The Worst Jobs in History: Dark Ages (Dark Ages Documentary) | Timeline

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a piece of our history over here this is Hadrian's Wall or at least what's left of it it's stretched way up there originally in miles in that direction and miles in this direction but it feels so historical just sat here in the landscape it seems to tell us so much about the might of the Roman invader and their fears of the people who were attacking from this direction what we seldom think so much about those is the fact that every single one of these blocks had to be brought here by someone hacked out of a piece of rock transported and then stuck one on top of the other and then somebody had to do a bit of pointing and that's what this series is about those people and people like them forget about the Roman emperors and the kings and queens this series is about the people who literally made our history the medieval war industry would have been nothing without Fuller's spending hours in stale urine without the Victorian Navis dog tracks trains would never have gone anywhere Henry the eighth's Court would have come to a messy hint without gold scours keeping the sewers flowing and Handel's water music was only possible because violin string makers were prepared to get their hands dirty in fact I think of a lot of jobs or the lowest rungs of the historical career ladder involves some kind of disgusting substance or other blood and gore and urine and dung I'm gonna be up to my waist in all of them because when I've established what I consider to be the worst job in any particular era I'm gonna have a go at it myself welcome to the worst jobs in this [Music] in this program we're looking at the worst jobs in the thousand years up to 1066 some were hard someone Missy [Music] others were just frightening them oh Jesus Christ written history began when the Romans invaded and they brought some horrible jobs with now we know what the Romans gave to us all those lovely straight roads and measurements like the mile and the calendar but it wasn't all one way they wanted something from us gold gold was very important to the Romans they used it as a status symbol and we had it here in southwest Wales [Music] the Romans sorted out deep underground getting it out is one of the worst jobs in the Roman Empire the Romans had plenty of rotten jobs most of them done by slaves but for me the worst of them all was working in the gold mines even Pliny the Elder who had slaves of his own was shocked at the conditions it was so bad that working in the mines was used as a means of kashrut local population in Wales was plundered by healthy people to dig out the gold welcome to the worst job of Roman gold mining the gold has come from the center of the earth it's been interrupted through volcanoes etc millions of years ago and into the movement of the earth and plate tectonics it comes up in this bigger typical demand that you just got to keep on digging it and it might take you up it might take you down so you have to chase these things you'd have to chase it basically at any point it could open up to a bigger vein so you'd have to keep on chasing the don't open until you know you've come to me how do you get the stuff out you use a pig it's pretty difficult to swing a pick in here with me it's a small big I don't realize you meant to pick quite as small as this one how do you use it you just chip away you can see you've got a quartz vein there yeah I'm gonna try and chip away at that to expose the core to get it super wet the ordinary rock and that's right hope quartz comes work just peeling off a bit Amit is yes what do you think the conditions would have been like pretty horrible you can imagine in the summer would be very hot lots of men working here and they would have had candles they would have had small little lamps that they would have used and but the rest of the mine would be obviously totally pitch black so in the summer time very warm in the winter very calmly in colder down here than outside so you can imagine you've got the worst of both worlds there in some ways it's an easier job than I thought it would be because this rot fracture so easily but on the other hand it gets in your eyes lucky you're wearing glass and the appian knows all the time it's not actually the nicest job in the world I think half of them or I've got a bit of quartz that laughs of them would have been blind by the time they'd been doing it for a year or so in fact many of them died before they had the chance to go blind because the Roma's were impressions we're always coming up with more efficient ways of doing things getting through lots of real quickly was a priority so they came up with fire city the process of smashing rocks on an industrial scale the cost in lives didn't matter slides Butchie if you look at this area here if you can imagine what you would have done is built up this area full of timber branches logs etc and set it alight you would have kept that going then for maybe three or four days I've been smoking in here exactly you would have had a lot of smoke it would have been an intense heat tear as well also parts of the rock would have started to break and shatter at that point but after then a few days you'd throw water on it buckets of water and that would cause a bit like a mini explosion the whole face there would crack and shatter so be an incredibly boring job a very smoky job and then a very dangerous job exactly but it would show you where the seam is going then once it's all shafted you get a pile of rock just like we got here the problem then is that you're left with large quantities of rock to carry out it takes this lot ten truckloads to get one load of quartz out within this box there's maybe a piece of gold the size of half a cube of sugar in