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Archeologists Excavate 600-Year-Old S**t Of Lady Jane Grey | Digging for Britain

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  • čas přidán 19. 08. 2024
  • Professor Alice Roberts and the Digging for Britain team take us on a journey of the greatest archeological discoveries from Northern Britain. Archeologists attempt to discover the truth about Lady Jane Grey's childhood home, and uncover a 16th century garderobe (medieval toilet) in the process with 600-year-old excrement still inside. Another team is on the hunt for a long lost viking drinking hall, while another discover a treasure trove of ancient Roman goodies.
    Welcome to Unearthed History -- the home for all things archaeological! From ancient Roman ruins to buried medieval mysteries, we'll be bringing you award-winning documentaries that explore the remnants of long lost civilizations.
    Subscribe so you don't miss out.
    Discover the past on History Hit, with ad-free exclusive podcasts and documentaries released weekly and presented by world-renowned historians Dan Snow, Suzannah Lipscomb, Matt Lewis and more. Get 50% off your first 3 months with code 'UNEARTHEDHISTORY': historyhit.com...
    To get in touch please email: owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com.
    #UnearthedHistory #Archaeology #Documentary

Komentáře • 292

  • @Obiter3
    @Obiter3 Před měsícem +112

    It's important that history like this isn't wiped away.

    • @virginiajayhudgins8277
      @virginiajayhudgins8277 Před měsícem +12

      Oh, that is sooo bad!😂

    • @Obiter3
      @Obiter3 Před 29 dny +14

      @@virginiajayhudgins8277 I did what I did, and I'd do it again!

    • @nekoslilsis
      @nekoslilsis Před 27 dny +5

      Oh my god the snicker that left my mouth 😂

    • @wombly5596
      @wombly5596 Před 25 dny +8

      Yes, it's really horrible the way people poo-poo history these days.

    • @robothunter1035
      @robothunter1035 Před 18 dny +2

      I tell people I my toilet is 600 years old , BUT it only just looks that way.

  • @peterc2248
    @peterc2248 Před měsícem +49

    I run a modern burial ground and it often intrigues me at what gets deposited in graves even in modern times. So when various grave goods are turned up and the archaeologists go into all sorts of flights of fancy about 'high status' or 'wealthy communities' I always consider my own experience. I've seen very poor people throwing ornate gold and silver jewellery into graves, I've seen household objects thrown in, I've even seen an iPod placed on the coffin lid. I've frequently had coffins with pets in them, I've had an elderly gent buried with a set of compasses and professional drawing pens and a lady buried in a proper glittery ball gown. All this in a burial ground about hundred metres square and 120 years old. Imagine what silliness future archaeologists might make of that lot :-) . The truth is we can never know what was going through the minds of the bereaved at the graveside and whether grave goods mean what we 'think' they mean.

    • @virginiajayhudgins8277
      @virginiajayhudgins8277 Před měsícem +6

      You are spot on. In college I did a survey of a cemetery in Pickens County, AL, USA. Some of my own ancestors are buried there as is my late husband and some of his family. I absolutely love the history there for the taking just reading the stones; not just the words themselves, but the designs, size, locations within family areas, the "directions" of placement, etc.
      Sadly our histories here in the US are nowhere near as long or well recorded as those in the UK. There are so many cemeteries that are no longer known today.
      Think that may be one of the reasons I so enjoy these programs from the UK.
      Thank you, all of you who provide such gifts to your loyal fans and supporters.

    • @dragonmaid1360
      @dragonmaid1360 Před 25 dny +4

      Good point but remember they didn't have multiple mass produced goods. So every bowl and cup was important. And if plac3d in a grave lost to the living and dedicated to the lost. That puts it way out of a modern 'perspective' of how goods were valued. So every object was hard won. Not exactly the same as an ipad you can get at any store. I think we need to appreciate the archaeologists that have very extensive experience in these digs. Plus remember many of these goods were traded hard and won hard. Valued beyond today's understanding. Some of these digs are pre- christ or only 300 t0 400 years post Christ,

    • @bidd7680
      @bidd7680 Před 19 dny

      People have been depositing objects with the bodys for thousands of years. Even though we understand they can not take the things with them we still do it .

    • @heathyrdamian6957
      @heathyrdamian6957 Před 11 dny

      Even though it seems like silliness, people are buried with pets, in ball gowns, with ipods, or expensive pens because it meant something to them. The things people are buried with have profound meaning beyond whether or not they were wealthy or had high status.

