The House of the White Queen | FULL EPISODE | Time Team

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that one of the finest manor houses in britain was built for a powerful family played host to Charles the first you can imagine how excited the archaeologists were when they discovered the moats of this grade 1 listed building except there was one tiny problem look at this map the archaeologists drew there's the house here's the moat and does it go up to here and then turn around the house no it goes hurtling off in that direction this is the direction the moats going in but what on earth's going on what's it protecting well there have been several theories from a roman fort to a royal court from a chapel to a heavily fortified cattle enclosure and we've got just three days to rip up this field and find out what this has got to do with that please don't let it be a cattle enclosure please not a Catalan closure [Music] Clank arc is just north of Cardiff City on a plateau of land in the middle of the rolling South Wales Valleys the earthworks we're here to investigate were first recorded in the 1970s but so far all attempts to establish exactly what they are for failed where is coming in now is where that ditch was but it makes sense to assume they've got something to do with next door flank I farm an ER where the powerful Pritchard family once entertained Charles the first and the manor itself now a museum and Education Centre is also a bit of a mystery because no one knows if it was the first house to be built on this side you've got this a whole place to run and you've got coach loads of kids coming in and all the tourists and you've invited us here for three days we have indeed I just really really want to know whether we've got anything else that's earlier than about 1530 which is what the date we think the house behind us is because I don't think the manor house is the only thing that's important on this site it's always struck me as rather strange that we have this potential motives enclosure and it actually goes out in the opposite direction from the house and in this document from the Royal Commission it says this might be a medieval motored site or on balance more likely a Roman origin and then the golden words excavation will be required to decide the matter so you're quite happy to find the kids and the children often absolutely no I'd be delighted so do we have an earlier moated house or even a roman fort in this enormous field it's a big question and for once we're not waiting for GF is to answer it there are definite artworks sir because some of the team have decided to break with tradition and open a trench immediately look at that not only a trench but a big one here are the three wise monkeys of archaeology then how come we got a trench in already well Stuart had a wonder about this morning and he picked up these very low earthworks but they seem to line up with the with the possible mode so we thought we'd go for it with some wait any longer a company years ago they put a trench across where they think the earthworks were and they found two rows of stones - sort of banks of stones with a post hole in the middle until we open up a bigger area we won't know whether we can identify these stone rows whether we can only find anymore postal we've got to think big surely this is gonna be the easiest dig we've ever done there's the house there's the moat something in the middle Bochco yeah except the term moat on an Ordnance Survey map covers a multitude of sins what does he mean well all it means really is that somebody's seen a bit of a depression I mean first of all what is a moat it could mean a water filled ditch it could just mean a dry ditch it could be something that's there's functional defensive it could be for fish it could just be something that looks nice in in your in your grounds I mean we've got no idea what this thing isn't really do you so our first trench has gone in over the tantalizingly visible bit of the l-shaped earthworks that everyone is calling a moat I reckon you learned more from that first trench that you do all the other ones you put through it gives you that first impression of this hole we suspect this earthwork may only be one corner of a much larger feature with some potentially stunning archaeology in the middle and until John and his team finished their survey of this field we can only guess what that might be Stewart do me a favor tell me our moat isn't a cattle enclosure well the problem with any ditch that turns a corner the bank with it historically people think of moats and moats they associate with medieval manors and so on but that could be the corner of any type of enclosure it could be a call of a Roman fort or thought that could be something like a medieval moat it could be a cattle enclosure but we've got to remember just beyond that set of trees up there there's at this a fine man house and so we've got to take those trees away and perhaps see in this field that we've part of the landscape that goes with that manor house over there so to work out what's going on in the field we need to find out as much as we can about the house and the most obvious thing about plank is our manor is that it's a house of wealth and which is probably not that surprising considering it belonged to a powerful Welsh dynasty called the pritchards as far as you know the history of South Wales goes Pritchard was quite an important character during the Civil War period he was governor of Cardiff Castle and then of Cardiff itself as well and he comes from quite important family they're thought to be part of the Royal line from Glamorgan and that's that's the genealogy that they want to hold so going back to he thought about who was sort of a king of Glamorgan you know some centuries beforehand I know it's early days yet