Roman times hundreds of men would have been doing this bent double-o carrying big heavy loads day-in day-out that is and if the weight was bad enough it was always the danger of falling rocks let's find when the tunnels are wide but when he gets about here they're carrying this weight and having to duck down - to make emperor's lightly roerich took the lives of hundreds if not thousands of early Welsh miners people who were forced to work in the most horrible dark and dangerous leadership mic was hard for the first 400 years of British history but at least when the Romans were gold-mining something beautiful came out at the end of it for the Saxons who followed them though things were pretty bleak look at the materials I'm gonna have to be handling to break into the Saxon building trade [Music] the Romans brought a sense of order with them they were very civilized they built streets with houses and workshops in neat straight lines [Music] then they left what we did we went back to this when the Romans left we went back to living in mud hearts in higgledy-piggledy streets this was how most of the country lived until the middle of the Middle Ages despite all that the people who lived here after the Romans left were part of a very highly structured society at the top of the local Kings below them were various kinds of noblemen all of whom were warriors so basically their job was to fight and below them with everybody else doing the ordinary jobs at the bottom of the pile propping up everyone else it was the Saxon peasant but sure he didn't get paid he had a few acres of land and his job was simply to keep himself and his family alive he needed to be a jack-of-all-trades Farmar builder he has to do some baking woodsmen and he also had civic services too [Music] most people of course lived off the land which meant that they had to work it which brings us to a very difficult and back-breaking job would they have had to do very much power plowing was quite literally a matter of life and death if you didn't work the land if you didn't have plow your fields and plant your crops you wouldn't have food on the table so plow was important to everybody right through society why did they use oxen and not horses cattle much stronger than horses beefier they can wade through the kind of soil that we're working on here horses were much rarer in the anglo-saxon period they there were horses but they tended to be grander animals so they were the kind of things that hire more important people in society would own the word acre is an old Saxon word it was the amount of land one could expect a plough in a day it wouldn't have looked as sophisticated as this though their plows weren't made of metal that does make a difference also I'd like to think that someone's got a plow itself very rudimentary on the back get a good grip on the handle here okay okay how do I dig it in you just got to lean a little bit of weight on it as you go along oh I see yeah okay I can go when you want to move forward you're gonna say walk on yep it's everyone and Oswin so if you call their names first of all they'll wake up I know gah that's always in charge now walk on and steady [Music] okay so nicotine you need to apply a lot of heavily downwards team of people helping me out oh it's alright then learning who's boss and when get round get your bum real this way come on be quite honest I think they're a bit fat spoiled these two this might look like a bit of fun but for a Saxon farmer it wouldn't have been this was the day job the job he had to do continually to ensure food for him believe we go look at this good boys good boys as well as all the other stuff this was just one more joke I just want you to see this finally tilled field [Music] honey my crops gonna work pretty well [Music] but looking after the family's needs wasn't simply a matter of putting food on the table the churl also had to provide shelter and this came from wood in the Saxon period seventy percent of the country was covered by trees and people really did use wood for lots of stuff from firewood to plows one of the things that we know they use wood for was making their houses and to make them they use this rather spindly looking stuff which would eventually be transformed into a wall looking like this this is wattle isn't it for what'll endure that's right how'd you set it up we're going to wave this into the hurdle yeah well I'll turn it side to the rod below it yeah put the butt of that in in front of the the Enzo like that yeah take it in front of that sail looks like it'll snap off isn't it well it should be flexibly enough to come down push it down at that end oh yeah really does kink doesn't it green so it's flexible and then when we get to the end yeah we have to bring this round now if we just if we just pull it yeah it's gonna just snap yeah yeah so we have to separate the fibers and we do that by if you want to just pull it towards us yeah and we're gonna twist as we do it so where's the way twist yep twist away that's it like that and eventually we should see oh yeah it's turning it's a rope isn't it that's right before my realize it comes round and that one might even go right there to finish it off Oh only another 60 will ever warm building this little bit took ages and all I was doing was assembling it I didn't have to gather the right sorts of wooden strip it all down and split it to make sure I had enough of the right length this might be interesting if you're doing some arts crafts who does a job getting 20 or serve these together for a house or fencing the worst mr. waiting for this is what a finished wall should look like but as you can see it's pretty drafty so the next job is to fill in the gaps and to do that we need door hence the term wattle and door and dog comes in four parts there's water straw mud and wide