Retracing The Steps Of Ancient Celtic Warriors | Ancient Tracks | Timeline

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[Music] Britain is criss-crossed find amazing network of region track boys these remarkable roots are out we traveled for more than 5,000 years he's quite small thing is small boy is mighty small what my teeth have overheard my ribs and traders punches and invaders Celts and roadman Saxons and Vikings each track is bound up in myth mystery and legend of all the archaeological finds I've come across when I heard about it my jaw actually drop I'm on a quest to connect the clues and rediscover the stories hidden among Britain's ancient pathways I want to find out what it is that tempts today's travelers to go back in time and rediscover these mystic tracks do you reckon that's the North Star not the brightest side this guy but it's probably one the most useful sprit like me smell a letter you can still smell it nineteen hundred year old leather isn't that absolutely amazing this week I'm trekking the ancient earthwork frontier that straddles the border between England and Wales offers nice inspired by legends that transcend time itself if I walk along this remarkable route we'll reveal a mythical monarch romantic scribes Pierson's these are the paths our ancestors once followed the ancient tracks we in Britain can still walk today [Music] my journey begins in England on the shore at said Bri Gloucestershire and the southern starting point of something quite remarkable this is the mighty river seven you've got whales over there England over there and since 1966 they've been linked by that beautiful elegant bridge and I actually feel quite at home here because I used to live just beyond that big stanchion there in Bristol and I still support Bristol City come on new rigs but that isn't the boundary that we're interested in today just beyond that big cliff there is another boundary between England and Wales one that's existed for over a thousand years and is full of myth and legend it's time to explore offers Dyk century king [Music] offers Dyk stretches more than 80 miles dividing the two great nations of England and Wales through centuries of tribal conflicts religious strife and local legends this ancient border has helped define what it means to be English and Welsh I'm going to walk north from the Severn Estuary along the author's Dyke path a modern reinstated version that follows the course of much of its ancient namesake on my Trek I'll explore the borderlands between the ancient English and Welsh kingdoms of Mercia and Powis finishing my walk as the Dyke crosses the river 7 again near Welsh pool the way our walk in the wake of romantic poet William Wordsworth explore the subterranean resting place of King Arthur confront Wales is fearsome mythical emblem under the priceless gold coin issued by King offer Fraser Valley authors dike a massive ditch and Bank structure has been around for more than 1,200 years the earliest records of this formidable frontier come as early as the 9th century when the Welsh monk a sir wrote there was in murcia in fairly recent time a certain vigorous king called offer who had a great dike built between Wales and Murcia from sea to sea [Music] a lot of people have never even heard of office dicot then he got a vague idea where it is and indeed it is quite difficult to find in the landscape for many of its miles although when you climb up on a bit like this and get to the top you are at the top of one of the most important monuments in Britain this took hundreds of man-hours thousands of people in order to make it in fact it's such a great piece of ancient engineering that a lot of people compare it with the building of the pyramids [Music] but unlike the pyramids King offers extraordinary achievements have in recent times faded from view it wasn't always this way Alfred created this massive earthwork but he also created something else which is much smaller but is still remembered and it's this we've all got them floating around in our pockets haven't we the humble penny offer established the English penny which still exists over a thousand years later the penny had pronounced offer Rex Anglorum king of the English but it actually represented this visionary rulers global ambitions when it came to currency and commerce I'll reveal more about this later Oh Hugh written records were kept at the dykes built though inevitably legend flourished and the path over time has become an inspiration for an illustrious roll-call of authors and artists before me that is who have walked its route [Music] and this next ominously named Scotland a journey I've been promised a certain devilish science serum and a feast for the eyes of one of Britain's most awe-inspiring views [Music] can you see that beautiful ruin over there that of course is Tinton Abbey and just below me down this rather hairy little path yep there is that is the devil's pulpit this book was written the 1880s by Wirt Sykes and he says near Tinton Abbey there is a jutting crag overhang by gloomy branches of the you called The Devil's pulpit his eminence ie the devil used in other days and wickeder days to preach atrocious morals or in morals to the white robed Cistercian monks of the Abbey from this rock pulpit in other words here he'd be looking down at the monks trying to seduce them into doing all sorts of