but what do you think might be the relationship between this house and that field if we've got what looks to be a moated enclosure that's heading out across the field it's all made always made me wonder whether there's the possibility that there's an earlier building that's there we just need to try and see if we can find it [Music] so could our potential moat enclose the ancestral home of the Pritchard family well archaeological digs have shown time and time again that posh houses are built on top of or next to slightly less posh houses belonging to an earlier generation of the family and it seems unlikely that a house as grand as the current clan kayak fire was the first to be built on this side it's a so you might have had a big post in there yeah and Ben and Phil have now hit the first evidence of the mysterious earthworks that promise so much that Bank out there is one row of stones this could be to post over in the middle yeah and then we sold that way and we have another row of stones which is the other Bank who knows geophysics must be able to track it all the way across picking up the rest of this earth work feature and what's inside it in this lovely flat field should be a walk in the park for geophys I mean what could possibly go wrong it's lunchtime day 1 we've put in our first trench it was over where this moat like feature is supposed to be and sure enough it's there but the problem with this moat on the maps is that it looks vaguely l-shaped nothing more but now John has done the geophys is everything clear as clear as mud what do you mean well I've got an old stream bed for you ridge info flowering fuse lines nothing that looks like a moat ditch and I can't see any evidence for an enclosure in other words the field could be completely empty which is not good news with two and a half days still to go afternoon day one here at Klan [ __ ] in South Wales where we're looking for a moat which rather than going round the medieval house over there seems to be going off in this direction which is a bit of a puzzle but in order to solve it John's been out with his geophys team and frankly Ben I think we now know even less about this site than we did when we got in sneezed on it in black and white yeah that's not quite the idea of geophysics is it basically this geophysical phlegm has found no hint of the moat or any suggestion for the earlier medieval house we'd hope to find in this field and as for the moat well Ben and Phil have now worked out what the surveyors actually saw yeah we look here this mound of stones boulders and pebbles here that's that's more or less conforming with where the moat should be but I have to say there's nothing in this trench that looks terribly moat like and it ought to be here there's no moat oh dear so the moat the reason we came here doesn't exist but all due credit to John the geophys has thrown up something unexpected that has got Ben and the team intrigued there's some sort of linear feature ditch or something like that running up here turning a corner and coming down here this is enclosing a very large area and that ties in quite nicely with something that feels good at the end of the trench here we think we've got a feature running in that that direction but until we get a section across that ditch we can't tell what date it is it might be nothing at all to do with the medieval period it could be something much earlier we've got a dig it basically and have a look and what's intriguing about this newly-discovered enclosure is that it and what's inside it appear to be under in other words earlier than the medieval Ridge and furrow plowing let's have a go carry on and we'll see what we what we get so as well as investigating it in trench 1 we're opening a second trench further along its northern boundary [Music] we've been working on the theory that our main field may have been the site of a posh house that's earlier than the next-door grand manor house but to work out if that's the case we need to get as many dates from this site as possible including the correct date for when the manor house was built just cutting through this original yeah-yeah partition it looks like this whole corridor have been added early 17th century look at this collar its condition what about the original they've got tech holes for the common rafters so we've brought in a dendrochronologist because oddly enough the best dating evidence for a house is often found in the roof Timbers it's either significantly later than we'd anticipated or significantly earlier we'll pick up through the Dendera even if we don't get that that fine resolution dating yeah and that would potentially allow us to fit it into the family history so hopefully we'll get results back to you come day three brilliant the dendro dates and digging are going to have to be our main sources for the early story of LAN Chi because there's almost no written history for the Pritchard family prior to the 16th century that was all passed down through word-of-mouth although we do at least have an impressive family tree well they claim that they went back a very long way indeed and from up here you will see how they trace their descent back to a very distinguished hero in this area in the 12th century a man called Ivar up merrick and better known as evil bah heave or the small we know the Pritchard family lived somewhere in this area from at least the 12 hundreds but the first recorded mentions of a house at LAN Chi er don't appear until the mid 1500s guellen Newell Hebb colonia aglow and guy at glen kya we saw mist with no healthy heart and reign as a shroud over gland kya so do we know where they're living before our house is built unfortunately we don't and it'll be very exciting indeed if the archaeology can show that there was a major manorial center of the Middle Ages here prior