    • @ahrianpruitt9632
      @ahrianpruitt9632 Před 2 dny

      My grandmother ruled my parents house from her bedroom by using a handbell. When she passed away, I know a member of my family slipped the bell in her casket😅

  • @fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602
    @fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602 Před měsícem +161

    I really like this program. But today I'm irritable, anxious and inattentive. So I'll just close my eyes and travel into Alice Roberts' melodious voice. There is no better remedy for stress. This teacher's voice is more therapeutic than 10,000 psychoanalysis sessions.

    • @GailBrenner-vt9ou
      @GailBrenner-vt9ou Před měsícem +10

      @@fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602 FAB..chill..go relax...take some time for yourself. But, its a smart man who knows when he needs a time out. Blessings

    • @CaitlynGraham-po4ef
      @CaitlynGraham-po4ef Před měsícem +4

      Came here after today’s escapades, the clam and clarity we need in this world!

    • @samuelgarrod8327
      @samuelgarrod8327 Před měsícem

      Ok, maybe mention that to your therapist next time.

    • @younghanrahan
      @younghanrahan Před měsícem

      Agreed!

    • @virginiajayhudgins8277
      @virginiajayhudgins8277 Před měsícem +2

      And she's so pretty, too!

  • @dereks1264
    @dereks1264 Před měsícem +131

    I've always felt profoundly sorry for Lady Jane Grey. Through no fault of her own she got caught up in political machinations over which she had no influence and paid for it with her life.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 Před měsícem +4

      We don't call her Queen Jane because she never had a coronation? Neither did King Edward VIII.

    • @robroy5352
      @robroy5352 Před měsícem

      BECAUSE of fkn religion

    • @michaeltelson9798
      @michaeltelson9798 Před měsícem +5

      The movie “Lady Jane” is such a good historical movie.

    • @stephencrowther524
      @stephencrowther524 Před měsícem

      @@michaeltelson9798 It’s historically flawed….google it.

    • @jamesswindley9599
      @jamesswindley9599 Před měsícem +10

      She was named Queen. She should at least get a name in the royal books etc. she’s always left out. Disgusting😮

  • @Gasher82nd
    @Gasher82nd Před měsícem +14

    Having walked around Bradgate park a thousand times and living in Anstey for some years i always thought Bradgate ruins was her home. Totally amazed at what can be found out via an excavation. Loved this episode as i felt it has put some of the stories regarding Lady Janes home into perspective. Cool.

  • @MrTorleon
    @MrTorleon Před měsícem +12

    Another superb episode in this outstanding and well presented series, anchored by the quixotic and mesmeric Prof. Alice Roberts.By Introducing digs across extended time frames, this makes for fascinating and satisfying viewing, to emphasis the passage of so many peoples, and in doing to complements our current understanding, whilst adding additional previously unknown information of our earlier ancestors. A quite marvelous series, both in concept and delivery :)

  • @flashovr24
    @flashovr24 Před 11 dny +3

    While the potato famine did effect the diet and restrict PART of the food staple of the Irish people....that wasn't ALL the Irish people ate. They had a wide variety of foods. Meat, vegetables, grains, etc. What DID happen...that the British professor Dr. Alice Robert's purposely left out was that the Britsh military took advantage of this blight and of the Irish people they had just recently put even further under their thumb. The potato blight ALSO affected the British people as well, however, they came to Ireland and went town to town, stealing the food stores of any stored/preserved vegetables and/or meats and grains. Now, the Irish people were left with nothing, starving to death. THAT is why many died, or, forced to flee to America.
    Don't let those poor, subjugated starved Irish people..some who paid with their lives...be forgotten and written out of history, by morons that choose to leave their story out of a documentary like this, and just gloss over what the BRITISH did to them.
    Shame on you History Hit!

  • @lovelyskull3483
    @lovelyskull3483 Před měsícem +23

    Thank you so much for this amazing episode. Alice Roberts is magnificent.

  • @curiousuranus810
    @curiousuranus810 Před měsícem +17

    Edward VIII never had a coronation, why don't we just call him Dave?
    I'm starting a campaign to call her Queen Jane!

  • @EmbraceTheJourney
    @EmbraceTheJourney Před měsícem +13

    another fantastic voyage into history, thank you very much

  • @josephmcghee8887
    @josephmcghee8887 Před měsícem +14

    And during the time of the so-called "potato famine", food was being exported from Ireland to England to feed the English people, mostly the wealthy who could afford it. Also, during this time, the Sultan of Turkey offered food shipments and aid to Ireland which was turned away and refused by the English government.

  • @josephmcghee8887
    @josephmcghee8887 Před měsícem +6

    Just before the American revolution, Benjamin Franklin, who had been an anglophile, made an ambassadorial visit to Ireland and England, came away with a different perspective and frequently used the word "slavery" in referring to relations with England.