disgusting things but they were good and holy and Noble so they didn't get juiced up at all and in frustration he stamped his feet and you can still see the marks on the top of the pulpit where as if he'd been a little bit more cool he could have enjoyed the spectacular view couldn't for the rather more serious minded william wordsworth the magnificent in turn and the epic walking tour that would lead him there were inspirations [Music] but it wasn't any old poem he wrote it in the meter of someone walking along so he was reminding himself of how he felt when he saw it I've got the first few lines on this postcard here it's actually called lines composed a few miles above Tinton Abbey on revisiting the banks of the why during a tour not the punch list of titles but I think you'll get what I mean about the rhythm of it five years have passed five summers with the length of five long winters and again I hear these waters rolling from their Mountain Springs with a soft inland murmur once again do I behold the steep and lofty cliffs that on a wild secluded scene impressed thoughts of more deep seclusion and connect the landscape with the quiet of the sky see what I mean [Music] I wonderful like the Tinton Abbey poem so much because I'm an actor and though what the words in it are so muscular consciously recreating the way he walked in the metre of this poem yes because he wasn't a person who sat down at his desk and wrote this poem was written a few miles above Tintin so very specifically and the dates prove that so we know that he was composing as he went along and Wordsworth would dictate his poetry like Milton used to do so he wasn't a desk poet he was very much an action poet in the sense that he would be as he was walking he would use the rhythm of his walk he was a prodigious Walker yes he was I mean he was a very athletic Walker he walked a thousand miles across Europe one summer on a kind of cheap grand tour and he could walk 20 miles without thinking about it what would Cincinnati have been like in those days well the ruins would not have been as quiet as they were now for example I mean when were words with us here there were beggars living in the ruins of the abbey there poor people who he wouldn't have met if he hadn't just got out there on the road that's right on that note I think I will say goodbye now if I cross that bridge there am I still in England no I think that's the gateway into Wales so I wish you no blisters and good weather yeah nice to meet you as I crossed the border and take my first steps into Wales I'm hungry for a close-up experience of this glorious vision of Gothic architecture the quite stunning Tinton Abbey was founded in 1131 and Nestle's in a valley surrounded by misty green mountains it's dramatic ruins never failed to provide travelers with an unforgettable spectacle [Music] [Music] [Applause] really Wordsworth wasn't the only young artist to come here Turner painted it and in the early 18th century a host of artistic young people flocked here when it was rediscovered as a sort of wild and magnificent cultural icon it's not difficult to see why they were drawn here we call them the romantics and if there's one thing this place is it's absurdly romantic it's like a beautiful dream scape which they recreated in words and oils and poetry who wouldn't be inspired by Tinton Abbey [Applause] Oh [Music] [Applause] [Music] is Britain's longest ancient monument and even after 1200 years is still warped by today's travelers wanting to explore the rich history of this ancient corner between England and Wales I'm now following the track back across the river and back into England this is the dowered in Herefordshire a limestone hill around which the river wye has carved the steep-sided gorge I'm in search have yet another regal legend but this time it's King Arthur not often I see [Music] sometime around the end of the 17th century there was a poor elderly woman who lived near here and she'd lost her goat and eventually she came to a woodcutter's camp which was here she asked the woodcutters if they'd seen her goat and they said well we're not quite sure but there is a cave just here and we think we might have heard a bit of bleating from inside it and in those days it was really closed up and she said well I can't see anything can can you hack a bit of the cave down so they did what they did find was a gigantic skeleton of a man about 12 foot long and I don't know whether or not they managed to find the goat but they carried the skeleton out and it became the talk of the local area and I would love to be able to show it to you but I can't because they eventually took it down to Bristol gave it to a chap called mr. pie who was just about to go off on his ship to the West Indies and stupidly he took the skeleton with him and the ship foundered and the skeleton was lost so there is no tangible evidence but everybody around here believes that skeleton did exist and it was the skeleton of king arthur now whether or not it really was I have no idea but I'm not on my own today I've got a friend with me Sarah Sarah Peverley do you reckon those bones could have been the bones of King Arthur it would be amazing to think that they were wouldn't it it would be absolutely wonderful there's so many connections in this area with the Arthurian myth you're almost tangibly since Arthur here cut yeah you can't