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1-29 of 29
- A profile of the jazz musician and broadcaster Humphrey Lyttelton.
- Prince Charles tells a group of children, the story of the Old Man of Lochnager based on the book he wrote.
- In early 2006 an aerial photographic survey of Anglesey produced a remarkable image. On the slopes south of the town of Amlwch approximately four miles from the island's north coast - a large pentangular earthwork could be seen.
- In the final programme we are taken back to pre-history with the discovery of flints and other artifacts that show the valley was farmed and hunted thousands of years ago.
- Paul's grandfather's death shocked his gran goes in to early labor, she lost the baby and her life - leaving Paul's mum an orphan but Paul discovered his grandfather fell in to a canal with suspected heat attack. Paul looks in to his English father Albert's side and finds out they were singers and played banjo buskers on the streets of London in Victorian times and a street disagreement was accused of assault involving a banjo and was imprisoned. on his mothers side, his grandfather quit the British Army and joined the IRA even sending back his army medal, he was part of the road to Irish independence.
- The origins of his familial wealth resulted in the discovery of a rich businessman who had adopted his great-grandfather after his father died in an Trap (carriage) accident and his mother died of syphilis and was classed a lunatic. Their great grandfather not a Whitehalls but Thomas Jones Phillips was an anti-democratic Conservative Party members determined to squash working-class rights of the welsh. His ancestor was part of a Conservative movement that prevent the working classes leader John Frost (Chartist) from earning the right to vote and helped bring down the local hero, who spread democracy through early Victorian Wales. While he read the Riot Act from the Westgate Inn, Phillips was shot but not killed. In retaliation they fired on the crowd killing 20 plus people. Phillips helped in the arrest of John Frost and gave evidence at his subsequent trial in Monmouth resulting in him being sentenced to death but latter transportation for life to Australia.
- The Age of Materialism and its Age of Inhumanity of Colonial Slavery and Industrial Revolution (18th to 20th Century).
- Caerwent is the most well preserved Roman town in Britian. Located in Wales it has been dug and studied for over 100 years. The Time Team have been invited to dig a previously untouched section of the town in search of what is believed to be the biggest villa in the area.
- Izzie and Tim continue their Welsh road trip, buying a traditional Welsh lady's outfit and a lion-shaped pincushion respectively. Izzie learns about an ancient Welsh musical instrument while Tim explores an abandoned mine.
- Izzie finds an ornament made by a soldier during World War I and takes a detour to learn about Aneurin Bevan, the politician who created the NHS. Tim discovers some 100-year-old chocolate and visits a country park built on an old colliery.
- The penultimate leg of their trip sees Izzie find some maps and learn about a shameful event in Cardiff's history while Tim discovers a William Gladstone commemorative medal and learns how the Welsh language was saved from extinction.
- Pam heads to the village of Toddington, where she hops aboard one of the locomotives of the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Steam Railway.
- New discoveries are casting the Vikings in a new light. Not just the bloodthirsty pagans waging pitched battle and raids, Scandanavian settlements in England reveal the Vikings brought culture and commerce, as well.
- The Bronze Age, with monuments testifying to a glorious rich elite, declined quite rapidly once iron was around, stronger and more practical. Yet iron would only become common, more then bronze ever was, a few centuries later, perhaps due to climate stress. Whereas painstakingly produced bronze was a reference in its own right, beyond practical and cult use, to express wealth as well as obtain it, the easier, hence 'cheap' iron technology would 'only' enable a revolution in real agricultural productivity, allowing major population growth and spatial division, for the first time carving out single family-homes and plots as in historical times.
- A team of archaeologists investigate the mysterious Cladh Hallan site in the Outer Hebrides in Scotland and discover skeletons that challenge previous notions about Bronze Age Britain.
- The Bake Off comes to Kent, where the bakers bake signature breads, cobs, and sweet and savory rolls.
- Tony Robinson and the Team visit a tiny windswept island off the coast of Wales. The only way to get to it is by rigging a 500-metre zip wire way above the wave-lashed rocks.
- The Time Team visit a set of Roman ruins in Caerlon in South Wales. The area was always known for it's extensive construction work, but what the Time Team uncover that changes everything.
- Tony and the team investigate a large hill close to Cardiff that might be immensely significant as it could be the long-lost Iron Age capital of South Wales.
- Steve and Pru fell in love with Upton Castle in Pembrokeshire and they had little idea what they had. Acres of overgrown gardens surrounded the building and looked like a medieval castle at the front and a Victorian mansion at the back.
- This third canal journey takes Pru and Tim back to their honeymoon destination, Llangollen, in North Wales