um if you're using a lot of topsoil to cover a wall trouble is with top stones if you mix it with water and you slap it up on the wall once it dries it can crumble and fall off so if you put this stuff in then it acts like a binding agent really hold the soil together first of course you need to put some straw in as well it's going to take a long time to fill our bucket how much we gonna need buckets and buckets of the stuff or as much as the horses will actually give us the next thing is we need some water just squidge it all up as I say yes I call that like so and you need a lot more water than you'd think so that's just the first bucket then another one and then might as well put the the binding agent in you and then spread it around a bit like so yeah and then you need your straw this stuff's pretty important so when we when the mud cracks a bit in the hot weather this holds all the pieces what we need to do now is just get in it yeah like so and stomp and stomp and you've got your wellies on if I got my Saxon boots which design that's good for the skin Oh wonderful yes this is gonna be a good brew actually next though with a little bit of an actress you get a handful like that yeah yeah then you always start us at the bottom we find that's best because each layer so just supports the layer above funk it on and then you get your palm you just smooth it in like this so I get a big dollop like so yeah roll it into sort of a little bit of a ball I was getting mixed up in the scarf starts at the bottom and you whack it on and then slide it into the woods yes bless me with you dollop oh you'll get me back the cycling must be pretty messed up you're into that crap once you get your system going it's amazing how fast you can cover a wall [Music] I wish you wouldn't keep doing it keep smashing yeah at the end it should have looked like this lovely isn't it [Music] but even after he whittled his wattle and slapped his dog the Charles chores just started life in the house was very dull and incredibly repetitive for instance the fire was the focal point of all the activity in the house but it did not burn up a lot of fuel it could take up to four hours to get enough wood just to keep this one single fire going which was why it was important to have the children around because that was a job that they could help with and then there's this the daily grind that's where we get the expression from this is the quern stone where they used to grind the corn how did this work Fiona and the barley grains go into the middle of the hole in the corn and you turn it and rotate it the two stones squash the grains together to make flour so there's no flour beneath these two now there is amazing and how long would you have to do this for and it takes about three to four hours to produce enough flour to make bread for a family of 12 so after you've done the three or four hours grinding you can relax a bit by kneading the dough and when you've done that you'd form it into little patties put it on the fire and when they were cooked you'd have enough bread for the family but your whole life wasn't just limited to what happened in the house sometimes civic duty called the Dark Ages were turbulent times when 50 England had formed into three warring kingdoms with Umbria Mercia and Wessex they fought each other and Outsiders on top of his other jobs the churl had to do national service all those axes swords and armor required iron and that created another terrible job the pork pie announcer [Music] what are we laughter Jerry wall looking for tenants is a stuff called boggle it's the the iron ore that was used certainly in the Saxon period in Saxon times bogs were the main source of iron ore for smelting the wetlands will where the or had developed across millions of years it then just had to be found who the doers have been it would have been doing this probably at the very bottom I think I mean it's a mucky hard endless job because they would probably be needing possibly when they were doing a lot of an smelting 30 or 40 kilos a day it's alright for us because we've got work with a gear on that I would have had anything alright it's a thankless task because obviously the iron smelter was dependent on getting his iron ore needle in the haystack is that it's it is it is I mean they probably no good idea where it is but not exactly where it is and because they'll be utilizing it year in year out they're always looking for new sources so they'll be out there all the time looking for it in probing for it something that's yeah going clunk of it yeah that's the sort of things that we're looking for you say sort of thing is it it it is it doesn't look like anything special but that is Bogor how much metal directing there is in there well I think if we were going to do a smelt tomorrow we probably need another 10 or 15 of these because the only ways perhaps two or three kilograms and they're just scaffold off around the bogs it is this was a back-breaking and thankless job out in places like this [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Music] chok nowadays all our charcoal is mass-produced it's just something in a big sack that you heave into the back of the power but in Saxon times it was very different everybody needed charcoal virtually all of the time and it all had to be made and that was a long hard and very difficult job every little town and village would have had its own charcoal maker they set themselves up in the forest they cleared a space and collected would solve it three tons or so they then built it up into a sort of igloo shape carefully placing the wood so it didn't collapse this basically ended up as a sort of giant oven to slowly bake the wood they lit a fire inside which would have taken about five hours or so to catch well it looks like it's the moment of truth [Music] they had to be careful to make sure it just smoldered and didn't really burn as such if it burned too strongly then the whole lot would have gone up maybe also bits of the forest - but what made this are really horrible job was the process once it was lit what you had to do was just sit and watch it for up to 100 hours side you sit for many an hour watching a charcoal kiln day and night and the tendency is to get a little bit bored and to nod off and it is very frightening to wake up and find a big hole in your kiln with flames leaping 1215 feet in this guy so the charcoal burn has developed a one-legged stool so that if they did not off they literally nothing off they're still kept them awake right let's leave them suing them we'll pop back in a few days or so there's one other skilled craftsman who deserves a mention on any list of the worst jobs in history a man who risked his limbs for his work a man who lived constantly in fear always afraid of being denounced for cheating my next worst job welcome to the world of the coin Stamper the Saxons produced the first penny in 765 at that time every local area had to happen to admit [Music] each one had five or six people like this cutting and hammering away and making coins [Music] it was really like early police work but these guys didn't get paid they got bed and board yet they were surrounded by all this money a toy coins had to be shoot you might think the poor old Stamper would be tempted to snip off the odd bit of silver if he was caught the punishments were severe shaving a bit off the coins was seen as defacing the king's head a very serious offence penalty was castration and if a whole coin went missing then this guy's boss had his hand cut off and nailed to the door as a deterrent so the pressure was really applied how long cold days in the mint and no chance of a mistake [Music] back out in the woods dave has been awake for 48 hours solid [Music] but it's not over yet for the charcoal-burner time is the enemy there's still a danger that the whole knot goes up in smoke and after another 24 hours this is the big moment after a week of hard work and sitting around staying awake the Saxon charcoal makers were left with this much charcoal and because charcoal was in so much demand in Saxon times they just had to clear this lot away and start the whole process again the monastery was a key part of Saxon life serenity of reflection and prayer singing compared with the drudgery of outdoor life this looks pretty cushy hang on that is just the telly it may have looked like that in medieval times or at least in our rather romantic vision of medieval times with lots of cloisters and plainsong and people praying and meditating very quietly but in Saxon times it was much harder it was a really tough job to start with the monks would have lived in huts just like these and they too would have had to build them themselves they had to make their own bread and they also had to do their own plowing in fact the worst part of being a monk was that they had to do everything that everyone else had to do and they had the day job well this is a far cry from the medieval cloister there indeed it is is it this is exactly a Dark Age monks cell what you see is what you get no furniture no furniture a bit of blanket perhaps for a bed on top of straw for your eating ions you know drinking vessel plate knife to to cut your bread and that was it and very very strict prayer regime and all the other work they had to do as well how many times did they have to pray about eight times in 24-hour period and this isn't just hands together eyes close down the church down to the church yes in that was stipulated exactly at a the regular hours throughout the day what times starting just after midnight bear in mind of course they didn't go to bed quite as late as we did just after midnight then about 3:30 in the morning then later at 6 o'clock 6 o'clock in the morning was called the first our first hour of daylight when there'd be have their prayers then they go off to work and then straight after that you'd have 9 o'clock time then midday and in about 5:30 in the afternoon and then later the late prayers before the winter bed went to bed about 8 o'clock you say what happened if you just gave it a Miss and slept in oh that was just a death that no no punishments were quite strict quite severe anything even being late for a service with a would have meant a severe punishment what do you mean by punishments so there were various type of punishments for the lesser faults that though you would almost certainly have to prostrate yourself in front of the Brethren this was called making the vania what do you mean by frustrate yourself doubt with your arms outstretched on your front oh that's right like that arms outstretched yeah and that's where you would be and the abbot and all the others would be around you and you would stay there until such time as the abbot thought that you've had enough roughly how long it could be you know as long as that particular gathering was it was in session so you could be talking up to hours perhaps don't think my sin was particularly grave for the gravest of offenses you could of course be thrown out of the monastery sounds super bad a punishment a myth well it might have been a really good thing if you were that sort of person though you just didn't really want to do it anyway but if you were that sort of person how would you fare in Saxon life you know you wouldn't really ever guess and get on anyway would you really this is some government famous monks like him weren't in trouble that often but their lives were still very hard and some of it was accepted as a big part of the job [Music] one of the worst parts of the job of being a monk has got to be atonement this was the process whereby you suffered as a