Sean Bean on Napoleon's Greatest Defeat | Sean Bean on Waterloo | Timeline

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it was one of history's bloodiest battles a clash between two legendary generals it only lasted a single day but it shaped the map of Europe for a century okay always been interested in the story of Waterloo especially since I played the role of Richard show band a British riflemen South Essex one man gosh our sport Sharp's adventures were based on real events that happened here 200 years ago these programs I'll find out more about the men who in some way that character these pictures are incredible not the generals who led the battle but the ordinary soldiers if that went through its my chutes of pieces they're easily astray they discovered their Aiwass accounts and get a ground level that changed history here's a ring in it test their weapons just accidentally modern-day nobody taught you to lie [Music] 20 hold the lead ball that ended someone's life CG a sobering thought what salut is one of the most famous names in the history of battle I want to know what it was like to be here 200 years ago today history was made my Waterloo adventure begins in Chatham in the Southeast of England these history enthusiasts are rehearsing for a huge reenactment of the battle to Marquis 200th anniversary some of them have ancestors who were there when the French army of Napoleon Bonaparte locked horns with an international force under the British General [Music] pretty sturdy stuff that seen all those uniforms can I remind you that it wasn't just the British although they were a major kind of influence but it's also the Dortch the Germans the Prussians all fighting on the same side against Napoleon [Music] so how did three months old Waterloo Napoleon had is scared from excellent he'd been held on the island of Elba average 20th western France the top dog now we plan to attack Brussels in Belgium we're willing to his assembling an army with his Prussian alloy a general pollution the end game played out a few miles to the south of Brussels the battle that took place here was the first in history to be recorded in so much detail by so many soldiers the eyewitnesses tell stories of incredible bravery they reveal what it was like to be a soldier at Waterloo and make sense of the chaos of war their stories will be my guide as I try to see the battle as they saw it at the time and not just the fighting but the waiting as well on the night before the battle the locals fled their villages as thousands of soldiers converged for the fight and wondered what Samara might bring private Tom Morris feared the worst but his sergeant reassured him Tom he said I'll tell you what it is there is no shock made yet for either you or me and it will be a sleepless night for the generals - so this is Wallington headquarters yeah this is where he spent the night before the battle um and it would have looked pretty much like this Shawn actually I suspect it hasn't changed that much I just imagine to think Spencer his last few hours in hearing yeah I need you see the picture behind you there of Wellington on Copenhagen his horse and that's pretty much how you would have looked all the way through the battle the following day we know he he knows he's got a long day ahead of him the battle tomorrow so you know there's a lot of thinking going on and he did most of it in this room up here so on so here we are in Wellington's HQ Shawn and this apparently was the room in which he spent his final night for the battle not necessarily that bedding because they've got the tradition of him here no what do you think of the likeness amazing resemblance to Hugh Fraser who played I think it's very sharp it really does yeah I wonder if they move that profile actually look on the side Shawn you can see the most distinctive feature of Wellington that he's known yeah you Fred used to put a false one on every morning I don't think he'll I know we're movin it was necessary well how are you some reason to think this is worth willing to spend the night before that battle and although expectation of a nation on his shoulders and this is where he was here there's a lot riding on the Battle of him but he has one big advantage and the advantage is over here come and have a look at this short this is a copy actually the actual map he used to plot the defensive position that Waterloo or the story and the maps pretty amazing actually because even a year before the battle Wellington ordered this map to be prepared why not be necessary thought he was gonna face Napoleon but because he wanted a military survey of the Netherlands it was a place the British I have fought many times in their history just in case and when it was clear that Napoleon was back on the Lucid escape from Elba he instructed the work on this map to continue apace and I don't know if you can see is stitched together from lots and lots of different places you mean like that exactly a different Royal Engineer officer would have been in charge of each of those sections eventually was all put together in a hurry because he realized from the 16th onwards when the fighting begins against the French that he's probably going to have to fight a defensive battle against Napoleon two days before Waterloo the French fought with the British you'd cut your bra 10 miles further south and with the Prussians at winning they beat the Prussians and force them back to the village of Wavre the British retreated north to a better defensive position near the village of Waterloo it was only now mr. 48 hours before the battle the Wellington knew for sure where his showdown with Napoleon would take place his tiny water though up there has an arrow in his side it