwards technology seemed to improve almost overnight each month each year . We used to set up before any digging using the old levels and staffs, sorting a benchmark from which every new layer every artifact would use to record the exact details. Now there are geo surveyors who turn up & set up a machine that scans the whole archaeological site using satellites while we ( field archaeologists) clear off for 15 mins and have a coffee . It's like something you see on tv when cops a few recording a crime scene. Plus changes in dating finds and analysing soil from undisturbed layers of archaeology, & core samples The results are amazing, compared to when I started the limitations, the time it took the varying results. Now everything seems possible. When belgic settlers started farming, what thsy farmed , what animals they kept , the changes throughout the decades re weather, hotter wetter than usual, any changes to their usual routine. Times of trouble or lack of labour due to "plagues " etc The changes , its all happening so fast. GPR , and Lidar are two of my favourites. But thankfully nothing as of yet has been created that replaces people like myself the humble field archaeologist and our trowels , our experience are still needed to 'dig stuff up" ;)
The two groups combined to fight off Vikings incursions into northern England. The Angles and Saxons. Unfortunately for the Saxons the Anglo bit stuck and became Angleland, then eventually England. The French still call us Angleterre.
The term Anglo-Saxon seems to have been first used by Continental writers in the late 8th century to distinguish the Saxons of Britain from those of the European continent, whom St. Bede the Venerable had called Antiqui Saxones (“Old Saxons”).
What I appreciate most about this program is how it builds on prior scholarship in order to establish authenticity of recently discovered artifacts. A truly wonderful 33:44 presentation.
Current chronology dates are wrong.
@@xavisanchez7522Sr. Sanchez pronounces without evidence, then, like the furtive bat, flutters away into the night.
Early medieval, post-Roman, pre-viking Britain has recently become one of my favorite historical placetimes. You got the Britons who were Celtic, but by this time, had varying levels of Roman cultural adoption. Then you got the the Welsh, and the "Old North" of Celtic peoples of Goddoddin and Rheged and Elmet. Then way up top you have the Picts who were almost certainly a kind of Celtic, but different from the others further south and may have elements of an older heritage. Then the "invading" Germanics, the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes. Latin vs. Celtic. vs Germanic, Early Latin Christianity vs. the prexisting Celitc beliefs vs. Germanic. Irish invaders and pirates. Music and poetry and war and a kaleidoscope of kingdoms. It's such an amazing clash of cultures and beliefs and history. No wonder that period birthed so many legends.
Does sound fascinating!
Who is next? The Chinese?
😂 @@kiwiwifi
I think you'll find that the Britons were just Britons. What we call the Welsh today are the last remnant of the Britons.
Celt is a lazy modern term adopted to refer to a group of languages that share some similarities.
@@simonpayne8252 I am familiar with the distinction. But there was I think a difference between those Britons who were largely incorporated into Roman culture in southern England from those that were less so in what we now call "Wales". And for lack of a better term, I used the word "Welsh". I also concede your point about the term "Celt". However, I still find the term to be useful when differentiating between broad cultural groups such as Latin, Germanic, etc. But there is no doubt that the "Celts" were not some homogeneic culture, but many different cultures spanning across millennia and the breadth of Europe.
It has been really interesting to me lately to learn how gradual a lot of these changes were as opposed to sudden falls. Great video!
These experts have been on another show called 'Time Team'. I just love that series, mainly Mick Aston with his colourful pullovers. In this documentary my 'heroes' look so young.
I love how enthusiastic everyone is. :)
Speaking of ancient artifacts, at 17:35 there's a Blockbuster video store. In the previous century. local inhabitants would enter this structure to purchase a form of entertainment called "Video Tapes" which were inserted into a special machine. Actual viewing required yet another device that projected moving images through a very large glass object called a "Cathode Ray Tube" .
I came to the comments hoping someone said your exact first sentence haha
There is some speculation by the experts that this documentary was copied off one of the ancient video tapes.
@@mattfoley4654Indeed, it does bear the occasional artifacts of such an appropriation.
Lol good 1😅😅
Great Doc, what amazes me is the craftsmanship people had considering what they had to work with
What amazes me is that @1750, I glimpsed a Blockbuster video!
The ring (31:22) was found at a nunnery at Berkley Castle in Gloustershire which was the captial of Mercia. Lesley Webster (from the British Museum) said the ring (with wolf heads) is from around 825. Around that time, the king of that area would be King Aethelwulf of Wessex. Æthelwulf (Old English: [ˈæðelwuɫf]; Old English for "Noble Wolf") was King of Wessex from 839 to 858. In 825, his father, King Ecgberht, defeated King Beornwulf of Mercia, ending a long Mercian dominance over Anglo-Saxon England south of the Humber. The ring (with wolf heads) must be for that "noble Wolf"; the king of Wessex !!
