Britain AD Episode 2

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Uploaded by on Jun 19, 2011

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Finding new and previously unexplained evidence Francis Pryor overturns the idea that Britain was crushed under Roman rule, then reverted to a state of anarchy and disorder after the Romans left in 410 AD. Instead of doom and gloom Francis discovers a continuous culture that assimilated influences from as far a field as the Middle East and Constantinople. Francis is confronted by evidence that confounds traditional views of Britain as a powerless bunch or warring barbarian tribes. Nor was there the invasion of bloodthirsty Anglo Saxons, rampaging across the countryside, which our school books have always depicted. With new archaeological evidence Francis discovers a far more interesting and complex story, one that puts the continuing energy of the Ancient Britons at the core. According to conventional wisdom, native British culture was suppressed by 400 years of Roman rule, and the withdrawal of the mighty imperial army in 410AD threw the country into a state of primitive barbarism, which only came to an end with the invasion of the more advanced Anglo Saxons. With detailed archaeology, cutting-edge academic research and his own brand of iconoclasm, writer and broadcaster, and presenter of Britain AD, Francis Pryor argues that we've got this version of British history wrong. Francis shows how archaeologists are beginning to reveal that the early history of Britain was in fact a vibrant period in which the population thrived from a series of foreign influences from as far afield as the Middle East and Constantinople without losing its own cultural identity. In the second episode of this series, Francis Pryor sheds light on the so-called 'Dark Ages'. He shows that far from a 'Dark Age', archaeologists have discovered evidence of a resurgence of native culture. The classic image of the Romans departing and 'turning out the lights' is shown to be completely false. Francis finds a world inhabited by Christianised, literate Britons engaging in trade and diplomacy with the Byzantine Empire. So far reaching are the implications of these discoveries that the 'dark age' period in Britain has been renamed Late Antiquity.

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  • Thank you for this very well made and enlightening information.

  • @MrCutsteel Thanks for posting as i didn't realise about their cooking elements and ornaments still being of bronze once the iron age had set in.

  • @harry646464: I'm not sure whether they traded tin with Byzantium or not, but on the other question; just because the 'Bronze Age' ended, doesn't mean people stopped using bronze, at least not altogether. Sure, bronze may have been superseded by iron for weapons and tools and so on, but it was still used for cooking vessels, ornaments and all sorts of other uses.

  • So did they or not trade tin to the byzantiums and if so what for as the bronze age ended around 1200 b.c. correct?

    Fantastic show Francis !!!

  • Thankyou Francis! :)

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