The English Village That Went Into Quarantine During The Plague | Ancient Tracks | Absolute History

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[Music] britain is crisscrossed by an amazing network of ancient trackways these remarkable routes are our oldest roads and have been travelled for more than 5 000 years he's quite small isn't it he's small but he's mighty small but mighty hello walked by pilgrims and traders hunters and invaders celts and romans saxons and vikings each track is bound up in myth mystery and legend [Music] of all the archaeological finds i've come across when i heard about it my jaw actually dropped 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 [Music] do you recognize the north star it's not the brightest star in the sky but it's probably one of the most useful it's been like me smell a leather you can still smell it 1900 year old leather isn't that absolutely amazing this week i'm in derbyshire walking the port way a prehistoric path through the peak district i want to know what this journey across the heart of england can tell me about the history and legends of ancient britain through the stories songs and stone along its track [Music] these are the paths our ancestors once followed the ancient tracks that we in britain can still walk today the peak district is a geological wonderland of remarkable rock and stone so it's appropriate my journey along its ancient port way path that connects caves carvings and quarries begins at a rather imposing rock rich with local legends of the spiritual and satanic this is the hemlock stone some stories say it was an object of worship carved by druids while another legend had the devil himself hurled the hemlock at a particularly pious priest [Music] when you come straight at it out of the forest it does look pretty impressive but whether it's to do with devils or druids or a rather efficient piece of natural erosion the great midlands novelist d.h lawrence wasn't very impressed by it look this is a copy of sons and lovers from 1960 rather pleasantly racy cover that i think anyway he says about the hemlock stone it's a little gnarled twisted stump of rock something like a decayed mushroom standing out pathetically on the side of a field but rock and stone are key to understanding this part of england lawrence's ambivalence is perfectly in character but he protests too much this place is remarkable and the hemlock stone marks a perfect connection for me between the physical nature of this area and the people who lived here communities as resolute and proud as the rocks that shape this land my journey takes me from the hemlock stone along the ancient port way track from the edge of nottingham through the magnificent mineral-rich landscape of the peak district national park with its diverse geological bedrock to one of the region's most dramatic viewpoints ma'am tour along the way i'll enjoy the beautiful songs of this ancient land have a bird's eye view into a terrifying abyss that unearthed my very own hidden treasure i'll bless them i can see two little faces alongside d.h lawrence this magnificent landscape has inspired such other literary giants as daniel defoe and arthur conan doyle but way before these great writers immortalized this beautiful land the centuries-old path that i'm walking on served as a key trade route from the ancient bronze age right up until the middle ages so why is the pork way called the port way well we're slap bang in the middle of england here so it's pretty doubtful whether they would ever have been an enormous medieval port anywhere around here i'm sorry this little gap was made for someone slightly slimmer than me this is the pork way proper and it could be that the word pork way is simply an anglo-saxon word for main road there is another rather cute idea that it means port as in a harbor or a protected place somewhere that was a haven for the weary traveler it's very poetic but i'm not quite sure how strong it is as an explanation however the landlocked port way got its name this land's subterranean nature inspired conan doyle to describe derbyshire as hollow could you strike it with some gigantic hammer he wrote it would boom like a gigantic drum [Music] and the underground theme picks up here in the mining town of worksworth where inside mary's a beautiful 13th century church i'm about to see britain's oldest lead miner when you come to a little place like this you might well think why has it got such an enormous church and the answer of course usually is because at one time or another the area was making a lot of money and that's certainly true of works was its money came from lead the interior of this church is like one of those charity shops that's so well stocked that when you get in there you can't believe your luck look at this carving which is set into the stone you see they call it the queen of hearts because of the heart-like shape of the body and there is another one on the other side of the door which is really funny but that's goliath and then there's tiny little david above him i really can't imagine that that david could have defeated that goliath can you and there's carvings all around this gorgeous church but there is one carving here that is very much simpler and is actually my favorite in the whole church [Music] rosa who is that little chap right this is toad man of bonsall what man the old man to old man oh to old man yeah um a bunsel a bonsall which is a lead mining village just down the road from us what's so significant about him we think he could be the oldest representation of a lead minor anywhere in the world how do you know that's a lead minor and not just some bloke carrying a stick yeah he's got his pick and his kibble his