I mean the Arthurian myth has a pull on our islands generally it crops up it gets rewritten lots and lots of times in moments of crises so whenever there's a big conflict in the country the Arthurian myth flourishes again it's a way of reminding people that unification is important and of course sites like this are absolutely integral to keeping that myth alive because you've got that kind of over worldliness about it it certainly does feel very otherworldly you can really imagine Lancelot and Guinevere cantering through this environment solutely I mean this place is just so evocative isn't it it's it's got that kind of liminal feel to it where you've got the supernatural and the natural worlds colliding you can imagine a fairy or a dragon living in such a cave I love that word living on you've got the line between the mystery inside a cave and the reality of the outside you've got the two countries Wales and England marked by that line of offers died this area is quivering with liminality before we fall to pieces [Music] Stone Age people used these caves as shelter and Flint's used by hunters can be dated to more than ten thousand years ago it's these remnants of fantastic ancient beasts such as mammoths leave rhino jawbone of a wolf and these extraordinary hyenas teeth that really fire the imagination but I want to know if there's any scientific evidence to back up claims of King Arthur's existence I'm feeling the news of some archeological discoveries in a cave up ahead may give me some answers there's a killer path this is so skinny it's only a few hundred feet down there but must have taped me the best part of 20 minutes to get up here Tim try and stand upright this is really extreme archaeologists certainly it yes it does look pretty spectacular it's an amazing cave are there any human beings associated with it yes there are lots and too in particular the remains of two male individuals that date from about 600 AD 600 AD were they that's perfect time for us it is isn't it the Romans have just left yes the Saxons have yet to arrive yes and it's it's it's a period for Herefordshire and the Welsh borders about which we know very little so we were very very surprised when the date came back has 586 10 AD now what might that be at your feet well these are some of the fine stone II just like a comedy bone it certainly isn't I mean it tells you how well-preserved he was that's a femur it is that's a bit bigger than mine definitely he was over six foot in his socks and this is most of his head so again typical of the age his teeth are very very worn Wow you know when you've got your your teeth for 65 years plus and stone ground bread you're gonna get through it that beautifully preserved well we may not have King Arthur but we've got someone from the time of King Arthur and that's good enough for me [Music] and yet more historical finds and ancient tales both real and imagined lie ahead and following the path north re crossing the border into Wales and travelling forward several centuries to discover the three castles built in the Meno Valley as part of the Norman conquest of South Wales between England and Wales but it was William the Conqueror who resolved to add an extra impenetrable layer to of his mighty dike [Music] [Applause] 20 William the Conqueror came to Britain from France he upgraded off his defensive line by putting in a load of castles along the dike he knew that their sheer bulk and height would prevent his Norman soldiers from being hammered by the force of the mighty Welsh bowmen these deadly arrows tore through the air and chainmail to strike fear into the Norman invaders I'm intrigued that such a seemingly primitive weapon could create so much carnage I know that the Normans were terrified by the Welsh bow and the Welsh bowmen but what was a Welsh bows well if we put aside the starry-eyed romanticism of there being a Welsh longbow there isn't really a great difference in the in the actual bow itself it's more from the material that it made but more importantly the use of the bow how they were actually deployed by the Welsh basically rebels guerrilla warfare fighting so this is a real gorilla weapon yes it's not like King Arthur's Excalibur that unites the whole country this is like your ak-47 of its day it's not as precise sniper rifle but it does its job for fight very quickly so you can have a pop of their little squirt Luke I think I can do that for you yes let's see that okay [Music] [Applause] beause the battlements of the skirmishes along this border were indeed unrelenting in those enormous times walking off as Dyke today offers a sort of no-man's land jobs to meditate about ancient warring nations and the nature of borders and then on to sunk addicts church at Ranga top lingo it which is in Monmouthshire [Music] this beautiful whitewashed exterior may seem serene but within lurks yet another reminder of the bloodthirsty conflicts return another legend [Music] it's all that white on the outside seems pretty authentic but inside it would have been a completely different kettle of fish you see this fresco which was discovered fairly recently all those reds and oranges I think in here it would have been a riot of color now that is sent George he sees a helmet and see the plume coming out of it which is called a panache which it's pretty appropriate and he is treading just about make it out I