All About Westminster Abbey | FULL EPISODE | Time Team
During the 19th century, restoration work at the Abbey uncovered a previously unknown section of the church. The Team search for the lost sacristy in Westminster Abbey.
Series 17, Episode 1.
#TimeTeam #BritishHistory #WestminsterAbbey #Cathedrals
Time Team is a British TV series following specialists who dig deep to uncover as much as they can about Britain's archaeology and history.
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Пікірлер: 241
As someone who can't afford all of the "Must Have" subscription services, I hope they keep posting these on KZread for us common citizens.... You know, the one's that have to actually go to work to go to work.....
@tygeron3145
3 жыл бұрын
Yup
@teckeleddie
3 жыл бұрын
HAHA, I am feeling that. Someone will stop it though, as it is a pleasure to others.
@shamefurdispray6077
3 жыл бұрын
Seek and ye shall find.............
@khagemann7462
3 жыл бұрын
If you like documentaries that are interesting and free I recommend checking out spark here on KZread you will probably like it!
@DanO12345
2 жыл бұрын
That is what many hoped the internet would be.
"They're super-rare. Absolutely wonderful. Find us some more, please." Classic Time Team.
30:54 - I love his management style: "Abolutely wonderful! Find us some more please."
I live in Washington State, I so enjoy these programs and have learned so much. I started watching due to my ancestors who came from Feltwell, UK. KEEP these coming. I benign watch once I start they just play.
When I visited London in my 20's - about 50 years ago - this American knew almost nothing about Westminster Abbey, except that Queen Elizabeth II had been crowned here when I was a child. Still, it impressed me deeply. Over the years, I've learned a bit more, and this episode adds to how blown away I am by the history of the place. That's what I remember about being there - you can feel the antiquity.
@jcortese3300
Жыл бұрын
I had the same reaction to it -- walking around and seeing Handel's burial, then turning around and just stumbling into Chaucer, then wandering outside, looking down, and there was Muzio Clementi the composer. It's like a who's who of the most important names in history.
@joshschneider9766
6 ай бұрын
And now she's permanently buried there and her son is king. All things full circle eh?
@dottiebaker6623
6 ай бұрын
So true. I wonder if, as she was being crowned, she realized that someday she be buried there for all eternity? Seems like a possibility....@@joshschneider9766
@JulianneTure
5 ай бұрын
@@joshschneider9766 Queen Elizabeth II is buried at Windsor, not Westminster.
Visited the Abbey in 1996. Even thoughn I was raised without a religion, I still wanted to see it for the historical aspect, and being a Royalphile, lol. It was AMAZING.
@Honeydwarf85
3 жыл бұрын
I love going to see grand old churches. I may not be religious, but I love the history, art, and all else that comes with them is just fascinating to me! A shame that where I live in the US the oldest ones don't go much further back than the mid 1600's.
@TimeLady8
3 жыл бұрын
I visited London in 1977 and couldn't find the Abbey because it was completely covered in scaffolding. It was being sandblasted to clean all the coal muck off. My sister had to point me in the right direction.
@theastronomer5800
2 жыл бұрын
Agreed. These building have so much history and such amazing architecture that anyone can easily appreciate them without being religious in any way.
@fereiramacon2792
Жыл бұрын
Hello friend, I am Ferreira by name, I would like to know you if you don't mind.?
This is one of my favourite episodes, and all the artefacts are amazing. Every time I pass by the Abbey I think of Time Team. Cheers! ❤️
@sheakennelly2218
Жыл бұрын
Ya know😅 s😂 is waste if fgdxd😂r pvga 4:51 😢taffeta the g by hv❤ge❤oh 😮❤❤w🎉 6:08 😂😊 6:16 qlove
Always good to see another Time Team, even though I've watched them all on BBC America.
Aside from the TV budget of "Time Team", it would seem that this sort of archeological work should be continued beyond just 3 days. What else is down there?
@bellehogel8665
3 жыл бұрын
Agreed. I doubt they just fill everything in a go home at the end of day 3. Would be interesting to see what happens after the camera stops rolling.
@theastronomer5800
2 жыл бұрын
They did an episode where they followed up with some of the digs that they did, and many of the important ones do get studied in more detail later.
