One Of The Biggest Castles Ever Built In Britain! | FULL EPISODE | Time Team

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Publicado 2020-08-28
The Team visit an enigmatic castle site in Wales: Llangibby Castle, also known as Tregrug Castle. The layout of the walls and the central keep are well understood, but there are huge blank spaces within the wall that seem to have had no purpose. Will Tony and the Team be able solve this mystery?

Series 17, Episode 8.

#TimeTeam #CastleDig #TregrukCastle

Time Team is a British TV series following specialists who dig deep to uncover as much as they can about Britain's archaeology and history.
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Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @jaymac7203
    Stewart Ainsworths ability to read the lay of the land is second to none! Amazing talent 👏
  • @pamchapman9909
    I am more interested in history as a 65 year old, than I ever was in school. So glad I found these shows.
  • @monktridge3268
    On the 1326 Christmas menu, "clell" (pronounced "kleel") is archaic English word for the bird "red kite" (species Milvus). It was a common male name at the time, and still survives today as "Cleland" and "McClelland".
  • @BlowingShtUp
    Unsung heroes of this show: Seriously good backhoe operators!
  • Just leave it to Mick , he's got this. Mick is the coolest old guy ever , he's so laid back he's upside down.
  • @Talamasca124
    Stewart Ainsworth. The Sherlock Holmes of Archaeology!
  • @mellie9633
    Undoubtedly one of the best and most interesting shows on T.V, Tony Robinson is excellent as always.
  • @williamgorden6390
    If I had ever had wishes magically granted to me, I would ask to be a member of the Time Team from the beginning of the series. Man, I envy their experiences! 💚
  • @Zenas521
    Maybe they need to have a Time Team Revisited show. You get most of the old team back with some new faces and modern "geophys" technology. Revisit the old sites to see if the original theory holds up or if new evidence gives new insight. What do you think? Is the market interested in this type of show?
  • @joshuakloos9341
    Dr.Phil Harding makes time team what it is. Always has a ready smile. And so knowledgeable. His instincts are impeccable.
  • @kaytiej8311
    I love that the owners are so invested in finding the real history that's found on the lands they're entrusted with. Thank you for enabling these treasures to be saved for the future.
  • @mermeridian2041
    I suspect removing all that buildup of concealing vines would help...except it's probably holding the walls up, lol. Love Mick! Love Stewart, too - he's so great at reading the literal lay of the land. And Phil's enthusiasm is so great!
  • @JWade-pe6td
    Love this show... it's like comfort food for me
  • @Weeeewriter
    I'm in Canada and I love being taken on these tours on such ancient and beautiful places!! ❤️
  • @vic.blaine
    Christmas Feast 1326: 1 ¼ Beef, 1 ½ bacon, 2 pigs, 2 mutton, 1 ½ boar, 5 ½ beasts of the chase. 3 swans, 2 herons, 2 bitterns, 2 egrets, 6 capons, 12 piglets, 12 geese, 8 hens, 24 chickens, 13 partridges, 18 woodcocks, 800 eggs, 1 ½ bushels of wheat, 4 bushels of corn. That's what I was able to transcribe. Quite a party.
  • So fascinating. I absolutely love you guys . I am deeply saddened about Mick leaving us. And certainly hope Phil is digging on... I'll have a toast to all of you.Cheers.
  • @kop-uv2dx
    if it weren't for my inability to remember numbers I'd have chosen archeology instead of English to study at uni... Time Team is the way I get my archeology fix! love it that new stuff is being uploaded (I previously thought I'd seen all TT episodes)...
  • @24greenie
    the very end, Phil had no hat on but Tony managed to shoot the hat off. love this show
  • @Darwinsmom
    Observing the ambience (for lack of a better word) in the area being investigated, it transports me back to 1996 when I worked as a general labourer on the Jemseg Crossing dig. There is something ethereal in the mist on a site like this. What I wouldn't give to be back sifting through buckets of matrix looking for the smallest of clues. I found a clear quartzite thumbnail scraper in my screen, and it humbled me to realize that I was the first human being to lay hands on it in more than 6,000 years or even as much as 12,000! It strikes me as very strange that one of the more common items we found at Jemseg was European clay pipe fragments, and the last 2 Time Team videos I have watched today also turned up clay pipe fragments! Artifacts are fascinating, and tell us so much, but I am more intrigued by the features on a site. Archaeology in practice is an endeavour of blood, sweat and tears, interspersed with a scattered few eureka moments. I love it!
  • @iamnoone9041
    Im so happy Ive found this channel! I love history and I love documentaries!