think on the red dragon now whether that is simply a symbol of good triumphing over evil or whether it's the English stomping all over the world I have absolutely no idea you can be the judge of that I'm not going there this is a hugely symbolic lost it's still extremely impressive in the lab denying how iconic the dragon is for Wales as an antagonist mothers die really is a place potent in myth and legend where these natural identities unfold the imagination captured in folklore and verse and further along offers dying literary giants international artists and a fantastic forest will proclaim the enigmatic beauty this enchanted land you [Music] up to an impressive 80 meters wide and three meters deep Arthur's Dyke is the immense 8th century frontier that divides England and Wales as I walk the path that follows much of history and literary heroes weave stories that collectively define the relationship between these two proud nations no place better celebrates this storytelling tradition than my next stop I've reached hay bluff a prominent Hill at the northern tip of the Black Mountains which straddles the border between England and Southeast Wales I'm just coming down off a bluff which is the highest point on the toughest dying path it's a bit of a slog but it's really worth it because you can see all over Herefordshire great views and now I'm going down there to visit one of my favorite events certainly my favorite festival in the whole world the Dyke has led me to hay on why the town of books half English half Welsh and a modern mecca for lovers of the written word in a setting that has itself inspired so many wonderful writers could there be any more perfect place to celebrate the this is gonna be the biggest the most influential the best organized literary festival in the whole world I've been coming here every year for years sometimes just as a punter sometimes to speak or perform but I always find it quite intoxicating in every tent there's a philosopher political thinker a writer it's an assertion of ideas of discourse of talking of a freedom and hope really just as each their builds a journey each word comes together to create a story and there's one particular travel writer who helped the spirit of this land close to his heart no matter where he wrote I'm on a mission hey is all about bookshops this one's wonderful bookshop of your dreams and I'm looking for travel writers his travel writers along here ABC yes there we go oh of course would be one of my wouldn't it Bruce Chatwin what about greatest travel writers English but inspired by the history and heritage of Wales on the black Hill told the story of twin brothers living in a bleak Welsh farmhouse straddling the English Welsh border and Chatwin's insatiable wanderlust inspired much of his writings he once said man's real house isn't his home it's the road and life itself is a journey to be walked on foot agree more chadwin died aged just 48 having only published five books but his reputation as one of our finest writers was already secured and his literary influence continues to this day you've written about this place I have I wrote running for the hills and if I could have done I would have called it on the Black Hill but unfortunately someone got there before you bruised Jacko and nicked my titles 20 years before yes and he dug up the dirt the stories the myths and the legends have a whole swathe of hereford shown this side of Paris then he takes it all and he puts it into on the Black Hill and it's wonderful in that it's the story of the place in terms of time which isn't linear but the cyclical and goes with the seasons and that's how I experienced growing up here I think there is a deep truth there about how time happens in this region must be loads of stories about this place it's thick with stories so we could start over there with the Lea lithic and we can move through the Romans the Normans Second World War and right up to the current there's the best fields in the valley because there was an almighty battle between the English and the Welsh down there and of course the blood according to my Godfather's soaked into the soil invaded I'm so conflicted about offers died on one hand it seems to me this very old ancient thing and on the other hand it's really quite young compared with an awful lot of British history isn't it it sounds old doesn't it they offer is it is old old English yeah it sounds like a way back but then compared to around here I mean they we measured time in quite different ways I mean so this is old red Devonian sandstone that we're standing on I think it's 365 million years old and all this would have been a sort of shallow lake at one point in the Pliocene so you know is really quite recent as in the old offer where's the border board it's directly behind us so you can feel the weight of the mountain behind us but the border here is partly a function of geography and partly a function of the mind there's always something odd about borderlands isnt it is it's a very emotive island really it's a sure between two cultures and you know what if we'd been up here 2,000 years ago I bet someone like you we've been telling someone likely similar stories from the previous two or three thousand it's a lovely thought yeah as well as on the Black Hill Borderlands also inspired Bruce Chatwin seminal travel book in Patagonia with its tales