@douglasgraebner1831
2 жыл бұрын
@@bellehogel8665 my understanding is that that is what they do-bear in mind that they can't dig everything up and leave it, they have to document the finds and analyze/write up a report on them. A full excavation would require a lot more people and effort/funding and would likely be an extended commitment; this is really closer to a limited-purpose evaluation.
Bless those archeologists. I'm more than willing to watch them work and learn from them but I could never do their job.
This popped up on my KZread feed and it was wonderful. I don't know where else I might have found this over the years, so I'm glad I ran into it here. More more! Riveting.
29:27 I love it when Tony gets technical 😂
I always love Time Team, but truly enjoyed this one since I actually visited Westminster Abbey back in 2007. I guess I was a few years early to catch Time Team at work.
@barrydysert2974
3 жыл бұрын
I visited in 1982!:-)💜
This has always been one of my favorite episodes! Even more so after my trip to Britain in 2012. Only now do I realize that my mom and I sat on the very same spot as Mick and Tony at 3:20 when we had a coffee break while visiting the Abbey. The one thing that bugs me is Helen’s supposed confusion over what a Galilee Porch was, especially when she says that she had been asking others and they didn’t know either. I could have told her since it is clearly defined in my guidebook for the ruins of Rievaulx Abbey in Yorkshire. If it is such a common church architectural term that it’s in something written for the average tourist, then the experts she was consulting just weren’t that good.
Love Bettany Hughes! She has some awesome documentaries.
Wonderful, gentle humor, fellowship, and the joy of discovery. please keep these lovely programs in the public domain
This was extremely exciting! Going all the way back to Knut! Loved this episode. :)
Tony Robinson thank you for the interesting stories of Britain's 6 Cathedrals I enjoyed it tremendously I hope you will have more of the Cathedrals in time to come you are fantastic at what you are doing
@keithdavies6316
2 жыл бұрын
Keith Davies Cape Town South Africa
I'll watch anything with Tony.
Very interesting - was just visiting WMA. However the skewed burials reminded me of a family joke. Grandmother was pointing out that all of the burials in the local cemetery were pointed east because it is from the east that the second coming is supposed to come from. An aunt who was Catholic pointed out the adjacent Catholic cemetery graves were pointed south. Grandma smiled and said I guess they will need to make a quarter turn.
I was so hoping the team would perform - and report results of - more than just carbon dating of the remains discovered. It would have been amazing to learn the origins of the person who was interred. Given how mobile people were around the time of the Saxons, my curiosity was piqued considerably!
@0u0ak
Жыл бұрын
(Tiny bit more detail: the person's bones were carbon dated to around AD 1025 - 1155, an adult male, 23 - 25 years old; mild calculus and very small dental carious lesion.)
@joshschneider9766
6 ай бұрын
There actually is a good bit of extended detail in the digs official report which is hosted by Wessex archaeology.
GREAT JOB TIME TEAM TO FIND EVIDENCE OF 2 SAXON BURIALS AND MORE AS ALWAYS===== AWESOME WORK TO ALL STAFF
Amazing dig. Unbelievably interesting.
Terrific dig!💜👍
10/3/2020 Saturday. beautiful show and beautiful people.
@ 7:55 all of these people in one of the most architecturally stunning buildings in the world and half of them are talking on their phones. If I hadn't just seen it for myself I wouldn't believe it.
@marjielalonde3875
3 жыл бұрын
It`s possible they`re listening to a guided tour I`ve seen devices handed out in other churches etc that are like a cell phone but have a narration
Buildings today just cannot compare to those our ancestors created. It is so sad that so many are lost
@robertandhollyscorpiofan2697
Жыл бұрын
Erm, do you mean “lost” as in demolished, or “lost” as in re-purposed for something else? I live in the United States, the southeastern “corner” of pennsylvania (the ‘burbs of Philadelphia). There are many older houses in the town where i live, but most of them have been “converted” into apartments.
I like how the backhoe operator gently removes the sod so it can be put back later
@TheJonathanNewton
Ай бұрын
It takes a very, very, very, very skilled operator to be able to dig with such precision.
The front porch at Durham is also called Galilee.
What I want to know is if the tombs in the abbey have any remains or are empty. Edward the Confessor, Edward I, can we really expect any remains after all these centuries of looters?
I love history
Its Baldrick!!!
So mind blowing that they would just slap workshops right up against the wall like thatm talk about max efficiency 😂
Nice to see Balders do so well in a new career :)
@luthahvelken4653
3 жыл бұрын
baldric
First aired June 28, 2010 (I think).