to the house that we know of [Music] unfortunately we don't seem to have any evidence for a medieval manner in the big field but we're not giving up because Stewart has a theory if you come a bit further there's the other side of it against that tree there look oh you'd easily get a cart over that seriously big bridge he thinks the landscape may hold a clue to the location of an earlier house on the other side of this vast site guys you could have chosen a slightly nicer place well what we're starting to do now is kind of understand the site as a whole I mean we started out in that in the field on the other side over there we're now thinking 180 degrees different the houses over there were completely on the other side and looking through the the maps through time what we see is that the main road that probably is this house is associated with actually we're standing on it now the house is facing south so there's got to be something in this corner rather than that corner as an entrance what else might the feeling anyway so do you think this is the first house on this side I don't think there's anything in the house that to me says there's anything on that specific site before so does that mean there's unlikely to be another structure here no no there could be one in the vicinity of it perhaps why did you go ha ha ha Maps well here we have the the tithe map for the area you can see there's the house complex there there is a field here with a number 1483 in it and on the apportionment that goes with that 1483 has the name Hendra now I'm told by our Welsh speaking historian that is a very important name because it's often applied to the old settlement or the old place and that anything with that name is likely to have been sort of fossilized in the jog through the place by the middle ages so there might be something very old just in that field over there that's here before so thanks to his beloved Maps Stuart believes that this area to the south of the house may contain an earlier settlement so gif is once again find themselves surveying another nice big open flat piece of grass once again is the perfect site for geophys survey any vibes and so once again what could possibly go wrong is this a Stewart idea or is this actually bonafide I wouldn't say anything against you not when he's in the bucket shop Mamta truth hmm oh dear once again John can see no evidence of any structures and I was well worth waiting for isn't it yeah well back to the drawing board this was a Stewart plan yeah here is your answer so if there is an earlier house here then where on earth is it this morning I thought this big field presented us with one of the easiest most straightforward time teams we've done in a long time nine hours later I'm not so sure then can I remind you what this Royal Commission report written about thirty five years ago actually says this could be a medieval motored site on balance however a Roman origin is far more likely but excavation will be required to decide the matter well we've done the excavation it don't seem to be medieval it don't seem demoted and it doesn't seem to be Roman either correct but does this mean that there isn't an earlier building on this side no I don't think it means that at all I think logically it's it's likely that an early building would be somewhere around here so what's the strategy for tomorrow well as you can see there there's beautiful lawns we can't come busting in here with a big machine but we can get some test pits in here and hopefully we'll come across some deposit some layers something that just gives us a clue where this early house might be well we may have lost our moat but do we have an earlier building on this site well the only way to find out is to put our shovels into this beautiful garden I can't wait it's the beginning of day 2 here at LAN Chi foul Manor in South Wales and we may not have found a medieval house here in the so called moat field but we definitely have archaeology Oh [Music] two bits of char oh yeah lovely because both trenches are picking up traces of a massive enclosure ditch discovered by GF is I do wonder whether it could be could be seriously on yes Restorick if you like I wouldn't mind bad and that will now be our major investigation here because we've established there isn't a medieval moat here in spite of what it says on the maps what the Royal Commission saw were two banks and a slightly hallowed area in the middle and I think was created one of the banks is this big stony feature running through here and what you reckon that is well at the moment it is a bank and that's all we can say about it do you think we'll be able to date these two features well we got no sort of firm date in evidence but what these these features do seem to respect is the many able Ridge and furrows so I suspect that some of this is probably medieval what I don't understand is that just behind you there's a bunch of stones going in the completely different direction that is what is so important Tony because it is not going in the same direction at all is a totally different direction and we think this could be a much much earlier prehistoric enclosure on the site so been everyone around here yeah believes that there was at one time a moat in this field yeah we've had people leading over that gate for the last 24 hours saying our digging they're digging the motor are you.why the thing is the Royal Commission came and they saw some earthworks and a guess they did well to spot these features because they described them as slight but given that they're close to this big fortified house it was a natural thing to think this could be a possibility and moat and once you put it on a map it must be true do you now think that this field isn't going to be able to tell us the story of why this house was here in the first