of Welsh immigrants settled in the vast South American region straddles Chile and Argentina but here on the crest of her ggest Ridge high up on the path there's a little piece of Wales that will be forever [Music] this is typical borders country isn't it really risk wind blowing got these fantastic views as far as the eye can see nothing - all growing but Bracken well not quite nothing actually because look at this you've got this absurd clump of monkey puzzle trees why well apparently about half a century ago there was a local gardener who realized that the winter temperature around here is very similar to the winter temperature in Argentina which is where the monkey puzzle trees grow naturally so he planted them and they've certainly flourished so in this funny little oasis you're suddenly in Patagonia I'm sure Bruce Chatwin wouldn't really have approved [Music] leaving this puzzling patch of forest behind I'm in search of reception of the dyke regarded by many as the finest on the route both the views of the Dyke and the surrounding spectacular landscape that leads to fanfare Hill [Music] but before I get there I'm stopped in my tracks by a beautiful oasis riot of color on an otherwise verdant landscape and the woman behind this stunning floral scene connects yet another distant land with offers dyke [Music] this gorgeous little cottage hello it's fantastical you lived here uh 30 years Wow did you create this garden yourself yes yes I did it's my family daggering Lee beautiful cute a bit wild two things I can see the dazzle of color and the big open sky wonderful open skies and I always say I live here because the earth meets the sky without interruption we born in England no I was actually born in Uganda and I was Ugandan refugee when I was a child so my family were kicked out of Uganda and then I grew up in West London south or south or west Athol girl but I couldn't wait to get back to somewhere that was rural because we'd come from rural Africa buta Bay by the lake and so I just longed to go go somewhere that reminded me of home and was home one of many tell me well and down this track and down the hill that's crew have you them might be popping in no it's fantastic unexpected that thank you bye from Uganda by London to office night Tahira has certainly come a long way to find her perfect home but the beautiful familiarity of the landscape realized the ambition of the man who gave the Dyke its name King offer had a vision a desire to reach into the Arab world and establish an alliance far beyond the borders [Music] you you on the dye is a spectacular ancient earthwork that splits the nations of England's of Wales may believe is a defensive structure showing strength made by the King behind its name while the 8th century King Arthur led the English kingdom of Mercia through a golden age this progressive ruler had ambitions to spread his Midas touch much further afield [Music] because we've got virtually nothing written down precisely who offer was earned what he did remains a bit of a shadow but we do have two tangible pieces of evidence Dyck and a coin not the cute little penny which I showed you at the beginning of the program but an extraordinary gold one which is lodged at the British Museum [Music] the gold coin of offer is a very significant object in the history of ancient Britain the coins design at first glance resembles the gold dinars but it is in fact not of Arabic origin it was actually engraved struck and issued in England by King Arthur I'm enthralled about how this incredible centuries-old link with the Arabic world came about you know of all the archaeological finds that I've handled over the years this is one of the two or three that when I saw about it my jaw absolutely drop really I just think it's amazing and then what's written around the outside it says Mohammad ur Rasool Allah which basically means Muhammad is the prophet of God that is so extraordinary 8th century yeah and you've got this mercian King king of a third of England or whatever and he's got round his name on a coin that he's produced Muhammad is the prophet of God yeah was he a convert to Islam there's a theory that that happened but I think it's baseless really what do you think if you wanted to trade with a civilization that controlled around you know the land around the Mediterranean yeah you wouldn't need to use a gold coin so he thought well you know they use dinars possibly I can use one too so as far as arthur was concerned looking across the English Channel the Muslim Empire would have been massive wouldn't it well you're talking from Portugal and Spain south of France all the way across the top of Africa Middle East as we know it Central Asia all the way across to Pakistan that's huge it's made wonderful that you've got this tiny little window into offers life here we are standing on the Dyke and we now know that offer recognized that the Muslim Empire was out there and for some reason maybe a bit diplomatic hit knowledged it by writing about it on the outside of one of his coins exactly I think it's it's been lost in time it's a tragedy that we don't our past and our European history really now in the 21st century you know we still think Muslims and Islam is new but twelve hundred years ago it was there you know at the doorstep really and in inside Europe right here on this diet they were aware of it that's