So grand!#
Thumbs-up 👍
12:16 It seems to me if that you interpret that plan as a corridor with a right-angle turn, the total length of the hall meets the 120 ft length spec pretty closely. I'm surprised nobody commented on that in the video, because it stood out like a sore thumb to an amateur like me.
Wonderful piece of architecture hiding centuries of dirty politics & crimes....
@WyattRyeSway
3 жыл бұрын
Stefan Paul ....royals and clergy.....you’ve got to love them (insert sarcasm here)
@timhazeltine3256
3 жыл бұрын
And that's different in what way from any other time in human history including our own ever so virtuous times?
@stefanpaul842
3 жыл бұрын
@@timhazeltine3256 Right, we humans are such controversial - good & evil !
@stefanpaul842
3 жыл бұрын
@@WyattRyeSway - Eta Pravda !
*This is not an Abbey, this is a Cemetery* 😫😖💀👻
@flitsertheo
Жыл бұрын
There is nothing unusual about people being buried around and even in the church. It's only from the 18th century on that separate cemeteries became commonplace and mandatory for a number of reasons (lack of space, hygiene, ...).
Fantastic series, question please earlier Mick found steps and a ceiling of what was thought to be what you were looking for Why did you not drill the ceiling to see what’s under it ?? , I would of thought it would go down at least ten feet ?. Cheers .
Never ceases to amaze me how the Time Team cameramen always found just the right angle for down-blouse shots in every episode.
@markuschampos5750
3 жыл бұрын
Not on Phil🤔 how's that?
@flitsertheo
Жыл бұрын
I think some of the ladies are very helpful showing lots of cleavage.
Aah. Good ol' Baldrick.
Sure, pilgrims probably nicked some bits of Edward's tomb, but it's a Catholic shrine, seems worth considering the Protestants might have stripped the gold from the Papist memorial. Stunned they didn't tear it down, actually.
The bust under the tall arch at 33:34 looks like a bust of Tony Robinson. LOL!!!
I'm watching from all the way down under from Mount Gambier in the State Of South Australian.🥇🇦🇺🦘⚜️👑⚜️🏴🇬🇧
I agree with you Mjosephine Fonzo of 3 mo. Previouse ..we need info of the outcome of old bones
I’d love to explore the crypts
As a good French, I love gothic architecture !
Probably just a coincidence, but when the bone lady mentioned finger bones, I thought of how some Churches had finger and toe bones as relics.
Poor Warwick needs a haircut. This is my dream profession, but at 60 it ain’t going to happen.
@maryespinoza4933
2 жыл бұрын
I have been thinking about that, too, but it's hopeless considering I am 72 & I can't get to my knees with all the arthritis in my back, hips & knees 🤣😘
That early Saxon grave LOOKS SO TALL, so thin, was it a Giant? They don't give its dimensions.
Was there a part 2 to this? Did they just pack up after the 3rd day and go home?
I predicted those early Saxon graves were probably in the year 1066 and what did they come back with? Carbon dating stated that they were 11th century burials! I should have been in archaeologist!
@fereiramacon2792
Жыл бұрын
Hello friend, I am Ferreira by name, I would like to know you if you don't mind.?
30:54 "Good...but get more!"
I dream about visiting London some day. 🚢🛫
At 35:50 I wonder if the author misspelled "gallery" of the sacristy?
i saw this place in a movie i think and i immideatly fell in love with the architecture, its one of the finest examples of European high gothic architecture
Wow! Time Team goes in looking for Henry III and comes out with Cnut!
My ancestors are there beginning with Henry VII and going back. My wife and I visited in September 2018. For me it's family history.
@wiking44
3 жыл бұрын
Aren't you special!
@fereiramacon2792
Жыл бұрын
Hello friend, I am Ferreira by name, I would like to know you if you don't mind.?
@psychedelicprawncrumpets9479
Жыл бұрын
Yer and I'm related to julius ceasar 😆
End of Part I. So what happened? I feel the need for some Curiosity Closure... 😔
@annegrauzlis2815
3 жыл бұрын
Agreed Or, continue to phase II
Love Bettany Hughes!