we've clearly got interesting things going on in this for we've got these these rubble banks we've got this early feature that Phil's been dealing with there's definitely a story to be told here but I'm not sure it's going to get us to where the early houses there is actually a chance that this big feature was a cattle enclosure or a horse paddock or something else but because these banks and potential post holes are so criss-crossed by later plowing it'll have to remain an enigma turn I've got some bad news for you okay break it to me gently then it also means I need to have a chat with Diane there is nothing that ties in with this house at all in this field all right okay so where do we go from here then I don't know how do you feel about that it's difficult because it creates more questions than it answers really you know I can't imagine that this field we don't just you know this area if they just suddenly put a house here in the 1530s you know there's got to be something that went before it you know it's such a perfect location it's near sort of their own Road it's near the river it's near the Ford you can't imagine that people haven't used it for living on sort of since time began almost if we want to find evidence of an earlier house or the first version of that house then we've got to move in that direction that's fine moving in that direction means moving into your lovely garden moving into your lovely garden means ripping it up at least bits of it that's fine we just dig holes in the lawn and see what happens so a lot of our effort is now shifting to the area immediately around the standing Tudor manor house as we try to find any previous buildings that may have stood on this site the test pits are so close to the house because geophys have already eliminated an area further to the south that Stewart thought may contain a Hendra an early Welsh settlement but undeterred Stewart has another target as he believes there should be some sort of structure on the original Road into the site we need to get across to as close as that wall that's possible so looking at some sort of else.you well what we're looking for over here and find our level and then we can chase it back it'll be a funny shaped wrench yeah it's a funny shaped area we've got to have a funny shaped wrenches we're putting in a couple of trenches here because we'd expect an earlier manner to have a defensive wall and a gatehouse because during medieval times this was the wild Welsh West constant feuds and lawlessness made even the most powerful families needed to defend themselves it's funny that on that door there are no defenses at all that's the first door you come to but the second door pull that across certainly the current manor house is a monument to the art of survival right and same thing another drawbar we're on the first floor now that doorway there goes through to the Lord's private quarters and that's defended in the same way so the pritchards could barricade themselves in there for what else fails wave before Lance really fells they can go down this to escape stir here down to another part of the house you'll see that this is a house of power and paranoia there's no such paranoia over in the moat filled more a profound sense of relief and jubilation because we've just made a remarkably rare discovery isn't that wonderful that looks very prehistoric and it looks like it's tending more towards the Bronze Age it's gotta be Bronze Age isn't it that's really something I've never dug a piece of Bronze Age thought up in my life and I I've been digging over 50 years you've never ever know donation pieces in museums no no no never seen this part suggests that people may have been living here during the Bronze Age and when you consider the whole population of the UK four thousand years ago was only about two hundred thousand it's like finding a needle in a haystack but I mean this should be an ideal place for a little Bronze Age settlement don't boil it a stream lovely place yeah I think there are just superb let's find some more yeah yeah this is the field that refuses to die yesterday evening we discovered that we hadn't actually got a medieval mode here then this morning we thought we might have something prehistoric and this afternoon we've discovered that yes we had got prehistoric and is actually Bronze Age which is apparently quite rare isn't it but all that brings into question our understanding of John's GF is bit Monty Python that's who shares in the middle of a field yeah we need the desk presumably looking for a medieval mote days rather different from trying to find something prehistoric in the gfs yeah I mean the problem we've got is all this medieval Ridge and fir plowing it's masking what's below and the plowing is not only eaten into the archaeology it's certainly eaten into the magnetic responses so trying to understand the geophysical anomalies he is even more difficult okay so if you forget about there being anything medieval here and you forget all this plowing is there any evidence in your gfs of something that might be prehistoric well the stream like that maybe of interest now then some of the ditches clearly these come into play we've now extended the survey down and look at some of these curving responses I mean it could be we've got a sort of Prius type landscape here so day one here day two over there and now it looks like we're gonna come back here again that's the way it goes that sounds very stony down there lecture back over at the house our quest for an earlier medieval manor is falling apart I've just found piece of plastic if there had once been a building in this area we'd have expected to find some evidence of it but there's not even a sniff of anything medieval I think we've actually got to call it a day on this one I don't think we're gonna get to