You are on page 1of 39

1

00:00:05,940 --> 00:00:11,460


From its earliest days, Britain was an object of desire.

2
00:00:21,420 --> 00:00:26,660
Tacitus declared it "pretium victoriae", worth the conquest,

3
00:00:26,660 --> 00:00:31,020
the best compliment that could occur to a Roman.

4
00:00:33,060 --> 00:00:40,500
He'd never visited these shores but was nonetheless convinced that Britannia was
rich in gold.

5
00:00:41,700 --> 00:00:46,500
Silver was abundant there too. Apparently so were pearls,

6
00:00:46,500 --> 00:00:52,340
although Tacitus had heard they were grey, like the overcast, rain-heavy skies,

7
00:00:52,340 --> 00:00:59,380
and that the natives only bothered to collect them when they were cast up on the
shore.

8
00:00:59,380 --> 00:01:06,260
As far as the Roman historians were concerned, Britannia might well be off at the
edge of the world,

9
00:01:06,260 --> 00:01:10,900
but it was at the edge of THEIR world, not a barbarian wilderness.

10
00:01:10,900 --> 00:01:17,380
If those same writers had been able to travel in time to the northernmost of our
islands,

11
00:01:17,380 --> 00:01:24,340
to the Orcades, our modern Orkney, they would have seen something more astonishing
than heaps of pearls.

12
00:01:24,340 --> 00:01:30,620
The unmistakable signs of a civilisation thousands of years older than Rome.

13
00:02:19,180 --> 00:02:24,940
There are remains of Stone Age life dotted all over Britain and Ireland.

14
00:02:25,740 --> 00:02:33,580
But nowhere as abundantly as Orkney, with mounds, graves and, above all, great
circles of standing stones,

15
00:02:33,580 --> 00:02:38,460
like here at Brodgar, vast, imposing and utterly unknowable.

16
00:02:42,220 --> 00:02:49,140
But Orkney boasts another Neolithic site, in its way even more impressive than
Brodgar.

17
00:02:49,140 --> 00:02:53,340
The last thing you would expect from the Stone Age.

18
00:02:53,340 --> 00:02:57,620
A shockingly familiar glimpse of ancient domestic life.

19
00:02:57,620 --> 00:03:04,340
Perched on the western coast of Orkney's main island, a village called Skara Brae.

20
00:03:11,420 --> 00:03:17,340
Here, beneath an area no bigger than the eighteenth green of a golf course,

21
00:03:18,140 --> 00:03:25,740
lies Europe's most complete Neolithic community, preserved for 5,000 years under
sand and grass

22
00:03:25,740 --> 00:03:29,940
until uncovered in 1850 by a ferocious sea storm.

23
00:03:39,820 --> 00:03:43,340
This is a recognisable village,

24
00:03:43,340 --> 00:03:48,300
neatly fitted into its landscape between the pasture and the sea.

25
00:03:48,300 --> 00:03:51,220
Intimate, domestic, self-sufficient.

26
00:03:51,220 --> 00:03:56,380
Although technically still in the Stone Age, in the Neolithic period,

27
00:03:56,380 --> 00:04:03,660
these dwellings are not huts, but true houses built from the sandstone slabs that
lie all around the island

28
00:04:03,660 --> 00:04:10,860
and which gave stout protection to the villagers here at Skara Brae from their
biting Orcadian winds.

29
00:04:13,300 --> 00:04:17,300
And the villagers were real neighbours,

30
00:04:17,300 --> 00:04:21,380
their houses connected by walled, sometimes decorated alleyways.

31
00:04:21,380 --> 00:04:28,860
It's not too much of a stretch to imagine gossip travelling down those alleyways
after a seafood supper.

32
00:04:32,380 --> 00:04:39,940
We have, in other words, everything you could possibly want from a village, except
a church and a pub.

33
00:04:42,300 --> 00:04:47,420
In 3000 BC, the sea and the air were a little warmer than they are now,

34
00:04:47,420 --> 00:04:51,500
and once they'd settled in their sandstone houses

35
00:04:51,500 --> 00:04:58,580
they could harvest red bream and the mussels and oysters that were abundant in the
shallows.