Beautiful production as always, but it occurs to me...the space between the buttresses and the sacristy? How is that not a robing room? There is no doubt that the exterior footprint has been changed many times, why not consider that the space between the main building and the corridor is the sacristy itself? Walled away from the main building with only an exterior channel to the interior of the building would suggest to me that it would have been highly secure as was pointed out in the first part of the program.
@anne-droid7739
3 жыл бұрын
They didn't give any indication that geophys found anything to suggest that, but it would be interesting to see what might come out of another trench. This show always leaves you wanting more!
@DodiTov
3 жыл бұрын
@@anne-droid7739 Excellent observation, but geophys looks for walls and ditches and a paved floor does not show up on the scans. A robing room would simply be blank space to geophys as we have seen in Roman excavations.
@anne-droid7739
3 жыл бұрын
@@DodiTov I was thinking in terms of foundations heavy enough to support the kind of masonry in the other sacristy. A robing room wouldn't need that, though...but then again, another robing room wouldn't be necessary.
@anne-droid7739
3 жыл бұрын
@@DodiTov Perhaps I misunderstood--are you not visualizing a wall for this room running parallel to the buttresses?
@DodiTov
3 жыл бұрын
@@anne-droid7739 Well, yes! Look at the plan as laid out. The "corridor" could/might have had openings to access the corridor from this proposed "robing room". The buttresses we see today are an addition/renovation as seen from the inside with the processional arch. The ones we see tpday within the proposed room would have been added as the original structure was deleted. Frankly, it does not make sense that there is a processional corridor *without* a robing room, especially if the corridor accesses two different chapels...as it does. Where did they put on the vestments for the processional? Clergy are not prone to just stroll about with heavy vestments from site to site. A sacristy located in that space would only be logical, with the corridor a staging area for the processional *from the sacristy*.
At 2:00 all of them have the same hairstyle 😂😂😂
English Aristocracy. I have Connections to the Spencers via my Family history, ancestors at the heart of Bedfordshire, Bucks, Northamptonshire, Warickshire..Maternal line. 🏴🏴🏴🇮🇪 distant cousin Nathan Field acted at the globe as a young boy, connections to Elizabeth 1st and William Shakespeare.
🎈wow
Very interesting. I do hope you remember to pray for the repose of the souls of the deceased whose remains are exhumed.
So what did the radiocarbon dating of the bones show? Asking for a friend. Come on guys, don't leave us hanging.
@red.aries1444
3 жыл бұрын
The site has been fully excavated, because a new visitor center will be built there. The bones are from the time of Edward the Confessor but not earlier. www.westminster-abbey.org/about-the-abbey/history/rediscovering-the-great-sacristy
I have a suggestion for your word (galille) could be gallery?
Highly interesting but a nightmare to watch because of the 15 advertisement interruptions ...
@dipseldrop
3 жыл бұрын
Watch it on duckduckgo, no advertisements. :)
the commercials make youtube almost unwatchable....
@commendatore2516
3 жыл бұрын
not if you have addblocker ;)
@mama2boys123
3 жыл бұрын
@@commendatore2516, how do you get it? Do you have to pay for it?
@commendatore2516
3 жыл бұрын
@@mama2boys123 just google it, its all for free
@speedbrake22
3 жыл бұрын
Pihole to the rescue
@katerinakemp5701
3 жыл бұрын
@@mama2boys123 just scroll the cursor across screen at the beginning of episode then restart episode ad free viewing without having to google it.
He’ll always be baldric to me 😂❤
I'm in Kansas, USA and I can't comprehend how you lose a sacristy.......
@kasperkjrsgaard1447
3 жыл бұрын
Well it’s been 900-950 years. Things disappear over time. Look at the former colonies - they’ve lost an entirelly nation in less than four years.
@AnotherWittyUsername.
3 жыл бұрын
@@kasperkjrsgaard1447 They've only lost their dignity, self-control and the respect of the rest of the world. Maybe they'll earn it back in the next 4 years.
@robertandhollyscorpiofan2697
Жыл бұрын
@@AnotherWittyUsername. writing from the u.s. Nice axxumption you’ve made about 330MILLION people…..
Wait, how did the shrine of Edward the Confessor survive the Reformation?? I read somewhere that his shrine was lost after the hired men with pickaxes and hammers destroyed it!
@O-sa-car
Жыл бұрын
because it was a royal church
Imagine this programme transmitted in the 1966 s The regional accents would have been found abominable.