  • @t.michaelbodine4341
    @t.michaelbodine4341 Před 25 dny +6

    I want a "coprolite happens" t-shirt.

  • @josephmcghee8887
    @josephmcghee8887 Před měsícem +7

    Such poverty conditions and "workhouses" persisted right up to the onset of the Irish Revolution in 1916, even as many Irish soldiers, driven by poverty, were fighting for England in places like Iraq and India.

  • @aib0160
    @aib0160 Před měsícem +14

    The narrative about the Irish potato famine is that it was uniquely Irish and that many escaped it by emigrating to North America. The reality is the potato blight affected most of Europe and many many Irish emigrated to mainland UK.

  • @lianefehrle9921
    @lianefehrle9921 Před měsícem +19

    To be able to live in England or my birth place Germany and dig to find artifacts of the past even before the Roman’s is my wish before I pass away and become history. Now adays people are being cremated. By watching these kinds of shows makes me want to be buried so future generations can find my bones and whatever I’m buried with.

    • @AmyEugene
      @AmyEugene Před měsícem +5

      I'm an American and lived in Baden Württemberg for a time and I was really shocked by modern German burial practices. Is it possible to have an eternal burial plot in modern Germany? Where I was living, I was told the family of the deceased pays an annual fee to the cemetery for the plot and once there is no one left to pay the annual fee, the plot is "prepared' for another occupant. I understood this was a polite way of saying that the previous occupant was removed and this was in practice because of the limited amount of land available for use as cemeteries. I still find it hard to believe, so any insight you have would be interesting.

    • @CAP198462
      @CAP198462 Před měsícem +3

      Remember to pick some incongruous objects for example: a stone tablet, mortar and pestle, a sword, a metal bodied camera, and a metal 🔦. Really mess with those future archaeologists.

    • @robroy5352
      @robroy5352 Před měsícem

      i think that the scots and german, celts maybe even picts wer shagin each other for yrs before the romans ,,,,,,,we weren't as backward as the romans made out

    • @robroy5352
      @robroy5352 Před měsícem

      i think your roots will be more scots celtic than englis,,,,the land of the scot is better anyway

    • @peterc2248
      @peterc2248 Před měsícem +3

      @@AmyEugene I run a burial ground in the UK and our grave plots are 'sold' for a hundred years. Technically they can be re-used but ours aren't. Personally I see no issue with re-using graves especially as England is a tiny place and land scarce and expensive. Fewer people are being buried in coffins now so we offer cremated remains plots and people can scatter ashes. There have been bodies buried for thousands of years in the UK and chances are pretty much every back garden has some human remains in them. It's only the religious/spiritual aspect that bothers people and hardly any younger people are interested in that side of things.

  • @Westmansouth
    @Westmansouth Před měsícem +25

    I will tell my children that Alice Roberts was the Queen of england.

  • @hughbean6785
    @hughbean6785 Před měsícem +8

    Thanks Alice enjoyed it

  • @sidewalkpirate23
    @sidewalkpirate23 Před 13 dny +2

    When my kids were little we allowed them to say Oh Coprolite when they were really frustrated lol it was funny and got some really surprised looks when people asked us what it means hahahaha

  • @edithengel2284
    @edithengel2284 Před měsícem +10

    Queen Mary Tudor of England was not Jane Grey's aunt; Mary, like her brother Edward VI, was Jane's first cousin once removed. In fact, Mary Tudor had justification for taking the throne; her father, Henry VIII left the succession to her following Edward in his Will. It wasn't entirely clear that Edward's succession plan was valid. Lady Jane was already in the Tower as it was a royal residence, and her eventual execution was as much due to her father's terrible judgment in joining a subsequent uprising in her name.

    • @curiousuranus810
      @curiousuranus810 Před měsícem

      Bloody Mary killed her.

    • @robroy5352
      @robroy5352 Před měsícem

      religion,,, got a lot 2 answer for,,,,,,cathlic & prodys now hordes of muslims have taken over without firing a shot

    • @edithengel2284
      @edithengel2284 Před měsícem +2

      @@curiousuranus810 I didn't say she didn't, only that Mary had not wanted to execute her cousin, but Jane's father's rebellion forced her into it--at least as things were looked at in that period.

    • @kristengatt3709
      @kristengatt3709 Před měsícem

      You are a descendant of Guilford Dudley? y​@janscorza7549

    • @dragonwitch27
      @dragonwitch27 Před 26 dny

      You’d think they could manage to fact check such basic historical information.