Maybe it belonged to his daughter, who married the King of Mercia?
I really enjoy watching and learning with Dr Roberts's videos.
Beautifully done! Thank you, I really enjoyed this 😊
Significant archaeological find at 17:36. Blockbuster Video.
You know you are watching a video about “state of the art” analysis of ancient and medieval archeology when the documentary includes video of the hosting walking into a shopping center with a prominent “Blockbuster video” store front. I don’t know when Blockbuster vacated the UK, but the American LLC ceased operating as a business on November 6, 2013. Before that, Blockbuster was known for its “preservation” of antiquated media content and antiquated media formats, I.e. VHS cassettes.
Wow! That community involvement is FANTASTIC!!! Great for high school excursions too!!!
I love Bamburgh, stunning and so is Lindisfarne
Bamburgh is easy to see why it had been used as a place to build forts , castles etc from around age onwards .
I've never been but it's on my list
@kevcaratacus9428 I go every year in summer. it's so beautiful. You can see the Farne Islands and Holy Island from there on a clear day. You will love it , make sure you go.
Is it free to visit?
@snappytomatoe Yeah it is. You pay to get into the castle and the car park but thats it.
Fantastic documentary. Thank you.
😊 Visiting England was amazing! It's so interesting how ancient the cities and towns in all of Europe. Here in America, we barely have anything that's 2 or 300 years old.
Same here in Australia! Rarely anything much over 200 years old!
Same here in Canada. Oldest would be the mid 1600s.
I thought you were saying you barely have anything that's 2 years old 😂
@@Nicefoolkilla Is there much to see from the 1600s?
@@boulevard14 Some places in Newfoundland. That was the earliest settlement in Canada.
That ring 😳 but also the size of the band. That person had to have been massive especially from the times stands
allot of the rings back then were made to fit over gloves.... possibly why it's so big?
@@garyevans8083
Maybe it’s a ring for a ehm… different purpose?
@@kevinmcmillin870What a lot of Koch!
A reminder of how lucky to live in the times we do,
Excellent work this. UA-cam is better for having such quality content. Thank you.
The real archeological find is the blockbuster at the mall lol
I wish I still had one
It's exciting to think of what may be dug up in the future. Great doco. Thank you.
Nice a new video just in time for me to watch while eating lunch!
As the video itself become archeology: a living record of a standing Blockbuster store.
I had no idea blockbuster made it across the Atlantic.
,😂😂
14:15 Author W Cleon Skousen born in Canada had the best writing about the brothers Hengst and Horsa that I've seen.
Not too long ago I read that CSI Sittingbourne lost their place in the shopping mall. I do hope they found another home.
Building a highway right through an ancient Saxon grave site. What could go wrong? Has no one seen Poltergeist?
😂 right
When technology fails, I'm certain that some archaeologists, 1000 years from now, will be convinced that our society lost all ability to read and write, and we were all rich and wealthy. We all carried around these plastic little boxes so that we could look at our reflection in it's glass. This goes to show you how future societies come up with their "Best Guess" when it comes to past civilizations.
The amount of phones with cracked screens and not in gravesites will definitely confuse them.😂
❤l hope you are well and happy love you
2:32 @@Grace-ms7un
37:50ish..talking about teeth/bone development. ALL my children had teeth very early. The dentist did not believe me when I told him my daughter just turned 5...he said "If she had just arrived as a refugee,he would have to give her age 7 based on the development of her teeth"
I was really surprised people weren't wearing glove while handling such precious objects. 32:57
That's exactly what I was thinking. The acid on the fingers will deteriorate the bones.
Fascinating findings revealing so much history
Must be an old doco, with that blockbuster being there at the Meads
well it is archaeology maybe it was an old Roman Block Buster
I thought that, too! Haha. And Alice looks quite young.
😂@@davedixon2068
That was interesting, I love archaeology
Was that a Blockbuster?? Talk about ancient history
WOW..i remember Alice from the days of Time Team, now she has her own show!! Good job Alice!!
She’s had her own show for about 15 years lol
Great piece of work!
Seems like the same thing happens over and over about every 1000 years or so.
And nobody ever learns from it.
You can literally just change the names of the countries/societies, and it is still pretty much all the same.