basket for carrying the lead in it it looks like his lunch box yeah he could have taken his sandwiches as well it's tantalising isn't it that we don't know how old he is he's like a voice calling us from the very distant past yeah it's a real mystery i mean it's sort of part of the beauty of him in a sense that we can't date him but it's sort of literally tracing um you know our ancestors he's quite small isn't he he's small but he's mighty small but mighty i like that thank you for me this small but mighty toad man represents the centuries-old miners whose rich pickings were traded along port way's ancient track the industry continued through generations with everything from humble homes to glorious cathedrals clad with derbyshire lead you can see the hardiness etched on the faces of these men who risked life and limb earning a living extracting this precious bounty they'd often be cut off from daylight for days at a time chipping and drilling away at some redoutable rock face this job is only for the hardest of the [Music] hard all around this area are hundreds of vertical lead ore shafts plunging more than 30 feet below ground but it's above ground where i'm about to experience my very own piece of classical rock wow look at that it's like the opening bars of a symphony they say that derbyshire's most famous export is derbyshire itself huge hunks of it being hacked off and sold you can see the evidence can't you all along this rock face picks and axes countless millions of them attacking these rocks and see up there see that that pipe blokes used to dangle from there on ropes and drill holes so they could whack the explosive in boom more money being made see i always think of derbyshire as completely land locked with merseyside about 60 miles in that direction the wash about 90 miles over there but what these rocks tell us is that where we're standing now was once a prehistoric tropical lagoon that was teeming with life and is now full of tiny bits of fossilized sea creatures the most fascinating from my point of view being that that is the tooth of a little shark which once swam along the coast of derbyshire about 300 million years ago [Music] this immense quarry face provides a traveler like me with a glimpse into the area's fascinating past and it was the chronicles of one such fellow traveller that offered a unique insight he may be most famous for transforming his global journeys into the story of the world's most famous castaway but it was his homeland that provided inspiration for the travelogue a tour through the whole island of great britain it was of course daniel defoe i think for most people like me daniel defoe has always been the bloke who wrote robinson crusoe full stop but then he writes the tour what's that all about the tour i think came at a period of his life really towards the end he's in his 60s and i think the tour really is an accumulation of bits and bobs facts and figures and also his only memories and experiences of earlier travels around the country and he's accumulated all these bits and bobs and he puts it together i think in the three volumes that are the tour it's funny isn't it because today we're so used to bill bryson and all the other travel writers who go around britain reflecting it in a whimsical and ironic way but presumably in defoe's time there were many of these people well no there were a few travel writers but there were antiquarians so they were going to i'm going to tell you about britain's past but defeat i think was doing something new he was trying to give you on a kind of view of the country as a whole as it is now and also its future so it's partly a travel account but also partly a state of the nation what do you think of derbyshire derbyshire really interested in because what he wanted to get to and in fact what he does throughout the tour is to try and attack or critique the kind of ancient myths of britain he calls them the wonderless wonders what were they so uh there's places like uh elden hole there is uh mantour there's uh the giants tomb and and these places a lot of these places he sees as mere products of nature he says well this is perfectly natural there's nothing incredible curious about that we're explaining through rational means with his detailed and exhaustive travelogue defoe explored all around the peak district dismissing the so-called seven wonders and instead delighting in writing about the obscure both natural and man-made the defining profound experience for defoe would come at the end of a long hike to the atmospheric harbour rocks he'd been in search of a fabled giant's tomb but what he saw that day and what he scribbled in his journal had stopped this hardened traveler in his tracks [Music] defoe writes when we came close up we saw a small opening not a door but a natural opening into the rock and the noise we'd made brought a woman out with a child in her arms and another at her foot says i good wife why where do you live here sir says she and points to the hole in the rock here says i and all these children live here too yes sir says she they were all born here pray how long have you dwelt here then said i my husband was born here said she and his father before him i asked the poor woman what trade her husband was she said he worked in the lead mines i asked her how much could he earn a day there she said if he had good luck he could earn five pence a day defoe was awestruck he discovered a family of cave dwellers living a life of almost primeval simplicity they wanted for nothing said the writer it was a lecture to us all this stark truth sent him onwards questioning the very meaning of life [Music] the beautiful yet challenging character of derbyshire's ancient port way path is