where we want to get to with this and as for Stuart's latest target well yep over here we've got natural and over here we've got natural we do have a sewage pipe down there and we've got a beautiful 19th century cobbled surface have you been able to get underneath that what we have and we've got natural no go hospital no gatehouse no Road they boundary ditch none of what Stuart thought was gonna be here but it was worth a try oh dear so not only no moat but nothing medieval outside the Tudor house either and certainly no major defenses if there isn't anything here after all we're really up the creek oh no I don't think we are we've come here to test a possibility why is this house here is there anything earlier here and there's a range of possibilities it could be that there was an earlier ancestral home here and they simply built this grand new house in the same place it could be they arrived on a greenfield site we're here we're imposing ourselves on this area we'll build a big house here the other thing is that although they're thinking a bit about defense it's also the beginning of the period where they're thinking about the picturesque qualities of the landscape so again is it simply that it's just a wonderful area to be in and they're just hedging their bets with a bit of defence because over there is the bland still they're brave words but I don't know how much faith I have in them after all what do we have well as far as I'm concerned not a lot apart from gf is being on the verge of a nervous breakdown but just as I'm beginning to think this is one of the most frustrating sites we've encountered in a long time we make our first proper medieval find this little coin is a major discovery because we suspect it dates to before the time of the current manor house that's a little penny isn't it long cross handy got the cross on one show it innit well I'm not entirely sure cuz if you have a close look at it that appears to be a cross on both sites let me put my glasses and would you believe it it's not from the garden it's from the moat field that we dismissed as having nothing but evil in it what we can say is this is this this is earlier than the manor house isn't it no it might just be that someone dropped out of a pocket or a purse walking across the field it could be something like that but that proved so there were people in this field earlier than the manor house it's now the end of a perplexing day - well it's perplexed most of us although there is one man who seems to be content with the results of his Labour's I really am over the moon I mean not only have we got our piece of Bronze Age pot but more importantly we've now not got one Bronze Age ditch but three ditches and the beauty of that is that it implies that people have been living here for such a more extended like a length of time so we've got prehistoric occupation here for probably hundreds if not thousands of years and not only that you've got some rather good food a very very surprising finds we have not one but two medieval coins what's that date 14th century if they're 14th century am I right in saying it is medieval but it's earlier than our house absolutely yeah we finally extended activity back earlier than the present house so there's all to play for not only have we got something prehistoric and fairly epic but it looks as though something quite exciting was going on here in the Middle Ages before that house was built what'll it be we'll find out tomorrow it's the beginning of day three of our dig in South Wales and it's not just the weather that's taken a turn for the worse have you started then well you're there the moods also darker amongst the diggers yes it's where in spite of our best efforts we can't find any evidence of an earlier manner here at flank high but we're not giving up yet even if it means we have to turn the whole garden upside down so why we putting this region well this is the back side of the house really and well we see that up there the Privy garderobe that tiny little window then yeah well this is the area where all the sort of rubbish and muck wood would be deposited and presumably we could possibly find evidence here of an earlier phase of this building if an earlier phase exists salutely yes the thing is hopefully we'll have some rubbish pits or a midden heap something with some early pottery in because it's been remarkable how clean this site is we've got very little pottery it must be going somewhere and pushing it towards the back seems it seems a good candidate a lots riding on this trench to the north of the manor we found no trace of an earlier house in the test pits and trenches to the south and yet common archaeological sense suggests there could be an earlier Manor here we've got to go back the whole way now so hopefully something else comes up a bit further along otherwise we're going to be rather disappointing again and all I can say to people is natural the fridge odds who owned plan Kirk Manor had lived in the area since the 12th hundreds and yet this house was built much later although no one's ever come up with an exact date until now Nigel you've got a dendro date for us 15:48 so 1565 and you're pretty certain about that okay thanks ever so much mate but you murmured the word later all things in these four commission volume suggesting around the 1530 so 1548 a little bit later than we thought but but we you know got a date what does that date tell you about the house it tells us that the house is more old fashioned than before really because you know you're looking at mid 16th century don't expect something like this at that date normally so we're bit in the backwards then really at that point on that little bit yes you've been looking after this house and doing all this reconstruction for ages but you've never actually known how old the