was all this big map and what's really well it's lucky that you've still got a little bit on it that enabled him to use the these positions Wellington must have been thinking the night before as he lay in this room that the possession of this map and the knowledge it gave him it might just make the difference the following day yeah while Wellington plotted his men tried to rest most spent a night without shelter we were up to our knees in molten stinking water rose army medic who will give name but not a drop of drinking water but a particle of food was to be found in the villages he had to settle down in the mud in the film as best we could he got some strawberries and with these we tried to make a rough shelter against the torrents of rain that fell all night and when morning came Gibney and his mates would face the battle of their lives coming up next bang I find out the damaged water velocity the bone is disintegrating on impact the limb would have to be removed [Music] it's the morning of the battle and thousands of soldiers prepare one of them is teenager Matthew clay he wrote a journal about his experience at Waterloo that his family still treasures today so I Christine tell me about your ancestor Matthew Matthew was one of seven children age 18 he went down to London and joined the 3rd Foot Guards of Scots Guards and then they had the orders that Napoleon was on the move so they all went to the Belgians oh yeah they're all young men women see we're in the early hours of Julie 18 Matthew and his comrades are ordered to report to the farm at hue Commons he would spend the day defending these buildings from repeated French attacks and play a part in one of the battles crucial turning points but first was time to find breakfast they were absolutely starving and then it's all sure upon him about the food the sergeant of each section gave a small piece of bread bounce announced to each man and inquiry was made along the ranks for a butcher one having gone forward he was immediately ordered to kill a pig which having been slaughtered was divided amongst the company a portion of the head in its rough state being my share and having placed it upon the fire the heat of which served to dry out our clothing in accoutrements and to cook our separate portion of meat which having become warmed through and blackened with smoke I partook of a little but finding it too raw and unsavory having neither bread nor salt I pour the remainder in my other psyche when he cooked it for a second time I think there was a part of a body a human body and with all the year bits of firewood and stuff oh you know what they were cooking so but you just can't imagine day as Matthew packed his kids he paid special attention to his muskets it had taken a soaking during the night so he fired a test shot to check he was working he knew his life would depend on it and the hours to cram I've used plenty of working replicas over the years but I don't know how he feels to fire a genuine weapon in the heat of battle but this man does his corporal Chris meek of the rifle brigade so how long have you been in their office Christian so I've been in the Roy was 10 years now when I currently train new recruits who were joining the right boss we're scientists ii do sailing country yeah the Patrick here before he became an instructor Chris did three tours of duty in Afghanistan he's joining me at the Royal Armouries in Leeds to see the weapons used by his predecessors at Waterloo you know there's so many so many of rifles ash a few replicas Emmitt on metal or noise look good very well made but to be surrounded by these rifles that have actually shots and anger it's a thing that maybe you're alive or someone else's depended on it it's quite scary quite weird most of Wellington's infantry used muskets at Waterloo I'm gonna find out what it's like to fire one of these original weapons loaded with live ammunition but first these times are meet an old friend so I'm putting the white gloves on now so this must be the real McCoy mark absolutely hand you a baker rifle similar to the one you would have been used to you have use replicas son sharp that's quite different I feel very very slim isn't it very sleek it's much I don't know seems heavier but it's pretty much much finer much slimmer kind of gun Oh Chris here is a musket of the same period it's very front heavy innit I mean to get it into a fire position it feels quite heavy at the front so it'd be quite a strain on your arm oh yeah I can't quite remember these sides are but the 1805 model which is the one you're handling this fitted with folding sights say we're two different distances to aim at you see this Chris G and that's for no idea can get it open as we put the thing the patches isn't it absolutely correct patch of course is a little squirt that of cloth which you can wrap around your musket ball which allows you to load it with a very tight fit and that's really cigar it would be yes put some powder in it bang billion Marcus - weapon upstairs been testing their water and guns to find out how deadly they fired live ammunition into materials that mimic the density composition of human flesh muscle and bone we hope that we'll be able to show the type of wounding that a flintlock musket ball can cause these slow-motion images are shocking it's showing quite clearly that the bone is disintegrating on impact the limb would have to be removed there is no bone left terrifying really you can see the bone flexing in a little bit see that is absolutely horrific you don't want to get hit by this the power of a musk terrified [Music] but how easy was it for a soldier Matthew plate it is target who better to test their accuracy than a modern army sharpshooter