defined by people of indomitable spirit who have forged identities among its rugged landscape this influence and the working-class roots of one of britain's literary giants came to revolutionize the modern novel and shock the establishment to its core above the village of middleton stands mountain cottage the final home in england for an arthur to riebler of the written word the creator of the semi-autobiographical sons and lovers and the notorious lady chatelier's lover d.h lawrence was born in nottinghamshire in 1885 the son of a minor but unlike many of his childhood contemporaries it would be words not rocks that the writer would come to mine [Music] frieda lawrence once said that if you wanted to understand her husband you had to know that he came from the midlands which he called the naval of england a strange black country with an underworld quality which is rather frightening which rather sums up how i've always felt about his work and it's this dark undertone that persists as i delve deeper into lawrence's life here in the peak district it's a lot more dynamic it's got two big universes stephen this is now a beautifully renovated house it is with these great bold artistic statements surrounding it but it wasn't all sweetness and light when lawrence was here was it completely different i'd imagine certainly he talks about having to break water on the well to get breakfast the eggs freezing in the pantry in christmas 1918 so it was a fairly rough fairly basic cottage i think he'd been expelled from cornwall along with his wife for suspicious activities why suspicious activity they thought he was signaling to german submarines when he hung out the washing and his wife of course was german and and an object of suspicion she had letters from germany via switzerland and uh clearly they were a very dubious couple how long did they stay here a year just a year i think they were both itching to leave britain and uh in in 1918 they they went abroad and effectively stayed abroad for the rest of the time and yet all the time that he was away he was writing about this part of the country wasn't it it's extraordinary isn't it how how vivid the memories were for him of what he called his heartlands and even his last novel lady chatelain's lover is set in a kind of derbyshire and possibly uh based on renishaw park near a bowl's over what do you think his legacy is well he's he's retained a lot of street credibility he's still the poet or the writer of about animal liberation about animal welfare about industrialization about gender balance so he although he was writing 100 years ago or more he touches on topics which are still relevant today [Music] [Applause] while lawrence gave the oppressed and vulnerable a voice he and his wife freda continued to endure their own battle against discrimination here at the old lockup a police station turned guest house lawrence and frieda who was listed as an alien had to report once a week during the great war and what's now the laundry room was once somewhere much more ominous [Music] now this may not look much like a prison cell anymore but it was the stark contrasting parentage of his barely literate coal miner father and well-educated lace-maker mother may well have shaped lawrence's love-hate relationship with his homeland he wrote the real tragedy of england as i see it is the tragedy of ugliness the country is so lovely the man-made england is so vile but in the end it was lawrence's ability to create groundbreaking prose from this earthly influence that guaranteed him lasting fame far beyond these shores and in a way his unique lament for his motherland echoes through the ages reaching a new generation who share an impulse to instill a sense of place at the heart of their craft [Music] so to conclude both great and small those that are [Music] a lot of the places in the song are pretty close to here the place names are just they're the places are named so wonderfully for great meaning and great historical significance um and all of these places they kind of prepped up in everyday life where did you find the song well i've actually bought the book this is the holy book of derbyshire published in the mid-1800s it looks as though that edition was published in the 1800s afraid it's a little bit worse for wear i've been carrying it up hillsides too much so it's the elegy and by leonard wheatcroft he was a schoolmaster the song has 19 verses so that song actually has 19 verses so you found the lyrics but you wrote the music i did i wrote my own tune to them which is very much within the folk tradition actually but i think it was kind of the the habit of the time um really to mention as many places as possible and it would become more popular in all those places because everyone wanted to sing about the place that they were from i know you go all over the world now don't you china nashville wherever do you come back here much i come back all the time i can't help myself there's some kind of historical ties to the land um but i just love them and i love the history behind them and for example down from mamtau you've got loose hill at the end of the edel valley and then across from there wyn hill and loose hill is actually lou's hill originally and there's this idea that these two armies had a battle between these two hills at one point on either side of this valley and when hill won the battle and lucille lost the battle so all of these place names and all of these places have such wonderful history and once you feel kind of tied into that it's very hard to leave those that are left the lord praises [Music] and just as bella hardy has woven beautiful music around the port way stories here in the picturesque lumsdale valley another history