monk in order to try and prevent other people your community from going to hell there were lots of different forms of sufferings but one of the things that's tough but it wasn't that he's to wade out into the sea sometimes in the middle of winter and in the freezing cold and hot he'd pray after seven or eight hours at a time he did it in secret but people saw him and he became very famous tourists I don't know he actually stopped anybody going to hell or not but what we do know is that within three hundred years the entire country was Christian I tell you what I was [Music] the worst job of being a monk though was the writing great writers like the venerable bede give us a lot of our history of the period but most monks didn't really write as much as just copy texts which was far more boring the danger of making mistakes was always in cold conditions because they didn't have much light he usually works by open door remember they didn't have brows so they one Benedictine monk wrote the eyes where is the back since Christ Thanks [Music] because of the valuable books monasteries were a prime target for Raiders and not just any old Raider the biggest danger facing many people in Saxon times was the Vikings the Vikings began raiding Britain in the seven 90s although they started out as breeders once here they began to settle down eventually they created their own kingdoms the daily stretching time thing about the Vikings is that we have such a generalized view of them so these great hairy men who sailed across the sea in order to hack us to pieces rape our women and set fire to our churches but it was much more to them than that welcome to the worst job of the Viking warrior now when I think of Viking boats I think of pretty large ships with a dozen or so people growing and the rest hanging around being carried to battle it's fine when the winds up and you can raise the sail it fairly clips along but I didn't think it would be like this just room for about 16 of us life has been like on the boat well it would have been pretty cramped and uncomfortable as you can see we're pretty tight in here even as it is and it's a lovely day if we were appearing across the North Sea or the Atlantic on a rough day we have water spraying all over us and of course we wouldn't just be rowing in the in the afternoon we'd have the problem of we'd be here all night so you've gotta sleep in this space it will be huddled down between the sea chests no privacy so it'd be cold wet probably extremely smelly and remember no toilet facilities we've just got the sides of the boat well they're really women Viking sailors there's at least one reference to a Viking army coming across from the continent to England bringing the women with them but for the longer voyages when they went out to settle in the North Atlantic settling the bearers and Iceland and so on they took their whole families with them the women would certainly have been on the boat and the chances are they'd have done their share of the rowing as well [Music] it's impossible to imagine how you just do it for two or three days you know so we've been running and bailing out for two days and two nights finally land ahoy and we want to get over here somewhere so we've got two alternatives we can either sail all the way around this headland about 20 miles till we come to here or we can carry the boat over this hill this process was called portage it was a common Viking practice the two key aspects to it was speed quickly can this be done and for the boat Viking ships were made from single planks split radially from very long trees building there was tricky and time consuming so repairs away from home were not a good idea but more inherently the ship was also a spiritual symbol important Vikings were buried in their boats ensuring that the boats were well looked after was very important Gareth even with this number of people I find it hard to believe that you could shift the Botes happiest this one is by hand well it's not gonna be easy but what we're going to do is shifted along these wooden runners these things here yeah so we slide it along the runners yeah it's a half lifted half pushed and we've got the rope there to drag it as well and we slide it along the runners someone comes behind picking up the runners once it's been over them moving them around to the front and just keep moving and keep moving I don't understand why wouldn't the boat just snag on these things well this is where it gets really unpleasant because to stop it snagging the runners have got to be greased with well there's various things that we can use for that lard is one butter is another probably rancid after a couple of weeks on board ship but what we're gonna be using is fish these things yes that's right it's pretty absurd isn't a line of fish with a boat sliding down them we're not going to use whole fish there's lots of oil and grease in there but what we're gonna have to do before we can use them is mash them up think your instinct right what do we do with these little sweethearts now basically pick them up and smooth them on the logs [Music] is that after four days in a box they were really smelly you can't imagine how much they stack this stage moving the boat looked like the easy bit we've got it lifted already basically what we're going to need to do is some craft lift and half push so get your weight underneath as far as you can so you're taking some of the weight off the keel that way there's less weight to actually push forward what's biking for one two three go one two three go one two three go [Music] [Applause] [Music] Oh shoulder fish right [Music] I'll tell you that fish grease really does work but just to say that does have to be one of the worst jobs but it wasn't the very worst for me the worst job of all in the dark ages I still don't