"Human hyenas, wound up by their hate, snap at the heels of the wise and the great,
with no regrets.
Well, we're all very cultured,
speak in soft tones,
sitting in front of a plate full of bones,
with no regrets.
Let us Prey,
State of the world today.
Darwin say,
"It's nature at work-
so it must be ok"
"Let us Prey"
(Fetters/Nyswonger)
The Raisins
1981
Strugglebaby Records
the romans conquered lands and then administered them by installing friendly locals and basically making them fantastically wealthy compared to everyone around them but still subservient to rome. there is clear evidence that this happened during the roman invasion of britain. it makes perfect sense to me that the angle saxon and jut tribe members would do similar.
Everybody is so shocked when they see examples of craftmanship from that era. However even today the best craftsman in the trades etc are of saxon stock.
Utter rubbish.
Literally all European peoples were expert craftsman and produced artifacts of immense beauty and amazing detail. These people were apprenticed from a very young age and possessed knowledge and skills that have been changed or lost over time. Saxon craftsmanship was however incredibly popular and sought after all far beyond Europe - It does have a certain enchanting power and Naivety which is very unique - you can even see other cultures in Asia which attempted to emulate Saxon craftsmanship - from weaponry To jewellery.
That said I do make silver pieces and naturally everything comes out looking like Saxon work.
@@Evus-st5diit’s not, saxons are the best.
@@Evus-st5di sounds like jealousy.
Concerning the man who died in battle, I wonder whether he was killed by a single sword stroke or did his opponent just keep hacking away at him until he was dead. I'm just curious.
that seems to have been a kid like maybe a 12 year old or younger. Sad how they acted in those days. He didn't stand a chance, probably tried to defend himself. Also that is why the crippled and kids had weapons in the graves- those were for self defense.
36:40 the woman says they had tooth decay because of a lot of meat, meat does not cause tooth decay, there's nothing in meat that can cause tooth decay, it was starches and sugars obviously maybe combined with some nutrient deficiency
Mead not meat. Mead is made by fermenting the sugars in honey.
@@GGK2006 I hope they said mead because if she said meat that's ridiculous and completely false
@@GGK2006 I checked the video again she did say they were eating a lot of meat and attributed the dental decay to that but did also say they were drinking mead
No, she didn't.
She listed what the people ate and clearly said that the starches in the flour and sugars in mead were to blame. She never said meat caused tooth decay.
@@theclumsyprepper yes she did say that but she also said meat before she listed those things listen back carefully AGAIN
What are the odds of these artefacts dug out of the dirt all being so significant as being connected to a king? Is it possible some of them were perhaps more common than we realise?
Imagine being a raider!
This is my DNA heritage
Its so cool to learn about
Wonderfully written narrative.
I'm sorry, but @1750, did I just see a blockbuster video store?
Just how old IS this documentary?
14 years ago😄
I didn't know you guys still have Blockbuster. @ 17:37
Very well done, thank you
After seeing the Cunk videos, I'm having difficulties taking this seriously. I keep waiting for the funny line.
I have to wonder if these Germanic people's were wearing their spoils of war . Many Romans were eliminated in Germania right before this time period. Maybe they weren't assimilated, but warriors that took trophies.
could be, but those people were already excellent gold smiths and jewelry makers, and that seems to have been brought from early Scythian forebears, who used similar designs. .
I really struggle with people disturbing the graves of a loved one! It’s not a game or a podcast! Someone placed them with their love and now you think you have some license because it’s been 500 years. I don’t think so!
Some 40+ years ago I got curious about my surname, so I decided to go to the library to investigate. Turned out my surname derives from a pre-7th century forename Wulfnoth meaning wolf bold or wolf brave, and is classed as old English/Germanic.
Always a thin philosophical line between Archeology and Grave Robbing...
indeed. i hope they treat those bones well while and after photographing and studying them. But as for the gold, the dead did not take it with them. burying it is a waste.
Very interesting Thank you
To quote that highly respected group of historians; what have the saxons ever done for us
They were the greatest people to walk this earth.
We thier descendants and the whole culture got a lot from them , in dna and in culture and language. Speak for yourself, because you must not be their descendant, i f you try to devalue them. That 's your hate and sour grapes . . the colonies of the Brit empire were all populated mostly by them, and we are their descendants as well.
@@Funeeman monty python.... yes they were/are
@@cobainzlady it's a pun on Monty Phytons Life of Brian . Look up 'what have the romans ever done for us'
You've gone and triggered everyone now hahaha /jk@@phildavies7666
Any of frictions between Angles and Saxons? Was there a split and in what period(s)?..