the India Patton muskie wears almost exactly the same modern army complements so adopt the kneeling position just as you normally would but the Waterloo weapon was notoriously unreliable if the mechanism got wet the gun might not fire at all as Matthew play would later discover so he's cost that is actually in the right circumstance the right man yeah strong shoulder you can hit the target what was that line it's quite quite a recoil on it a lot more than what I'm used to here yeah yeah and the let's smoke cloud after here take a couple of seconds to see if you actually hit the guy that's a pretty good shot yeah I'm pretty happy with that yeah yes so drop down get comfortable nice and stable okay the muzzle pointing down the range at all times now because it is loaded are you happy with that yeah pulling it well into the shoulder because this does care and then the last step is make ready which means you bring that to full [ __ ] that's it right right fire well there's a very strong tracker that isn't it nice to me thank you good excellent so you hit what you're aiming at yeah it's quite a big blast so how does that compare to firing a blank charge almost difficulty yeah yeah yeah and impact you know these sentences around it I should imagine in those days when the fines to Flanders maybe hundreds of thousands going off it was to be just kind of if the air was to just be resonating with the sound it's hard to imagine yeah yeah so yeah it's just off the paper but the human body is a lot bigger than a piece of paper so you you know that's killed your target yeah target is dead coming up next [Music] I'm finding out what it was like to be a soldier the Waterloo 200 years ago and now I'm heading for one of the key locations on the battlefield we are going to take a very bad Road right in the middle of the field my guide is George Jacobs our he's involved in a charity that's restoring the historic buildings at Google farm the day before the battle it have been dreadful rains like we have more it's probably similar to getting out for today I think I didn't attract massive cannon through this is logic you see that's over more appearing there so understand why Hyuga Moore was so important you need to know about the rest of the battlefield soon Napoleon's forces were massed in the south Wellington's troops faced from the high ground to the north this Ridge was a strong defensive position it's allowed Wellington to hide many of his troops making it hard for the French to target their artillery and French infantry and cavalry would have to climb a steep slope has reached the anime Wellington also control the farm of the hae-sun the buildings of humour play the station from here the Allies could shoot crossfire and destruct the flow of Napoleon's in size if Wellington kept control of these outposts he had a good chance of holding off the French until his Prussian allies arrived from the east it looks like a building site while the restoration happens but he can understand why Wellington thought it crucial to defend this place whatever the cost so this looks quite an impressive building you can see why Wellington put so much importance on it there's a stronghold quite an impressive building indeed there was the farm and about here this was always wearing those tactics to try to hide part of his troops and when he discovered two days before the battle that the worst displace it prepared it as a sort of fortress this was where the battle finally began in earnest Wellington had posted some of his best troops to defend the farm the buildings were surrounded by other obstacles the Med is a difficult place for the French to capture more Allied soldiers were positioned in the walled garden an orchard to the east and there was a large wood to the South defended by some of Wellington's German troops in the late morning the French began to fire their way through the woods within an hour they had the farmhouse buildings in their sights only a few trees from the original wood are still standing here today so these trees these wood these are the edge of the wood absolutely and then from here to there there's nothing nothing it's just an open space and Wellington made in the wall some holes to allow the troops that were inside to shoot at the French that would come out of the woods so no but it could possibly pass this stretch of open field where no chance no truck rented that no private Johann Leonard one of the Allied troops defending Hugo more described what happened next we're hardly taken up position at the loopholes when masses of French came out of the wood apparently all set to capture the farm but their word sole aids the shower of balls that we loose tar from the French was so terrible that a grass in front was soon covered with French corpses can still see a hole of a bullet that was shot at that time here which is impressive to think that those trees have been witnesses of the heavy fighting that has been taking place here this is quite a fortress this this side of the farm imagine the English with a musket through those holes you want to be a Frenchman attacking this unable to break through the South Gate the French turned their attention to the west side of the buildings where Matthew Clair was stationed with a hundred of his maids they were heavily outnumbered but as he tried to retreat back inside the farm Matthew found himself stranded outside to make matters worse his musket was misfiring he was forced to swap it for another one they laid by the body of a dead comrade as Matthew later recalled the new weapon was still warm from recent use in an excellent one at least he gave him a fighting chance of making it out alive meanwhile less than a mile to the south near an inn