plays out amongst its faded buildings and encroaching forest this was where visionary inventor sir richard arkwright harnessed the power of nature and pioneered a new era in british history although there are only remnants left now these buildings were part of that huge explosion of productivity that we call the early industrial revolution it was here that the water frame was invented a massively important invention both for britain and overseas because for the first time it harnessed the power of water to spin cotton on an industrial scale at the height of the industrial revolution there are at least seven mills crammed into this narrow dale at the top of which still cascades are quite stunning waterfall the stones have long since returned to the wild and the water mills have relinquished their powers giving way to nature's original plan i too must move on while on the port way i've seen how man has imposed himself on the landscape but at the other end of this tunnel i'll find out for myself the story of the vengeful power of nature and a simply heartbreaking romance the landscape and history of england's peak district evokes a delicate dance between man and nature stones and superstition literature and industry and here back on the ancient port way track i'm constantly captivated by this beguiling balance between the old and new and near birchover at the base of cratcliffe rocks is a stone chiseled curiosity within which dwells one of derbyshire's most remarkable custodians in the middle ages travelers on the port way like me were dependent on the hospitality of strangers so the church came to their aid by employing locals to fulfill the task and the people who provided this invaluable service the humble hermit [Music] is on the side of this rock yep look there's a stone wall here iron railings i bet they're victorian and can i get in hey yep result yes christ on the cross about what four foot high and apart from this damage to the legs it looks in pretty good nick doesn't it particularly is it supposed to be 14th century a little niche there for the candle and this i think would have been the hermit's bed whoa it's not memory foam is it but when he woke up every morning the first thing that he would have seen would have been this emblem of the crucifixion in the 13th century pope innocent iv decreed that all such hermits had to be appointed by bishops they'd often be given servants and pensions not bad for a lone cave dweller there's no coincidence that the hermit lives so close to the port way he was actually paid to guide people along it how do we know well there's a place called haddon hall which is about four miles away and there's a note from its kitchen that says 23rd of december 1549 payment to yi hermit for supplying 10 rabbits and later on yi kratcliff hermit mrs cratcliff paid four pennies for guiding of people to haddon i always thought of hermits as stern and solitary figures but the cratcliff hermit would have been a highly sociable creature constantly helping out the port ways lost or needy travelers like me [Music] today's travellers though won't be welcomed by a hermit to the nearby village of winston though they may enjoy the unexpected sight of a man dressed as a woman and a centuries-old tradition so old in fact that no one knows where it came from morris dancing [Music] isn't it wonderful that even in a region with as earthy and dura character as the peak district where men were men and women were women we can still stumble across something as magnificent as morris dancing [Music] [Applause] [Music] back on the port way now and back in character surprise surprise i'm heading back underground again as my journey draws me relentlessly into another tunnel [Music] so much about this view across the valley from monster head epitomizes the very ideal of romantic england but in 1863 its tranquility came to a crashing halt with the arrival of a thrusting new railway line and although it connected communities and attractive visitors not everyone was happy with this groundbreaking feat of engineering john ruskin who was england's foremost critic on culture certainly didn't hold back he said you enterprised a railway through the valley you blasted its rocks away heaped thousands of tons of shale into its lovely stream the valleys gone and the gods with it and now every fool in buxton can be in bakewell in half an hour and every fool in bakewell at buxton which you think a lucrative process of exchange you fools everywhere [Music] there's no pleasing some people but ruskin's reservations aside i think the midland railway line added something thrillingly dynamic to this landscape reaching across valleys and boring through mountains today though steam trains can only be seen in the archive this abandoned track has now been reimagined as walking routes and cycle paths teaming with whole new generations of travellers and like a moth to a lamp i'm drawn to the subterranean once again these are the tunnels of the montsell trail an eight and a half mile stretch blasted through the peak district with the distant light at the end of the tunnel i find myself thinking that this once pitch black feat of engineering was then the preserve of hurtling steam trains but now is accessible to all not least to one of derbyshire's favorite sons oh phil you're just puttering a little bit i'm used to seeing you s speeding at the speed that's right yeah yeah i'm having an easy day today so it's really real nice i can tell you're local i can hear it in your ex yeah i'm sorry about it well i'll make no apologies to be fair i'm really proud of where i'm from and it's a beautiful part of the world you know i've i've been all over the world playing sport but i'm always glad to get back to