@25 - they're glass inserts. They are missing the metal stands
I wish i could do the archeological store thing 😭
You could enquire at the University involved...if they still have that type of programme running...
Good luck.
The British Isles was really a melting pot of many tribes and cultures.
Yeah all North western European neighbours of similar cultures...Diversity is nobody's strength, it is what it says on the tin DIVISION?!..
false culturally yes ethnically definetly not
and some were related to each other, and most all were of western europe.
@TexasCoffeeBreak777 Evidence?
Bernard Cornwell's Bebbanburgh!
Old old is this show? It’s got to be fairly old due to the Blockbuster store in the background @17:39.
Just so everyone knows this came out in 2010.
Yep, you can tell as Alice doesn’t have funky coloured hair yet
No wonder Alice Roberts looks so young. She is only about 37 years old when this was filmed. She's an old lady now.
I very much enjoy all of these Chronicle videos. They are so well done. Quality. It's too bad most of what we have in the States has degraded to garbage. I have Bede's "Ecclesiastical History of England." It is well translated so is easy to read. There is so much in it about the conversion of Anglo-Saxon England. My own ancestry is very much English. My 9th ggrandfather came to America with the Puritans.
These Digging for Britain videos are all from the BBC tv series.
Omg Blockbusters!!
Meat doesn't decay your teeth, in fact in most cases it strengthens it and helps to carry away the damaging particals of starches stuck to the teeth during chewing.
Speaking of archeology, I saw a Blockbuster video
The groups of angles, jutes, saxons ect did not come from France. Only Northern Germany, Denmark and Dutch coasts and the nearby areas. They were Germanic peoples
Normandy ?
@@juliaforsyth8332 Normandy did not exist at that time and it is far further down on the French coast. Normandy meaning North man was land given to the Viking Rollo the walker by the King of France in a cowardly attempt to try and stop the Scandinavian raids on the country. The group would continue there until Rollos descendant William the Conqueror invaded England as he had a claim to the throne, so the Normandy element joined the saxons far later
True, although the Franks were Germanic too.
@@Gladedancer Yeah they had some Gaul ancestry but also mixed heavily, the original French would have been far more Germanic before they were replaced. The Normans were the viking descendants who did marry into some French lines but many also took norman or sometimes Briton partners. Intriguingly it is said that despite Robert Duke of Normandy having a wife (who has disputed origin due to a lack of documentation leading to the name William the bastard) he also had a relationship with a Briton woman and it is said that this Briton may in fact be William the Conquerors mother. The Britons were a Celtic people who had migrated to France, likely due to the Anglo-Saxon groups arrivals.
She might have been referring to the French (Viking) Normans.
They released the homeowner with no charges.....finally and thankfully. Per Jakob Rodgers of Mercury news.
Did anyone else see the Blockbuster store? OMG!
The hostess has got it going on.
Yes sir
Blockbuster Video? When was this made? seems ancient too
13:45 - actually, it is treasure
Digging up Bebbanburg? Uhtred would like a word with you.
Sugar and starch may give you bad teeth. Meat does not. That was just pushing the message.
you need vitamin A and D for good teeth, and minerals. maybe fish eaters had better teeth. Beef or lamb is more for muscle. but if it's pork, it's basically good for nothing .
@@cobainzlady Good thing meat has vitamin A and D and minerals.
@@cobainzladyMeat is protein. That's all, a source of amino acids
"ANGLO SAXONS", with deliberatley BBC approved brown hair and brown eyes!
I was thinking the same. The two at the beginning look more like Spaniards.
She says the glass beads aren't treasures, i beg the difference, i think they are
39:23 I'd love to know where she got this necklace from
American of English descent here . love this archaeological history, it' s also ours. We kept the old Saxon English Tun Moot for our New England Town Halls, from the beginning. All the adult men voted on things and elected thier local leaders, and colonial governors.
With respect, I think it is a stretch to say that New England Town Halls are directly related to old Saxon Tun Moot. (I study 17th Century England.). More likely, New England Town Halls are derived from ship-based cultures of the period, including joint-stock company ships, colonial trading ships, and privateer (pirate) ship cultures, which all had relatively flat democratic governance structures that included all the stakeholders (i.e. people on the voyage who contributed to the well-being of the ship.). It is safe to say that New England settlers had little or no understanding of English history in the Anglo-Saxon period.
False.
Do those trowels get smaller an smaller?
Yes.