called LaBelle Alliance Napoleon was aiming his sights at the heart of Wellington's defenses so all the allies will be right along that ridge line absolutely and pretty much where you can see the house is there and you see the road going through them that's the center of Wellington's position he'd have had troops arranged on both sides about a mile actually on both sides but the bulk of Wellington's armies the other side and the reason he's got them the other side is because what Napoleon is citing in this position were actually on here from where we are for a total of about a thousand yards were sighted cannon after cannon after cannon of the cannon Napoleon loved his cannons he'd risen through the ranks as an artillery officer and he knew how brutally effective his so-called beautiful daughters could be what Napoleon actually wants to do is use these cannon to wear down the enemy just below chindan yeah it's literally bludging it but there's a problem he's got on the day of the Battle of Waterloo and this is the clue to the problem yeah have a look ahead of me here Sean I mean look at look at this completely waterlogged this this soil yeah has taken on northern Bobby lot of rain in the last 24 hours or so yeah pretty much identical to what would have happened prior to Waterloo because for the 24 hours or so before it it's just been non-stop rain yeah and the problem with soil like that is you can't maneuver guns in it I've been roped in to help me the replica cannon into position you can see the problems of moving this gun on a relatively dry day this is Jim Palin he was a major in the Royal Artillery and his experts at Waterloo cares it's heavy it's hard work hard work Waterloo art cylinders how much should it be all I had to move so Napoleon accessing way for the ground to drop get his cattle right tikki he wanted to break through Wellington's defenses before nightfall and finally he could wait the longer just before noon you ordered his cannons to open fire gun captain when you're ready the first thing the attachment come on is going to do is order the gun to be worm the worm worm er is a big corkscrew he's gonna put that down the barrel and turn it to make sure there's nothing inside there that will pull out any debris that worm it words you know you'll notice how he uses the underhand if something is going to go off if you have your hand on the top then you're going to lose your arm the next job that's going to happen is a sponge man who is going to wet his sponge will now ram down the barrel and that will licks the English any embers if the embers were put out the cannon could explode as it was being reloaded working at the business end of the Waterloo cone is no job for the faint-hearted even when it's just a replica now get real welly if you don't run this properly it's not gonna fire and everyone I think you're a big girl okay Napoleon had over 250 cannons at Waterloo 100 more and Welling and the barrage began the thunder of the golems could even be heard in Broyles 10 miles from the battlefield now if you do that 3 times a minute you're gonna win bloody hell the heap the mom that must be very kind of difficult just to keep your concentration and when it went off I know they got incredibly loud oh here's a ring a well drilled gun crew could fire it's a rate of three rounds of minutes wonder how long it was in the first half hour of the battle napoleon launched 3,000 trembles it was a shock and or tactically before he sent in his invention any here let's go and finish time keeper I think I must have wash the outer sponge I like too much water yes that was just our first level we managed three shots in the end Napoleon would not even dressed for gun finish timing for first gun finish please do this 50 seconds of first gun timing for the last gun nine minutes what am i father don't bother me all right [Music] it's one thing playing soldiers with a replica the genuine Waterloo cannons were no laughing matter [Music] we persuaded the Royal Armouries to let us fire this 200 year old door closing by volition we're testing it's an an army approved bridge and Salisbury Plain the supervision of weapons expert Niklas hull this cannon dates from about 1800 so it was in use at the time of Waterloo Simon West trained is an artillery officer with the British Army he's fascinated by the experiences of his predecessors at Waterloo I think we've got a very rare opportunity today to actually see the weapon effects the were delivered by the Royal Horse Artillery at Waterloo after the French cannons opened fire on Wellington's Ridge the Allied artillery was eager to fire back but Wellington said no he wanted to save his ammunition to use at closer range against foot soldiers and horses I'm optimistic we're gonna headers this will be the first time in 200 years this cannon has been fired with a full charge of powder and a 6 pound round shots they'll watch the action from the safety of the control tower and high-speed cameras will record the result paul Seaton and Mandy Chesterton had ancestors who fall to the water gancho and about to see what happened when their three-times-great-grandfather Bombardier Nathaniel almay was finally given the signal to fire firing in 5 4 3 2 1 the shear velocity of these weapons spread carnage across the battlefield that ball was traveling at a couple of hundred meters or seconds and would have created havoc in the enemy lines one well-aimed shot could rip through a column of infantry and kill as many as 20 men our cannonball finally ended its journey 300 meters from where the shot was fired they took a small hillside to stop it that's good three feet in yeah it's a solid talk if that was a French cavalry man approached me I'll say it would