house was we just all we knew was around the 1530s well you know that's just fantastic to know that's the thing because we've never known with this date of roughly 1550 we've at least answered one of Diane's questions about LAN Chi it also makes the coins we're finding in the next-door field all the more intriguing because they predate the standing house it's either reference or six months most likely of Elizabeth the first it's already special I think as well as this fantastic find we've also discovered coins that are over a hundred years earlier than the current house I can see a crown I can see a crown because we've got the further we've got one of the flip there it's excited and I think dr.light over you can see the one of the fleur-de-lis is is complete in the middle and you can see a half fleur-de-lis at the end so it's the angular end of a crown these works kind of around 1280 but instead of jumping for joy that we found evidence of an earlier house the archeologists have taken a more pragmatic view as to why the coins are here this coin could just have been dropped as an accidental loss it isn't necessarily evidence for earlier activity on this site it's three or four coins different days but all from this area you've detected all the other is moral and the other trenches but they're concentrated here hmm that's that's interest do you think that might be evidence of settlement or evidence of trading or what it's evidence of where people have been congregating with money in their pockets and that's route ways meeting places that kind of thing isn't it yeah and it would seem that flank I was at a major intersection of Route ways we've got the the house here and it's quite clear looking at it that it's in a landscape dominated by deep valleys the great advantage of the stream the Chaya coming down there is that it defines for you we've got a shallow pass running through here that actually it allows you to run from east to west across the valleys is something that's really quite unique and important for this area this is one of the few places that routes from deep in the valleys would meet with east-west traffic so the coins aren't evidence of a grand early house but more likely of a dodgy crossroads where for centuries travellers tripped up and lost their loose change another patch of charcoal in the bottom there yeah is Tracy and yet this field has produced our best discovery so far a network of bronze-age ditches some three and a half thousand years older than the house but even with this information we still can't make head or tail of the geophys I mean we've done more survey and we're getting the same sort of results I mean we've still got odd lengths of ditches we've got odd pits and they're scattered right across the field but there's no clear patterns in the results there's no sort of discreet nice juicy target to go for if I could extend that trench all the way down the field hang on so how wide is that trench very wide and you'd like to extend it down the tank yeah yeah why not slightly just maybe just slightly I don't think we can just go poking around hoping that we're gonna hit something in here keep looking you might find something small or sexy in the meantime I'm going on to another scene right so Phil we've got all sorts of features in here so when I've got school children coming in just we'll go around the site and I want to be able to tell them what we found in the field what am I going to be able to tell them about what was going on here in the prehistoric period well what you can say with absolute certainty is that people have been here for at least 4000 years and we do have a lot of ditches let's be clear a base over and we're mat is where you can see he standing in one next door is another one and next door to that is another one those ditches have been recut they've been read ugh they've been read dug by hand that's a lot of effort what that does mean is that their boundaries of stage static for a very long time what is absolutely indisputable is that we've got one piece of early Bronze Age part that's going to take us back to about 2000 BC so thanks to Phil and his diggers dogged determination Diane has got a story to tell about this field just not the one she was expecting but there is a chance that the kids who visit here will be more interested in the story about the daytime team took a mechanical digger to plan kayaks beautifully manicured lawn because been under the concerned watch of the manners gardeners is opening another trench to the north of the house this trench is our absolutely last-ditch attempt to find any evidence of a house or actually anything medieval that predates our house if a cable I don't think it's still connected to anything because our previous last-ditch attempt to find something of archaeological note hasn't been completely successful just when we thought that we weren't going to get any archaeology at all away from the field over there away from the house over here on the far side of the current boundary of that house where failure rack shall have been working on their own for ages they found evidence not only of life but of death to have you fight we certainly got evidence of death yes we've got what looks like a dead horse I did horse yep can you date it well we've got one bit of pottery from actually that trench though which is 17th century so we can now say that sometimes a horse died on this farm thank you for your contribution to this story I'll avoid any remarks about flogging a dead horse although I can't help but wonder that in spite of Ben's heroic attempts to reel and scape the whole of the garden its natural this looks like that trumps oh we are now flogging a dead what you call it I just cannot understand the lack of pottery rubbish detritus these must have been the cleanest people in