  • @colinluck-wk1oj
    @colinluck-wk1oj Před měsícem +17

    just like to say if lady jane grey was born 1537 and now is 2024 so if the sh#t is 600 years old it is not hers

  • @sabbyd1832
    @sabbyd1832 Před měsícem +8

    Fabulous episode

  • @m.6292
    @m.6292 Před měsícem +6

    9 days Queen cuz her hubby was a 9xs lunatic. And the family that married her off to him knew that.
    Also, food was still being grown in Ireland during the PF. But the rich Brits & rich Irish were shipping it off to Britian, filing their pockets while watching the people around them starve to death.

  • @FrederickHopkins-xb6me
    @FrederickHopkins-xb6me Před měsícem +5

    At the time of the workhouse the Irish landowners were actually exporting food to England.

  • @jamiebriggs1249
    @jamiebriggs1249 Před 26 dny +1

    Great program I enjoyed it immensely

  • @anthonystreeter7808
    @anthonystreeter7808 Před měsícem +8

    The argument that Lady Jane Grey was not called a queen because she did not have a coronation does not make sense. Edward V (one of the princes in the Tower) did not have a coronation either, but he is referred to as a king. It would be likely that Mary I would not refer to her as a queen, but why was this never revised later?

    • @philipr1567
      @philipr1567 Před měsícem +3

      Also Edward VIII who abdicated before being crowned.

    • @normanpearson8753
      @normanpearson8753 Před 20 dny

      @@anthonystreeter7808 Is he referred to as ,"King"?

    • @ruthd7274
      @ruthd7274 Před 16 dny

      ​@normanpearson8753 nope! 😂

  • @TheLyds01
    @TheLyds01 Před 20 dny +2

    There’s a few mistakes here. Lady Jane Grey’s mother, Francis, was Edward VI first cousin. Therefore they were second cousins, and Queen Mary I was Lady Jane’s second cousin too, not her aunt.

  • @qre268Zrtb
    @qre268Zrtb Před 24 dny +1

    Alice Roberts has the best narration voice on TV, It's like wading through velvet honey.

  • @sharonkaczorowski8690
    @sharonkaczorowski8690 Před měsícem +8

    So Armstrong contaminated the site with artifacts from his own time…amazing. Sadly there are still people who believe in witches…and I don’t refer to Wiccan’s but the far religious right in the USA. The Anglo Saxon finds were jaw dropping. That Roman bowl, the boar’s head, the bead, and the bracelet, oh my..such gifted artisans! Anything related to Vikings always gets my attention, as well as anything related to spindles and weaving. Great video…an absolute treat!

    • @bruanlokisson8615
      @bruanlokisson8615 Před měsícem

      The only people in America who believed in witches came from Europe, mostly England and they lived in New England, and now adays are almost all democrats so.....

  • @bobhead6243
    @bobhead6243 Před měsícem +1

    Another great episode , the dark ages are my favorite piriod in English history , but the program as a whole is excellent .🙂👍

    • @maracarlisle
      @maracarlisle Před měsícem +2

      This was the early Renaissance - Tudor era. And Dark Ages is a derogatory term that the historical community no longer uses.

    • @bobhead6243
      @bobhead6243 Před měsícem

      @@maracarlisle well that 's a new one on me , Did not know that , it's what we called it when I was at school .

    • @fleetskipper1810
      @fleetskipper1810 Před 9 dny +1

      The period of early medieval history that occurred after the Romans left Britain is generally considered to have ended somewhere in the 10th century, meaning at the latest in 1066, when William the Conquerer became king, although there is really no definitive cutting off point. However, that period still ended approximately 400 years or more before Lady Jane Grey was executed.

    • @bobhead6243
      @bobhead6243 Před 8 dny

      @@fleetskipper1810 I was on about the earlier part of the show , not the latter .

  • @ultramindcontrolrealzz8367
    @ultramindcontrolrealzz8367 Před měsícem +1

    I love how she says known nooooowwnn

  • @carlchristensen8157
    @carlchristensen8157 Před 13 dny

    It's a archaeological Extravaganza out there

  • @thomasgalvin8349
    @thomasgalvin8349 Před 5 dny +1

    Wonderful programme. I would suggest that your description of the Irish "famine" be referred to as the genocide that it was. There was no shortage of food in Ireland at the time though the native Irish depend on the potato. London chose the blight as a good opportunity to rid the island of the troublesome Catholics once and for all. History is History. Don't sugar coat it.

  • @user-dm1pt4ru6e
    @user-dm1pt4ru6e Před 22 dny +1

    I am 94% British/Irish. As I watch this, and I hear how so many Irish immigrated to the United States, I can’t help but wonder if someone there was my ancestor who came to America because of the potato famine. I do know that my great great grandparents came from the eastern United States. I wish I could trace back to find “my people”.