have gone straight through him the first exchanges of battle Wellington ordered his artillery to hold fire but now their time had come because down in the valley the French infantry was about to attack [Music] coming up next fighting fire with fire it's not something you think about sailing and running no no which they're now fine [Music] it's early afternoon on the 18th of June 1850 the Battle of Waterloo has raged across this valley for nearly two hours [Music] Napoleon's cannons have battery in deranged alibi Wellington desires the British general is desperate to stand his ground until the Prussians arrive at the farmhouse at Hoover Mons is also under attack by the French and British teenager Matthew clay is stranded outside with one of his maids it was with private gun and Matthew says nice things about him saying it was a senior them two got stuck outside the gates and it went till one of the officers come in the open the gates open they managed to get in it was a narrow escape moments later the mother French soldiers son wielding axes began to smash the gates Matthew's journal describes the desperate efforts of his comrades to get them out so lieutenant-colonel macdonald carrying a large piece of wood or a trunk of a tree in his arms one of his chiefs mark with blood his charger lay bleeding when a short distance with which she was hastening to secure the gates against the renewed attack of the enemy which was most vigorously repulsed according to Wellington the heroic efforts of MacDonald and his men made the difference between victory and defeat at Waterloo barring the gates against the French insured this crucial outpost hid in British hands and mafia was there when history was made these are the famous North case of who c'mon it's where the French broke through where the British repelled them 200 years ago this courtyard would have been a place of horror a handful of French soldiers trapped inside when the gates closed behind them were put to the sword by the British such a scene of bayonet work I never before or since beheld one of the British soldiers Robert sir we look like so many butchers read with God but amidst the carnage Matthew clay performed an act of mercy that saved the life of one French intruder the enemy's artillery having forced the upper gates a part of them rushed in were as quickly driven back no one being left inside but a drummer boy without his drum whom I lodged in a stable outhouse this drummer boy you were running what are you 13 Oh cried yeah you Matthew managed to get him safe these drummer boys could be anything from line 11 12 year round yeah he got imagine that young lad being stuck inside doors whenever all this other the French are dead and they say like minister yeah should be proud of him I am yeah these lads who fought at water level it's nice to keep the memory the French would continue their efforts to capture Hugo Mon for hours to come the time was running out for Napoleon because Wellington's Prussian allies were getting closer to the battlefield the Prussians were marching through mud from the east there would be hours before they were able to join the battle if they made it before nightfall they could reinforce Wellington's troops on the ridge and also attack Napoleon's forces from the south if they didn't arrive in time the French had every chance of breaking Wellington's line has had been battered by artillery for two hours now the French infantry was ready to mount his first attack so sure we're following in the direction the first major French attack they had the Battle of the Waterloo the the cannons at the grand battery and the ridge behind us have been softening up the Allied line ahead and now it's time to send the infantry in and they're sending them in in these massive columns the French always attacking columns because it's easier to maneuver that way and there's also the psychological effect of the defenders seeing this huge massive truth how many men 2,000 men in a single column and there's a block here another one there and another one over there and these three massive columns with the head of the column 48 men wide so this all covered all always filled it much code by thousands and thousands of men all you can see a man as far as the eye can see in these solid blocks and it must have seemed to the defenders on the ridge that they were going to be completely unstoppable yeah now cannon a firing at them so they're taking casualties these these columns but that's not making any difference to them there's so well discipline the men are just falling out the injured and the and the killed and they're carrying on they're closing up ranks slowly but surely they're getting towards the allied positions up on the ridge they're up there just on the ridge lines we can see ahead of us there's a big block of Netherland soldiers 2,000 of them put in front of rather unfairly I think Wellington in front of the ridge line and they were the first point of defence and as these massive columns were getting closer and closer and closer the Netherlanders that were getting more and more spooked and when they got really close they just up stick and left and they just stream on back through the British line and all you've got left now are the British soldiers and the question is are they gonna be enough to stop the French breaking through the line these forces would help Wellington trusted his invention more than now is the time to find out [Music] recover these re-enactors are practicing the drills that made Wellington's infantry such as formidable full up under the guidance of former army rifles major Rob Yule to find out how they prepared for battle I'm joined by serving soldiers from the Coldstream Guards their