derbyshire it's a very special in my heart do you use this place very much yes i've been along this path several times you know it's old railway line and now it's got resurfaced and it just absolutely lends itself to pushing wheelchairs on and actually getting into the countryside which obviously wheelchairs and such like don't go through fields and well so this is like a nice corridor through the middle of nowhere which is absolutely amazing you know it's great what is it about derbyshire that gets you going oh for me it just gives me a great sense of well-being you know you got into the country the people are really friendly always small speak to you and smile and that and that's just nice it's just a nice thing it is fantastic when you go through the tunnel and come out the other side there's the light yeah i mean on a day like today it's beautiful yeah and like you say you know going through a tunnel it's kind of cold and dark in there and then you come out and particularly the other end where the you know where the viaduct is it's just breathtaking it's lovely i'll leave you to have a look okay thank you see you bye as i leave phil behind to reacquaint himself with the tunnel it's incredible to think what he would have been faced with a hundred years ago not now though the railway era is long gone and for locals this dramatic place has opened up a whole host of new possibilities and perspectives back on the ancient port way now and the drama isn't going to let up any time soon the pretty village of eem is about to offer up the port way's darkest story yet a tragic tale played out in all its beautiful stained glass glory in this 17th century church this is saint lawrence's in 1665 eem was a pretty prosperous place very successful over 700 people lived here meanwhile in london plague was sweeping through the whole town in eem there's a cottage that we now call plague cottage and in it lived mrs cooper her two sons and a tailor called george vickers there's george down the bottom there with his scissors and his ruler he received a parcel of cloth from london which was damp so he opened it up hung it near the fire gradually the cloth dried out and presumably in doing so that activated the plague ridden fleas vickers was soon dying there he is on his deathbed and pretty soon the people of em realized that they were absolutely engulfed by the plague they decided that they would have to make the ultimate sacrifice they would have to quarantine from then on the people of eem couldn't get out and the outsiders couldn't get in which was particularly difficult for these two people emmett siddl and roland torre who were lovers and they used to meet on either side of the quarantine line but gradually emmett's folk started dying six out of eight of her relatives had gone and she said roland we can't meet anymore because you'll get infected and you'll carry the disease out and so he walked away broken-hearted and it wasn't until 14 months later when the quarantine was finally lifted that he walked back into the village looking for his sweetheart and she died too the plague of eem raged for 14 months and claimed the lives of at least 260 villagers by the first of november 1666 it had run its course and claimed its last victim [Music] 350 years later we can only speculate why the people of em did what they did was it because of their christian faith was it out of hard headed realism was there a lot of peer pressure going on well i suspect all those three factors came into play but what we do know is that by making the ultimate sacrifice the people of this village made sure that the folk throughout the rest of the peak district wouldn't be swept away by this terrible disease i'm glad to be out in the open again but i suspect that won't be for long up ahead the port way has something else in store a plunge into the deep mighty rocks gouged from the earth marked man's intrusion on this epic landscape by carving out these cathedral-like quarries the people of the port way have fashioned an unlikely beauty from its rocky expanse but nature too has penetrated this rock-solid surface to create an even more awe-inspiring abyss [Music] the elden hull is a chasm that plunges 60 meters deep into the bowels of eldon hill eldon is one of the highest limestone hills in the area and dominates the landscape it was believed to be the fortress of the elves and the local people thought this bottomless hole reached into the very center of the earth and thus to the abode of the devil himself in the 1720s daniel defoe visited elden hull and he was so impressed by its depth by sheer terrifying profundity that he said all the other natural wonders of derbyshire paled into insignificance compared to it he wrote what nature meant in leaving this window open into the infernal world if the place lies that way we cannot tell but it must be said there is something of horror upon the very imagination when one does but look into it and so frightening is this horrific gash you don't expect me to explore its inky depths i mean ordinarily i'd be up for it but for now i'll leave it to the experts i'll keep watch up here right you ready to go mate i'm ready off you go there so where we are now is here on the surface and then there is a 60 meter shaft down to this cavern place here and then there is another plunge another 60 meters down to some water there but we don't know that for sure off my army of potholers go to investigate the innards of this underworld [Music] it's no surprise really that in the past such a gloriously evocative place spawned so many dark legends but wait there's something down there maybe just maybe i've bagged my first elves we got them yep we have two of them two fantastic from the bottom