  • @Businessinfluencer-dv2tb

    What your archaeological teams give the exciting vibes.
    ‏‪2:40‬‏
    From Traveling into history @exploringisraelshistory😮❤
    Plus i have the only tip is that Jaljuliya will be doing through excavation on the other side of this Arab settlement. ‏‪7:13‬‏

  • @Stayoutofthewater522
    @Stayoutofthewater522 Před 23 dny

    Get right on in there anything for history and I am glad you are doing it and I get to see all you have found without even washing my hands.Did they enjoy corn.

  • @erinobrien8408
    @erinobrien8408 Před 22 dny +1

    Most of those "people who fled Ireland" were in fact forcibly transported by England for non-payment of taxes by the Irish who were starving and suffering illnesses.

  • @airsearch1
    @airsearch1 Před 22 dny +1

    I think that it is really sad and should never be allowed for a cemetery to be moved. In my opinion, the school should have had to find a new location NOT the cemetery.

  • @a-k6575
    @a-k6575 Před měsícem +1

    Life as a human is very sick.

  • @tk2300
    @tk2300 Před 18 dny

    Came for the history, stayed for the redhead professor 😍

  • @Londubh1
    @Londubh1 Před 16 dny +1

    Battle of Culloden was fought on 16th April 1746, not 1745.

  • @JessTheEnigma
    @JessTheEnigma Před měsícem +12

    I first learned about the Tudors through Lady Jane and the movie of the same name starring a very young Helena Bonham Carter. I was 14. Queene Jane, for so I shall always think of her, had such deep courage in her convictions that she chose to die rather than betray what she felt was the "true religion". Just sixteen years old. To have that kind of inner strength and courage to face my beliefs head on and be willing to die for what was right... (Yanno, like not letting my country die at the hands of modern trumpnazis.)
    Since I was 14 Queene Jane has been my moral compass to help me to always do what's right, no matter how painful, no matter what I lose doing it. And here at 46 she is guiding me still, consoling me through lost friends and destroyed family relationships - because I will not bow to dictators, and most certainly not tiny peened mango baboon faced dictator wannabes. Where are the men who took Henry II at his word and rod him of Becket? Where are they when the entire globe has such a trumpnazi infestation? Where is the last great American sniper to end this nightmare for ALL of us. As a true American who believes in freedom and equality for everyone, not just white men, it's Queene Jane even more than my beloved RM Queen Elizabeth I that I find myself seeking solace and reassurance from, and from whose memory I draw the courage to fight another day, and another. So here's a giant two finger salute to dictators and their wannabe orange skinned fluffers everywhere. You will not win.
    And I just saw a flash of a comment about listening to Dr. Robert's dulcet tones to relax to and that is the best idea I've heard in a month of Sundays. Thank you for all you do on behalf of history and our understanding of it, Dr. Roberts. You are a global treasure.

    • @lianefehrle9921
      @lianefehrle9921 Před měsícem

      A person with the same way of thought through following what the past can teach us. I also know that the trumpnazi will not win. Where are our heroes? Are they standing by watching and waiting until the right time to expose them?

    • @janicemcdonald1371
      @janicemcdonald1371 Před měsícem +3

      I know you mean the best but your wrong.

    • @vivlynn9407
      @vivlynn9407 Před měsícem +3

      @@janicemcdonald1371this is their opinion. You cannot tell them that they are wrong😂 this person found a connection with Jane Grey and it helps them through life battles. This commenter is not wrong. Your response to their comment is idiotic.

  • @jimclarke1108
    @jimclarke1108 Před měsícem

    🥰 I really like watching this show😁

  • @DespinaDemonico
    @DespinaDemonico Před 13 dny +1

    Mary I was not Lady Jane's aunt, they were distant cousins.

  • @zoltannemeth8864
    @zoltannemeth8864 Před 29 dny +1

    Amazing, I’ve learned about all kinds of s**t watching CZcams!

  • @EmilyGloeggler7984
    @EmilyGloeggler7984 Před 3 dny +1

    Jane was legally and legitimately Queen. Queen Jane Grey.

  • @spacegeeking
    @spacegeeking Před měsícem +5

    Is there anything Louis Theroux cannot do?

  • @jturtle5318
    @jturtle5318 Před měsícem +2

    They were terrified of witches, but used hex symbols to ward off the evil spirits that their god couldn't protect them from.

  • @robbyakes8736
    @robbyakes8736 Před měsícem +5

    WAR IS EVIL

  • @rustyford3406
    @rustyford3406 Před 17 dny

    Well, that passed pretty quickly.