39:00 A human being, born, raised, fed; with hopes, dreams, joys, fears like all of us. A mouth that spoke, ate, drank, hopefully kissed in passionate love. Teeth that were part of someone’s smile, that someone picked after a meal or ran their tongue across in contemplation, that once broke forward as that person placed their baby teeth they had just wiggled out of their mouth under their pillow for the tooth fairy to collect. And then, a thousand years later, someone else gets to touch them, while I, another thousand kilometres away, am able to watch it, well afterwards and again and again should I want to. Mind-boggling doesn’t even begin to describe it. Not to mention what that person would have thought of it, had they known.
It’s one of the only UK Abbey’s left after the destruction of the reformation period of Henry VIII. He only left Westminster stand as his own relatives were entombed there.
0:14 I thought it was the anthem of the UEFA Champions League
@ChrisHyde537
3 жыл бұрын
That’s nothing. Mozart composed a minuet for Manchester U.
half of these episodes are blocked in the UK. which I think is very hypocritical considering half the point of time team was to get the people of the UK interested in their history.
Love TT.
Wonder what they did with the graves that they uncovered? Reburied?
So Mick was quite wrong about the date of the burial, then... And Warwick was closer (though wrong as well).
@psychedelicprawncrumpets9479
Жыл бұрын
Yeah mick was the junior professor on this one
@ACDZ123
Жыл бұрын
@psychedelic prawn crumpets hi prawns . Are you from Perth like me? I know the band psychedelic "porn" crumpets ..pretty good as well 😅
Is John Milton buried there?
Are they allowed to do such diggings in such historic place?
@noeleneroodt783
Жыл бұрын
My thoughts exactly. I didn't think that would be possible 🤔
@flitsertheo
Жыл бұрын
The authorisations and other preparations often take months of red tape wrestling. And there are rules what they can do or not. Take for instance the lawn, which is carefully scraped away to be put back in place after the dig.
Didn’t Edward the Confessor build Westminster Abbey?
What kind of hat does Phil wear? I want one.
@AnotherWittyUsername.
3 жыл бұрын
It's an Aussie Jakaru hat I think. My husband wears one that's a slightly different style, but same brand.
Fun fact. There were several "Ministers" built by the Saxons. All of them were pulled down by the Normans and either a better Cathedral was built or perhaps the site became a Monastery or an Abbey?
Wow so.nice to see a literal piece of my family history. More than two of my direct ancestors visited here, likely many times in their lives, as they were English lords who signed the Magna Carta. After of course successfully defeating the king of course.
@Ijusthopeitsquick
3 жыл бұрын
You're in good company. Judging by the comments about 20% of the people here are related to an English king.
@jimrichards7014
3 жыл бұрын
Cool story bro.
@jimm6095
3 жыл бұрын
An American? They all claim to have English royal's DNA! Glad I'm Scottish!
@katerinakemp5701
2 жыл бұрын
@@jimm6095 🤣🤣🤣
Was here October 2020
43:00 Harry Potter?
Is that right to disturb the graves just to find an architectural structure?
Hopefully nothing will happen to Westminister!
Take a shot everytime Tony says Geo-phyz
@christianmolick8647
3 жыл бұрын
sounds like rocks in seltzer
I visited the abbey twice, the detail is endless, there’s too much to see.
No subtitles. Sad.
@freshbeanne
3 жыл бұрын
You can select captions if you tap on the 3 dots in the upper right corner of the video.
7:55 in the Abby. Why is everyone on their cell phone?
@shaunsteele8244
2 жыл бұрын
those are electronic tour guides
@georgelong9957
5 ай бұрын
Better coverage 😂😂🤭
3:18 does Harry Potter movie was filmed there
Did they fill in all the trenches when they were done? This seems too important to cover up.
@angellgerll
2 жыл бұрын
They often will fill the dig sites back in if there are no immediate plans to continue the dig by some other organization. They’ve mentioned it in other episodes: it’s far safer and more responsible for the finds/archeology to be re-buried than to be left, exposed to the elements.
🤔Westminster? Excavating something new besides another tile to the bucket loads already found? 🧐Lets look for another dig for something really old and untouched! ...I will never do that again! Watch this video! 😉
Yes it’s true that the history of Britain is filled with colonial horrors But there is just something about there history that is just interesting I think Britain’s effect on the world will be something we feel for centuries to come