have a go at the worst job of each year and myself so what's the worst job that the first thousand years of British history can throw at me building a saxon house wasn't the most pleasant of tasks all being a Viking warrior sailing and the mic over my trousers but there was one job which I reckon was worse than any of those it was a job where you risked your life for the most basic of foods where your workplace required a really good head for Heights and where your technical equipment and health and safety were a bucket and a rope but I've committed myself to doing it even in this pouring rain so welcome to the world of the Guillemot egg collector in the Dark Ages Guillemot eggs were much sought after they were good to eat and bigger than most farming was tough and unpredictable collecting eggs with scene is essential many people believe that chickens were sacred so you couldn't actually eat their eggs that meant you have to look elsewhere here getting to the eggs was difficult people went over the edge on a rope with a bucket to collect them they went out in all weathers and were often attacked by Birds trying to protect their eggs in Victorian times the people who did this were known as climbers it was a nasty job but I geared up in sacks and clothes and had a go this looked reasonably authentic dear well it's not super how do we know that people were actually doing this well there's an account from 10th century of a trader who visited King Alfred and he described some of the people that were harvesting various products down 10 also eggs from what he described as egg man to egg mountains well that would take to be the sort of sea cliffs and the sea colonies why would they have been collecting guillemots eggs in the first place well guillemots eggs would have been a big rich form of protein at a time when other forms of food would have been relatively scarce and the secret should have been laden with thousands of them but they would have needed to keep the eggs and without refrigeration that would have meant that fresh eggs at least every two three days what they've been doing this for money no this would have been the food that they needed the biggest battle they faced was to put food on the table and it's sometimes the year in a bleak landscape like this who could be very scarce so the Guillemot is were actually nesting in the sheer cliffs yes they tend to nest on fun ledges and they get pretty aggressive when you try and take their eggs watch out below how did the egg collectors get down there well they would have needed to use two handmade Road now there are lots of materials that could have used but what was very popular to use sealskin like this and this would have been cut in birth and braided together to actually make a rope they could have also of course used something like this and just hang on to it and and go down wow pretty well they would have needed to take a bucket with them to collect the eggs in so your one-handed yes you think I'm doing it like this you've got to be mad fortunately I'm gonna be able to do it the proper 21st century way getting kitted up with modern safety gear didn't really make me feel any better about doing this I chosen this as the worst jobless accident area for me cliff with very few Birds of any description I was still desperately unhappy when it came to actually do it these ledges yeah nobody on the safety system yeah I like Jesus Christ this is Rick he's gonna be a safety man yeah I've never I've sailed in my life before just touching down mate [Music] at this stage I was really glad I was being attacked like Saxony collectors and someone was passing the bucket down to me someone else had seen egg I'm seeing I can see you later and see you Nick I don't know how the hell I get it even I could see my shoes come off oh Christ no back over here there's an egg just over here it's horrible leaning back and I said another letter get it in the bucket without breaking the bloody things in we're wrong hand God knows how they laid the damn things here totally done you this point where you look at those safety I quite like to appear to go out now like how up so I had modern safety gear on a warm hat whole team of people helping me planted eggs and I wasn't being attacked but this was still for me the worst job at the Dark Ages is excellent the worst thing was with my shoes fell off and I looked down and they were just spiraling down towards the sea hundreds of feet below and then when I came away from the rock and kept coming forward again my feet were just racing against against the rock and I think a very good egg collector next time we're going to be looking at some of the worst jobs of the Middle Ages so they can't be worse than this among the worst jobs in the Middle Ages I'll be acting as a human hamster building cathedrals trying a bizarre cure for sore throats and up to my knees a urine stadium in Europe [Music] [Music]
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Channel: Timeline - World History Documentaries
Views: 960,714
Rating: 4.8117018 out of 5
Keywords: worst jobs in history, history documentary, documentary history, tony robinson, bbc documentary, full length documentaries, 2017 documentary, full documentary, tv shows - topic, channel 4 documentary, documentary movies - topic, dark ages, worst jobs, the worst jobs in history, dark ages documentary, tony robinson worst jobs in history, tony robinson documentary, timeline documentary, middle ages documentary, documentaries history, worst jobs in history medieval
Id: 7jgu7EJ9A8A
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 48min 42sec (2922 seconds)
Published: Sat Feb 17 2018
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Love this guy

👍︎︎ 2 👤︎︎ u/Amelisa1967 📅︎︎ Jul 22 2019 🗫︎ replies
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