  • @davidharrison6535
    @davidharrison6535 Před 13 dny

    Time Team dug this some years ago and found a toilet

  • @neilmccaughan5149
    @neilmccaughan5149 Před 3 dny

    Lady Jane Grey wasn't first cousin of King Edward VI. Her mother was.

  • @jekinneys
    @jekinneys Před 25 dny

    Amazing to me they are digging up WW2 and Korean war areas. That wasn't that long ago that we forget?

  • @kaylenturner2235
    @kaylenturner2235 Před 8 dny +1

    @610... If you know anything about Digging for antiques, in privys, this guy is really a miss without any gloves!!!

  • @FrisianLunatic
    @FrisianLunatic Před měsícem +2

    what a title lol

  • @brendacooper5729
    @brendacooper5729 Před 28 dny

    I once read a theory that Jane Grey and Edward VI were actually switched at birth and that that was why Edward passed over his sisters, they were both born at roughly the same time, and if Frances Grey had a son and Henry needed a son, I could see them holding off on announcing Frances' child's sex until they knew whether Henry had hit the son jackpot yet. They don't give an actual date for Jane's birth, just the month, so its hard to tell if she was born before or after Edward. The Nobles had the habit of keeping the new mother isolated both before and after the birth, so the actual birth of Frances' child could have been kept quiet until Jane had hers. If you were that high in the aristocracy you pretty much had a life and death power over your attendants.

    • @dragonwitch27
      @dragonwitch27 Před 26 dny +1

      Time to stop reading historical fiction.

  • @gregedmand9939
    @gregedmand9939 Před měsícem +1

    Does anyone know where all the past, more than 10, SEASONS of Digging for Britain can be found?

    • @wmanad8479
      @wmanad8479 Před měsícem +1

      This page loaded for me with a thumbnail and link, upper right, for the 2010 season free on Acorn TV.

    • @hollyoswald7808
      @hollyoswald7808 Před 5 dny +1

      @@wmanad8479 Too bad Acorn isn’t free in USA.

  • @josephmcghee8887
    @josephmcghee8887 Před měsícem +1

    This episode has been somewhat like the excavation of Auschwitz and Birkenau in Ireland.

  • @fexdammit
    @fexdammit Před měsícem

    why is the HH insert so much louder than the rest? its shocking for those whose use decent size speakers.....

  • @neilmccaughan5149
    @neilmccaughan5149 Před 3 dny

    Mary Tudor wasn't Jane Grey's aunt.

  • @LM-pm2ir
    @LM-pm2ir Před měsícem +5

    While Queen Victoria dinned on her favorite vegetable… the potato … Ireland starved. She didn’t do a damn thing about it except continue to gore herself while people starved and died. And yes …. She was aware.

  • @user-wn3ew1qy1o
    @user-wn3ew1qy1o Před 27 dny

    OK, I'll wait 1 more minute

  • @aostrosky
    @aostrosky Před 29 dny

    16 yr old child 😢

  • @llamamama2910
    @llamamama2910 Před měsícem +1

    Why didn’t everyone turn to fishing and eating mutton?

  • @vegas1a
    @vegas1a Před měsícem

    Season 8, Episode 2 NORTH

  • @lorenebell9420
    @lorenebell9420 Před 12 dny

    Yeah she had no idea she’d become queen and then would be decapitated

  • @RegiPavan
    @RegiPavan Před 17 dny

    😎😎❤❤

  • @CobinRain
    @CobinRain Před měsícem +4

    The titling of this film is tasteless in the extreme. Or is it click bait?

    • @peterc2248
      @peterc2248 Před měsícem +2

      Oh don't be silly.

    • @thedogfather5445
      @thedogfather5445 Před měsícem +2

      I agree, archaeologist has two "a"s in the spelling

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 Před měsícem

      ​@@thedogfather5445Exactly, a dumb way to seek correction by pedants like me

    • @LBStew
      @LBStew Před měsícem

      ​@davepowell7168 are you proud to be pedantic?

    • @annegiorgio5602
      @annegiorgio5602 Před měsícem +2

      Some people are so sensitive I wonder how they live and survive in today’s world.

  • @chicagogyrl4846
    @chicagogyrl4846 Před 21 dnem

    Didn’t find anything in the loo.

  • @garyproffitt5941
    @garyproffitt5941 Před 19 dny

    Poop a day and its works a treat & thank you professor Alice Roberts.