Whitehorse the evidence speaks for itself [Music] so here we go the time line this is the Bronze Age little piece of pot there nothing in the Iron Age nothing in the Roman nothing in the early Christian of a Viking or the Norman here we are in the 15th century we've got two coins 16th century a thimble 17th century a rope a piece of tile 19th century a penny in a bit of pot Helen what's happened well from the archaeological evidence it seems like we have a bit of activity here in the Bronze Age and then a great lot of nothing until sometime in the 16th century people start dropping things maybe they built a house and then they apparently went away again I have to say in defense of all the people who were living in all these vast ian's of time they might have been making stuff that hasn't survived in the ground they might have been but that's that's absence of evidence and it's really dangerous to use that to argue that that is evidence of absence yeah yeah but it's getting there it's written nearly good enough to say nothing was happening I stopped to depressing No thank you Helen so we nearly have enough to say nothing was happening between the digging of these Bronze Age ditches and the building of the current Manor and that's a resolution of sorts I suppose it really didn't help having that native feature yeah but surprisingly there is a faction of the team that thinks the two could still be linked and it's all down to the medieval welsh love of heritage and making a link with your ancestors we now know that the ditches over there might be as old as Bronze Age they're certainly old do you think that the pritchards would have been aware of that when they came to build their house here certainly Phil and Ben seem quite confident that whatever there was out there could have been visible in the 16th century when they got here and this could I think have been a real attraction for a gentry family so if it's an ancient place to build a house next door would give them a kind of air of legitimacy that we've always been here this is a period when the antiquarian movement is becoming much more popular much more widespread as part of the cult and the education of the gentry there was certainly a cachet there was a value to having what in now in modern archaeological terms he called an ancient monument having that very direct and immediate connection with the past would have been something that would have meant a great deal to them and I think is very exciting the possibilities here we're now confident that echoes of that prehistoric landscape would have been visible in the 16th century but our hunt for an earlier medieval Manor has been a completely different kettle of fish well digging produced nothing to the east of the building while GF is and test pits showed nothing to the south the results weren't too hot either to the west and as for the north well we did find an electrical cable and a dead horse that was feeling generous I'd call it a mixed result okay after three days excavation are we in a position to say whether or not there was a medieval Manor anywhere on this site before this one yes we are in a position to say that understand listen no I'm certain not one scrap of medieval pottery from all these holes we've dug and if there was a medieval house here we'd find pottery everywhere I'm sure of it it's just not there you've not even seen any background manure in on the fields you get when when previous are cleared out and it shot the stuff on the land but not got any of that which rather begs the question why did they build this place on the green field side if you think about what originally brought us to this site it was that people saw an earthwork over there and it was if it was visible in the 1970s it should have been visible in the 1570s as well I think that is what drew them here and we know that that there was an interest the past on the part of the prytt charts and we know that there's an interesting place to name field name of Hendra i think there's all point to this being a special place that's quite interesting you're saying they might have built this place here because in folklore it was an important site I think there's every chance of that yeah so we now know the pritchards didn't come here until the 1550s when they built a beautiful if somewhat old-fashioned house on a major crossroads besides some ancient mysterious earthworks and it's tantalizing to think that they were trying to forge a link with the great Welsh hero Eve or bar the 12th century icon from whom the pritchards claimed to be directly descended no no we're just talking to a couple of local people who work here and they were over the moon that we'd managed to take the story of this site right back to the prehistoric well it's absolutely wonderful you know I mean you always hope that you're gonna find things that are really fascinating but to find out we've got something that's a Bronze Age enclosure it's wonderful and we've dated your house yeah which was you know every little bit extra just makes more of the story as we tell a better story but what strikes me is really ironic is that the people who put that house up thought they were harking back to their ancient ancestors for 400 years previously but in fact they were walking back to their ancestors 3,000 years previously amazing isn't it really [Music]
Info
Channel: Time Team
Views: 230,275
Rating: 4.8636217 out of 5
Keywords: Team Team, Archaeology, History, Education, Educational, British TV, British History, Tony Robinson, Phil Harding, John Gater, Stewart Ainsworth, Mick Aston, archeological dig, Channel 4, Time Team Full Episodes, Full Episode
Id: 60GFYLFdxbk
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 47min 39sec (2859 seconds)
Published: Wed Mar 11 2020
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