should we should we go back up onto the surface and yeah have a look at them i'll bless them i can see two little faces it's only a young one isn't it yes i'm not surprised you want to bite me oh yeah should we just let them trot round oh they're walking fine aren't they they should be all right that's a relief keep an eye on them though we don't want them going straight back down again are they the only birds you've ever found down there no we found birds down there a few times frogs is what we find mostly down there hundreds of them and what about animal bones because we know don't we that a long time ago the farmer was complaining they kept losing livestock yeah so all the time and so we've been digging this over the last two years and we've been finding animal bones all all the way down through the rubble and then mayday bank holiday we actually found some human bones down there you're joking uh there's about 50 bones all together at full jawbone which is what you know we we we knew they were human from that so dundee university checked them out to get an idea of of uh you know when it was that they died but the very fact they were 16 meters down it must be 250 years ago do we know how many different individuals there was a there was an adult and a child are they going to be dated they are going to be dated so um nottingham university are going to be looking into that they're going to do some radiocarbon dating on it so hopefully soon we'll we'll have an idea well we may not have found any great archaeology this afternoon but we've rescued two birds what could be better here they go my newly liberated jackdaw friends will soon again have the perfect bird's eye view of this magnificent natural wonder while i however being a glutton for punishment have decided to plunge back once again into another rocky abyss in search of buried treasure [Music] the creek cliff cavern is a series of caves considered to be the finest of their type in britain and it's here where blue john britain's rarest mineral is excavated [Applause] gary hey tony with that is there a blue john seam here gary well it's right in front of us just here in the wall what is it just this dark muddy stuff all the purple and the yellow you can see all that's blue john what is blue john it's a type of fluorite um in here it's a very rare type of fluorite you only find it in this one hill nowhere else in the world and it's also very good for ornaments and jewelry and things like that and why is it called blue john well it's a corruption on the on the words blue and yellow it was a the french who called it the blue and yellow stone back in the 1700s uh they were working the stone turn it into all sorts of ornaments and things like that and when they ran out of the stone they'd say send us some more of that blue and yellow stone over some blurs and it got lost in translation yeah it became clue that's right you fancy you go all right yeah yeah let's go he's first of course you can hear that i'll try and catch it when it comes i was gonna say i don't think i'm smashing on the floor hey whoa there you go look at that tony oh that's lovely isn't it oh god bless you hold on that really is heavy isn't it yeah it's heavy stuff blue oh that's beautiful isn't it that face is great well done you're a minor so what will happen to it now it'll go outside we'll have to dry it out for a few months and then we'll decide whether we're going to turn it into bowls or jewelry you know earrings bracelets all that sort of stuff right i'll put my order in have a nice bowl please see what i can do fruit bowl okay for the bananas so yeah see you tony it's amazing to think that while dinosaurs stamped the ground above and supercontinents were still fused together this beautiful gem was taking shape millions of years of earth's magnificent violent evolution is embedded in its very fibre [Music] i'm heading back on the road for one last time to discover how one tarmac stretch has relinquished its ribbon-like appearance to the rugged beauty of mother hill or ma'am [Music] due to its constantly shifting shale this celtic hill fort is also known as shivering mountain its ceaseless battle against heavy rains causes smaller mounds to collect around its base and when remnants from a nearby lead mine were used to build a road landslides eventually terminated its track man's engineering once again defeated by nature [Music] this is the a625 between sheffield and manchester well it was the a625 between 1819 and 1979. just imagine a little over 40 years ago this would have been rammed with cars and buses and caravans and police vehicles and now it's completely slumped look on my work she mighty and despair and so as i depart this wondrous wild terrain where derbyshire's ancient port way cuts across the peak district i've discovered how rocks and stones have shaped the people while mother nature has crafted its landscape humankind and the might of its industry have carved their own stories but ultimately millions of years of natural evolution will always have the upper hand this ancient place will continue to tell tales etched deep into the stone long after we're gone
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Channel: Absolute History
Views: 85,171
Rating: 4.8559508 out of 5
Keywords: history documentaries, quirky history, world history, ridiculous history, black death, bubonic plague, the black death, the plague, plague cottage, eyam plague village, eyam plague village documentary, eyam plague documentary, ghosts, bbc ghosts, plague victims, plague in britain
Id: lLHjRqRffsg
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 46min 35sec (2795 seconds)
Published: Tue Oct 06 2020
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