To say the very least most interesting
Why are these academics always surprised that folk centuries ago looked after one another , the one thing that hasn't changed from the dawn of time is human nature .
Because all there was violence a lot of the time. Because they know more than you and are immersed in it… A big part of human nature is violence. Don’t kid yourself. We live in tame times. We are still animals.
Pax Romana backfired across the Empire. Subjugation and pacification left an indigenous population unschooled in martial skills. When savage incursions from Pictland could not be defended, the Romano Britons were easily seduced by the Germanic warrior-traders they hired to die for them. The canny Anglo-Saxons decided to take the land for themselves. Internecine wars left the established English Heptarcy vulnerable to the warlike Danish trader-pirates and the Danelaw eventuated, leading to an Anglo-Scandinavian golden age.
A thousand years later, an effete society is about to be supplanted by a warlike radical invasion by sea, and a new, ignorant and primitive dark age is upon us.
Indeed... sadly, indeed.
Riiiight.
Pretty much history repeating itself, because people fail to study history and learn from it. Thus history is ignored, but feelings rule the day aided by ignorance
get over yourself, you drama queen.
get over yourself you drama queen.
Unlike in the medieval times, today everything is made with plastic none of which will be dug up a thousand years from now to reveal how life once was.
I didn't think we were still using the term 'Dark Ages' anymore?
Oh, good grief,why not??
Seeing so much support and love here is amazing. Blessings to you all.
Bot
This is my origin of my whole family
Umm all of them? Both sides? 😊
@@SorryPlayAgain who are marxist traitors to decide what people should be, you lot are gonna get rope for your deceit..
The Anglo Saxon s didn’t bring the Dark Ages. Islamic war and slavers caused trade to almost cease across the Mediterranean, and people had to start trading via landmass.
slavery comes with the beginning of time
we play like married and share the work load .
Whats that got to do with Islamic invader s, they marry their own the reason they dont ever integrate..
the Dark Ages started different in continental Europe
There were many things all over the world that brought about the Dark Ages. Ya can't blame JUST Islamic cultures and slavery. Slavery was ALL OVER the world. Doesn't make it right it is just a fact and our history whether we like it or not. Ya cannot just blame one culture or one act. There were many things at play and many different cultures all over the world that played their parts.
Question in a thousand years is someone going to be digging up Queen Elizabeth or other people
I beg to differ, it was sudden change at first, then a gradual acceptance of Christianity and Roman culture. Case in point, why did the Romanized Celts in western Britain emigrate to Brittany: They were escaping the sudden takeover by the Anglo Saxons.
They did not go to avoid Saxons, they went to avoid Romans! 400 years out? Also there was 'No sudden takeover' That is Victorian blah
So the romanized celts were escaping from themselves. You make no sense.
So the romanized celts were escaping from themselves???@@hogwashmcturnip8930
@@thomasschofield6633 By the 'old' themselves
the Celts already had Christianity whent he Romans took over. They got it from missionaries, not from Rome. But rome did take that over as well.
Too many stupid adds in this very beautiful and interesting documentary. Adds should not interupt the program.
History will not judge our journalists kindly
What's the difference between grave robbing and archeology? About a thousand years.
Grave robbing has theft as its only purpose.
When the Anglo Saxons moved in was the land empty.the only graves were Saxon . ?? who named the area controlled.i.e. Essex Sussex .. was there a problem between the occupiers and the natives??
Unlike in the people of rest of the Western Roman Empire - Gallo-Romans and Franks in Gaul, Visigoths in Spain, Ostrogoths in Italy etc. - the Romano-Britons put up a considerable fight against Germanic incomers. It took about 150 years before the Anglo-Saxons achieved the upper hand over the natives.
The point of them looking after disabled is that humans nature is NOT all 'greed and war' as people often say. We also cooperate and are kind. and that is very important, because it means a non-capitalist society IS and already HAS been possible.
Sorry my friend......there will never be a "Communist Utopia". You can undoubtedly find a good person in most scenarios but generally speaking people as a group are NOT inherently good......at all. These Neo Marxists will claim they can "do Communism the right way" but it's impossible. Even done "the right way" would require 100% government control and that will just pave the way to another disaster with a Psychopath in charge.
Anglo Saxon invasion? Raiders began to plunder the defenseless land?... how old is this documentary...?
2010. I was wondering much the same.
So outdated. There are much better docs on here about what Probably happened. This is the old Victorian twaddle 'Wave upon wave of warriors' Really? Did they disappear on landing? .There is No evidence at this time to suggest anyone 'Invade' Nor is there any proof that the country fell apart after the Romans left. Things happen Gradually, it isn't like shutting or opening a door!