  • @sethlogee
    @sethlogee Před měsícem +1

    wonder way the English took away all the other food besides the potato during the blight

    • @Littleowl85352
      @Littleowl85352 Před 29 dny +2

      It was a mindset that many people had then and some people still have now. That being: survival of the fittest in terms of Social Darwinism. The poor were despised and it was seen as a rich person's right to exploit them because their strength and wealth meant they were obviously favoured by the universe. Any mercy shown them would be seen as misplaced because you'd just be throwing money away on the undeserving

    • @rebeccamartin2399
      @rebeccamartin2399 Před 26 dny +3

      @@Littleowl85352 At least the Native Americans did send cornmeal during the potato famine . It is a relationship that survives till this day.

  • @maurachapman4179
    @maurachapman4179 Před měsícem

    Never heard of a pilgrim badge before.

    • @robroy5352
      @robroy5352 Před měsícem

      john wayne yous 2 say it all the time in his movies

    • @stephencrowther524
      @stephencrowther524 Před měsícem +1

      They were common….even today they are given.

  • @eugenecourtney1778
    @eugenecourtney1778 Před 16 dny

    You are a beauty beyound disscribing !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @Mandarava100
    @Mandarava100 Před 5 dny

    So Scotland is North Britain now ? Really ?

  • @life_with_laurie
    @life_with_laurie Před 28 dny

    That engraving looks like a poppy bulb on that silver bracelet. I also think I caught a glimpse of a butterfly.

  • @someperson2530
    @someperson2530 Před 6 dny

    Someone can't do their math 😄

  • @scotimotti
    @scotimotti Před 22 dny

    This literally ended the internet for me. Im done

  • @paulhease1007
    @paulhease1007 Před měsícem +1

    You are not really CLOSE to Culloden. Maybe 15 miles??

  • @user-wm9cd6gn9b
    @user-wm9cd6gn9b Před měsícem

    Time team did an episode at Poulton and couldn't find the Chapel , so it was finally located?

  • @saveriosalemme5366
    @saveriosalemme5366 Před 27 dny

    WTF was that at 1:33 ?!?!

  • @SpuktasticAudio
    @SpuktasticAudio Před 20 dny +1

    How vulgar and unnecessary. I'm sure you could have found a more accurate, polite and appropriate description to lead with.

  • @dakman1082
    @dakman1082 Před měsícem +1

    Does it not play on the minds of these people that they are digging through where flesh was once present?

    • @linsfisher5448
      @linsfisher5448 Před měsícem +5

      I'd say they do if they are digging bones😂
      It's long gone, disintegrated into dirt, not a big deal they are there to do a job.

    • @thedogfather5445
      @thedogfather5445 Před měsícem +4

      Pretty much everywhere once had flesh present between ground level and say six feet above ground if humans ever lived there. If you are digging human remains you do so with respect, but there is not much to be gained by letting your imagination run riot. There may once have been flesh, but it is long gone. However, on some sites there may well be organic remains such as hair, skin or even fully preserved bodies. Forensic archaeologists can be recovering bodies from recent war sites, such as mass graves in Bosnia, where there will be undecomposed flesh. You work with what is there. If it played on your mind you'd probably choose a different profession.

    • @ruthd7274
      @ruthd7274 Před 16 dny

      Of course. Also the fact these were once living people.

  • @greendeane1
    @greendeane1 Před 19 dny +1

    What a juvenile GEN-Z title. I don''t watch children.

  • @JayTee0007
    @JayTee0007 Před 23 dny

    They found corn in Lady Janes crap? To prove this, did they perform the sniff test? 🤔

  • @cruisepaige
    @cruisepaige Před 9 dny

    If she was his great niece she would not be his son’s cousin. Or, if she was his son’s cousin, she was not his great niece. Buh bye.

  • @Koryos375
    @Koryos375 Před 20 dny +1

    i loathe and detest roberts and her mickey mouse professorship

  • @NayFunPUMA
    @NayFunPUMA Před měsícem

    Ride scooter someone name russia

  • @Jehoshua.J.A.K.
    @Jehoshua.J.A.K. Před měsícem +2

    600 year old toilet....they are talking about Camilla.

    • @annegiorgio5602
      @annegiorgio5602 Před měsícem

      Oh brilliant, bet you went to uni and have several degrees under your belt

    • @Jehoshua.J.A.K.
      @Jehoshua.J.A.K. Před 18 dny

      @@annegiorgio5602 you should get help for your gambling addiction. Placing all these bets with nothing in the bank. You're walking a very dangerous line. I'll be here to.poiny and laugh when you fall and get hurt. Don't mess with people who are better and smarter than yourself. It's not wise.

    • @annegiorgio5602
      @annegiorgio5602 Před 17 dny

      @@Jehoshua.J.A.K. you’re funny

  • @pcka12
    @pcka12 Před měsícem +2

    Clearly if the King named Jane Grey as his heir she was the lawful Monarch not Mary.