right [Music] one of the annoying things about doing a long walk like this is that the whole procedure does tend to get a bit insular you're constantly being confronted by the things close to you and even the horizon looks like you're looking at the whole world so it was really reassuring to come face to face with offers coin and know that the man who built this dike wasn't only thinking about this area but was in some way engaging with Rome the far side of the Mediterranean and maybe even Baghdad and beyond the idea is tantalizing offers gold coin connects cultures across continents in an age 1200 years ago when such an achievement might be thought improbable to think what little we know of this enigmatic room if only his story had been written down but it wasn't and I must satisfy my curiosity with a walk along the great dike that honors his name what lies ahead is a link that honors our much more money west of the town of nain in Central Powers County named after the ancient world kingdom I approached the vantage point of beacon dream and I've time at last to reflect on this beautiful fertile and my journey along offers Dyk my intriguing final destination lies ahead at first glance this Hill is just a dense circular wood flanked by jarring modern-day transmitter masts but there's more to it than that this would have been an amazing strategic viewing point in the old days you've got England laid out in front of you there then you've got the border and you've got Wales all the way along there it's called beacon ring but there's something rather curious about it it's an old hill fort but it wasn't just used in the Iron Age it's crammed full of history the Britons fought the northumbrian here was used in the War of the Roses but look it's jam-packed full of trees you've got beaches you've got conifers what is the forest doing in the middle of an Iron Age hill fort and as I'm about to find out from a custodian at this beautiful Welsh landscape this peculiar juxtaposition of the old with the new crowns this elevation in more ways than one Paul I'm sorry to her to disturb your work but this does seem a bit odd to me I've seen hill forts with one or two trees in but you've got you've got a hole cops in here it's actually plantation that was put here in 1953 and partly to commemorate the coronation of Her Majesty the Queen and what would it have looked like well it's a combination of spruce and beech trees and the monogram e to our is picked out so you can see that from the air you say can be seen from the air but it just looks like a great big mound of trees now it does from here and it's slightly overgrown they reach maturity and our program over the next few years is to try and remove them gradually as we have done here with the with the vegetation on the ramparts and return it to its natural grassland state is intriguing isn't it we've got a bold statement by one monarch in the Dyke and then we've got a bold statement about another one on the hill fort which you're about to whip out we're going to gradually return it to its an earlier natural state I think is how I would put it have you mentioned it to the palace I'm afraid not no I should okay all right I mean I really sure on the ground the effect is invisible yeah it's remarkable enjoy this unique view while it lasts [Music] trees spell out e to Elizabeth Regina [Music] these trees are mere saplings when compared with authors dikes amazing 1200 year my war this ancient route defines the very essence of what it means to be English and wealth and will no doubt continue to do so for many generations to come this impressive frontier may have been built to draw a line between England sword wielding patron saint and the fiery red dragon of Wales but over the centuries it served to strengthen the national pride and cultural identities of both these border peoples and allowed us step-by-step to truly celebrate this historic boundary and finishing my journey here where the flow of history meets the flow of a river like the ancient dyke slow moving River meanders between both countries fully oblivious to any modern border I'm at the end of my journey now this is Welshpool and over here is the largest sheep market in the whole of Europe doesn't matter at the moment but it's Sunday so it's closed over here is the river 7 of what 90 miles or so and ironically I've ended up by the side of the same river as the one where I started this walk has been about trying to discover something about this strange border country that we call the Marches and also to learn a bit more about King offer have I succeeded well as Winston Churchill once said in studying offer we're rather like a geologist who instead of finding a fossil finds only a hollow shape in which a creature of unusual strength and size undoubtedly resided
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Channel: Timeline - World History Documentaries
Views: 161,099
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: History, Full Documentary, Documentaries, Full length Documentaries, Documentary, TV Shows - Topic, Documentary Movies - Topic, 2017 documentary, BBC documentary, Channel 4 documentary, history documentary, documentary history
Id: Gi5uzqCPDJI
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Length: 46min 47sec (2807 seconds)
Published: Sat May 09 2020
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