Old enough to have a Blockbuster Video store in it.
Right. if anything they fought while working for a neighboring king. Or just settled there.
It was an invasion though, anything else is just cope
I wish the post-Roman/Middle Ages would cease to be called "Dark Ages". There's really no reason.
Bloomin’ Saxons, coming over here with their elaborate burial rituals, trying to fit in. Roman means Roman.
I can't believe they still have blockbuster in England!
The documentary is fourteen years old.
@@theclumsyprepper lol, now that explains it! I should have looked into that.
Can you imagine a Muslim archeologist in a Muslim country saying anything like "this famous Islamic historian may be our best primary source from the period. However, his work was highly biased by his Muslim faith, so we should take it with a grain of salt"? If the answer is no, then that tells you that something is deeply wrong with 21st century Western civilization!
I think she was contrasting the pagan English kings, with Christian ones, but I know what you mean
I can't find a date for when this programme was recorded.
Since 2010 a lot of tbings have changed
And a lot of this info is missing relevant facts .
Such as a lot of what thsy refer to as saxon jewellery is not totally saxon.
But a composite of original Roman, re used Roman used to make saxon jewellery
Romano/ Saxon..
2010 was when it was recorded
@@darkstarr2321 its crazy how fast ( because of new technology) archaeology, is changing.
I started working for the museim archaeology unit almost 35 years ago.
When resistivity and magnetic surveys were improving and updating old ideas.
Since then especially from 2010 onwards technology seemed to improve almost overnight each month each year .
We used to set up before any digging using the old levels and staffs, sorting a benchmark from which every new layer every artifact would use to record the exact details.
Now there are geo surveyors who turn up & set up a machine that scans the whole archaeological site using satellites while we ( field archaeologists) clear off for 15 mins and have a coffee .
It's like something you see on tv when cops a few recording a crime scene.
Plus changes in dating finds and analysing soil from undisturbed layers of archaeology, & core samples
The results are amazing, compared to when I started the limitations, the time it took the varying results.
Now everything seems possible.
When belgic settlers started farming, what thsy farmed , what animals they kept , the changes throughout the decades re weather, hotter wetter than usual, any changes to their usual routine.
Times of trouble or lack of labour due to "plagues " etc
The changes , its all happening so fast.
GPR , and Lidar are two of my favourites.
But thankfully nothing as of yet has been created that replaces people like myself the humble field archaeologist and our trowels , our experience are still needed to 'dig stuff up" ;)
@@darkstarr2321 its crazy how fast ( because of new technology) archaeology, is changing.
I started working for the museim archaeology unit almost 35 years ago.
When resistivity and magnetic surveys were improving and updating old ideas.
Since then especially from 2010 onwards technology seemed to improve almost overnight each month each year .
We used to set up before any digging using the old levels and staffs, sorting a benchmark from which every new layer every artifact would use to record the exact details.
Now there are geo surveyors who turn up & set up a machine that scans the whole archaeological site using satellites while we ( field archaeologists) clear off for 15 mins and have a coffee .
It's like something you see on tv when cops a few recording a crime scene.
Plus changes in dating finds and analysing soil from undisturbed layers of archaeology, & core samples
The results are amazing, compared to when I started the limitations, the time it took the varying results.
Now everything seems possible.
When belgic settlers started farming, what thsy farmed , what animals they kept , the changes throughout the decades re weather, hotter wetter than usual, any changes to their usual routine.
Times of trouble or lack of labour due to "plagues " etc
The changes , its all happening so fast.
GPR , and Lidar are two of my favourites.
But thankfully nothing as of yet has been created that replaces people like myself the humble field archaeologist and our trowels , our experience are still needed to 'dig stuff up" ;)
At 35:41, yep. Those are English teeth 😂
@@file13whereareyou Tired and boring American stereotype for the British, not English. Americans have worse teeth
Where does the term Anglo Saxon come from?
The two groups combined to fight off Vikings incursions into northern England. The Angles and Saxons. Unfortunately for the Saxons the Anglo bit stuck and became Angleland, then eventually England. The French still call us Angleterre.
@@Ax3y thanks !!
The term Anglo-Saxon seems to have been first used by Continental writers in the late 8th century to distinguish the Saxons of Britain from those of the European continent, whom St. Bede the Venerable had called Antiqui Saxones (“Old Saxons”).
perhaps Bat, for the animals on the ring.