    • @timhazeltine3256
      @timhazeltine3256 Před měsícem +4

      Actually not. Parliament was the ultimate arbiter, hence the earlier need for Parliament to pass Titulus Regius, an Act of Parliament needed make Richard III King of England. Mary was next in line to the Throne because she was eldest direct line relative of King Edward. Edward's will expressed his desire for the succession but it did not supercede the dynastic imperative of the line of succession.

    • @pcka12
      @pcka12 Před měsícem

      @@timhazeltine3256 you know, Parliaments came and went at the whim of the Monarch in those days, Jane Grey was murdered because the boy king failed or was unable to provide his 16 year old female heir with suitable & powerful protectors for the period following here death until she had, had the opportunity to mature into a person of gravitas.
      Subsequently Mary (a Roman Catholic) reigned under a balance of power which failed to restore the absolute dominance of the Roman Church over England & Wales, so that her sister Elizabeth was able to come to power after the death of Mary despite being a Woman & not a Roman Catholic because she had powerful supporters & consequently did not meet the fate of their cousin Jane.

  • @sanchezhandymen3444
    @sanchezhandymen3444 Před 21 dnem

    Question: can the people excavating be exposed to all that disease they died from? Anyone know why they are not scared of exposure?

    • @ruthd7274
      @ruthd7274 Před 16 dny +1

      Because most pathogens would have died and dispersed in the soil. You do need to be a bit careful with lead coffins, however.

    • @ruthd7274
      @ruthd7274 Před 16 dny

      Most pathogens would have died and been dispersed in the soil. You do have to be careful with lead coffins, however.

  • @shaneoconnor6565
    @shaneoconnor6565 Před měsícem

    Great show but intro is ridiculously long.

  • @alexanderv7702
    @alexanderv7702 Před 7 dny

    LOCK Ness, an educated professor should be able to pronounce-correctly-a Scottish word Loch 😮

  • @kimberlylatour4402
    @kimberlylatour4402 Před 23 dny

    We found Boudica's petrified toe nail clippings...

  • @davewilson9738
    @davewilson9738 Před měsícem +3

    For all of the naysayers, please note that our history would have been impossible WITHOUT immigration.

    • @robroy5352
      @robroy5352 Před měsícem

      i bet your 1 of dem

    • @davewilson9738
      @davewilson9738 Před měsícem +2

      @@robroy5352 worse, I am a socialist one too! Have a great day :)

    • @robroy5352
      @robroy5352 Před měsícem

      @@davewilson9738 I AM A GREAT RACIST BECAME 1 FKN YEARS AGO

    • @kevinroche3334
      @kevinroche3334 Před měsícem +2

      @@robroy5352 What, instead of going to school?

    • @jahuti5065
      @jahuti5065 Před měsícem

      @@robroy5352 I am interested in your statement. I note that, like most racists, you cannot spell or write properly. Is this because your racism somehow made you reject education or was it merely that your lack of intelligence made both literacy and an understanding of humanity too difficult to master correctly?

  • @Zardox-The-Heretic-Slayer
    @Zardox-The-Heretic-Slayer Před měsícem +3

    Alice looking as hot as ever

  • @lottytaylor572
    @lottytaylor572 Před měsícem +1

    Is its name biden 😂

  • @fenixfp40
    @fenixfp40 Před 27 dny

    Legalised grave robbers.

  • @lochlainnmacneill2870
    @lochlainnmacneill2870 Před 25 dny

    It would have been easier to say you were in Scotland.

  • @lyndapierson6338
    @lyndapierson6338 Před měsícem +5

    alice please get rid of the red hair

    • @gittarollke3102
      @gittarollke3102 Před měsícem +1

      My sentiments as well.🥴

    • @margomoore4527
      @margomoore4527 Před měsícem +1

      That red hair made her stand out from a lot of other diggers. It brought her attention so producers could notice her intelligence, confidence, and urban sophistication. It may even have helped her get the job as presenter. The same strategy that turned Belle Silverman into “Bubbles”!
      If it works, don’t fix it!

    • @GailBrenner-vt9ou
      @GailBrenner-vt9ou Před měsícem +2

      I think her red hair brings out her God given beauty. Jealouse is a terrible mistress.😊

    • @lovelyskull3483
      @lovelyskull3483 Před měsícem +7

      A completely ridiculous comment.

    • @stephencrowther524
      @stephencrowther524 Před měsícem +1

      None of your business,look to yourself.

  • @sarahjones-jf4pr
    @sarahjones-jf4pr Před 25 dny

    This is why our unique culture should not be given away to Sharia law.