predecessors fought at Waterloo I'm just imagining now I'm a French soldier one of the infantry all got thousands we made each side of them used to win him and just quit off that hill under what Wellington's ghost offers on the other side yeah well not what Napoleon is expecting Napoleon is used to winning against the conscript forces of the European armies and he's expecting his artillery barrage has already demoralized the enemy forces so that when you crest the ridge line you're gonna be able to deploy into line and destroy the enemy in front of you who are already on the point of breaking however you're facing the British army which is the only professional army in Europe during the Napoleonic Wars and which is incredibly well drilled so a Charlie this is guess it's nothing new to you modern dear soldier drill when we're in the field when we fight we employ a very lowest level drugs and so a section back and drill encompasses everything that you do from the moment you come under fire through to fighting through improving the enemy position it's a one word of command from which a number of actions happen it's the same as we see here and it's designed to remove conscious thought because the people will be tired they'll be scared for the under pressure there we love the noise and distractions and if you can have something some almost in your muscle memory that you have practice and practice and practice it means you don't have to think so we're not robots yeah I think the minute we don't do it is when st. goes wrong yeah and well it all goes belly-up yeah that individual that's seen something forgets what he's doing is at drill will cost along with the drill how does that help you caught with fear I'll do a dress that it's the fear that keeps you sparking yeah it's the thing that makes you look out for disturbed come on wise and how's that things like yeah the ordinary it's that fear that keeps saying the back your mind all the times and it works and hand in hand with the Dragons whatever it is if you if you sort of baby at blase about their fear you didn't become slugs and rules not we're alluded to earlier or naturally mastitis not to get made of theorem I think there's definitely a coercive aspects as well because there is again its directional you know are you more are you more frightened of the enemy or you might frighten other consequences of turning and running and if the consequence of turning and running off some horrible sergeant with a big pike standing behind you yeah I mean the army of 1850 was a flogging army yeah and our regiment was particularly fond of the lash you read the punishment book soldier absent from camp for three three hundred and fifty lashes yeah this is not a normal ear Tommy rates people turning and running yeah so actually the threat in front of you is almost less than the threat behind you I'll say they mate surround you it's as it is today you've got other people depending on you fewer yeah it's not something you think about turning and running no well we don't do we know which they're now five make ready the firepower that signal will which is impressive enough [Applause] multiply that by 100 is terrifying [Applause] as Napoleon's troops got closer to the rich and of their comrades had already fallen victim to the rapid continuous fire willing to spend well this had been killed or maimed by artillery but still they marched forward through the trampled crops the French column is now reaching the front line of the Allied position the famous sunken Lane which you can see just here it was actually slightly steeper 200 years ago was quiet it was quite a little Bank just beyond it and on top of the bank was that a big thorn hedge so they had to scramble their way through the thorn hedge visit which is disrupting their formation a little bit and then all of a sudden what greets on the other side is the chilling sight of lines of British infantryman and behind them a massive cavalry I've seen the terrible damage a single usually killing fleet now both sides were fighting off thousands of rounds of many say close quarters and the cannons are still firing till artillery on the seventh lesson describes the chaos of the battlefield the air was suffocatingly hot resembling that issuing from an oven we were enveloped in thick smoke despite the incessant roar of cannon and musket ring but distinctly here around us mysterious humming noise like that's which one hears on a summer's evening proceeding from the myriad of beetles cannon shots who plowed the ground in all directions and so thick was the hail of balls and bullets they seem dangerous to extend an arm master shall be torn off next time it says the swords of Bullington sports arenas cookies ear off I get to grips with Waterloo surgery foot hard and back gentle and if I am why is battlefield discovery is unique try to hold a lead ball that ended someone's life Gigi celebrates all [Music] [Music]
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Channel: Timeline - World History Documentaries
Views: 971,387
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Documentary Movies - Topic, documentary history, 2017 documentary, battle of waterloo (military conflict), game of thrones, history documentary, Documentaries, Full Documentary, real, sean bean imdb, sean bean movies and shows, BBC documentary, Channel 4 documentary, stories, timeline documentary, Full length Documentaries, TV Shows - Topic, sean bean, sean bean game thrones, the history channel, sean bean dies, Documentary, History, the lord of the rings
Id: 8i2Tql4BkLs
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 43min 38sec (2618 seconds)
Published: Thu Oct 25 2018
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