36
00:05:10,340 --> 00:05:15,260
Cattle provided meat and milk. Dogs were kept for hunting and company.

37
00:05:15,260 --> 00:05:20,300
During the Neolithic centuries there would have been a dozen houses here,

38
00:05:20,300 --> 00:05:24,260
half dug into the ground for comfort and safety -

39
00:05:24,260 --> 00:05:28,820
a thriving, bustling community of 50 or 60.

40
00:05:31,260 --> 00:05:36,700
But the real miracle of Skara Brae is that these houses were not mere shelters.

41
00:05:36,700 --> 00:05:41,540
They were built by people who had culture, who had style.
42
00:05:42,540 --> 00:05:46,620
Here's where they showed off that style.

43
00:05:46,620 --> 00:05:54,380
The fully equipped, all-purpose Neolithic living room, complete with luxuries and
necessities.

44
00:05:54,380 --> 00:06:01,820
Necessities? Well, at the centre, a hearth around which they warm themselves and
cook their food.

45
00:06:05,340 --> 00:06:10,020
A stone tank in which to keep live fish bait.

46
00:06:14,380 --> 00:06:19,140
Since we know that some of these houses had drains underneath them

47
00:06:19,140 --> 00:06:23,900
they must also, believe it or not, have had indoor toilets. Luxuries?

48
00:06:23,900 --> 00:06:30,020
The orthopaedically correct stone bed may not seem particularly luxurious

49
00:06:30,020 --> 00:06:36,500
but the addition of layers of heather and straw would certainly have softened the
sleeping surface

50
00:06:36,500 --> 00:06:40,300
and would actually have made this bed seem rather snug.

51
00:06:40,780 --> 00:06:45,500
At the centre of it all was this spectacular dresser

52
00:06:45,500 --> 00:06:53,060
on which our house-proud Neolithic villagers would have set out all their most
precious stuff.

53
00:06:53,060 --> 00:06:59,460
Fine bone and ivory necklaces. Beautifully wrought and carved stone objects.

54
00:06:59,460 --> 00:07:04,220
Everything designed to make a grand interior statement.

55
00:07:29,900 --> 00:07:34,020
Given the rudimentary nature of their tools,
56
00:07:34,020 --> 00:07:40,380
it would have taken countless man-hours to build, not just these domestic
dwellings,

57
00:07:40,380 --> 00:07:44,140
but the circles of stone where they worshipped.

58
00:07:44,140 --> 00:07:50,740
So Skara Brae was not just an isolated settlement of fishers and farmers.

59
00:07:50,740 --> 00:07:54,980
Its people must have belonged to some larger society,

60
00:07:54,980 --> 00:07:59,820
sophisticated enough to mobilise the army of toilers and craftsmen needed

61
00:07:59,820 --> 00:08:04,300
not just to make these monuments, but to stand them on end.

62
00:08:04,300 --> 00:08:09,340
They were just as concerned about housing the dead as the living.

63
00:08:09,340 --> 00:08:14,180
The mausoleum at Maes Howe, a couple of miles from Skara Brae,

64
00:08:14,180 --> 00:08:18,340
seems no more than a swelling on the grassy landscape

65
00:08:18,340 --> 00:08:20,900
but this is a British pyramid.

66
00:08:20,900 --> 00:08:28,140
And, in keeping with our taste for understatement, it reserves all its impact for
the interior.

67
00:08:30,340 --> 00:08:32,940
Imagine them open once more,

68
00:08:32,940 --> 00:08:38,060
a detail from the village given the job of pulling back the stone seals,

69
00:08:38,060 --> 00:08:41,740
lugging the body through the low opening in the earth,
70
00:08:41,740 --> 00:08:51,020
up 36 feet of narrow, tight-fitting passageway, lit only once a year by the rays of
the winter solstice -

71
00:08:51,020 --> 00:08:55,660
a death canal constriction smelling of the underworld.

72
00:09:11,660 --> 00:09:18,020
Finally, the passageway opens up into this stupendous, high-vaulted masonry
chamber.

73
00:09:18,020 --> 00:09:23,140
Some of these tombs would have been elaborately decorated with carvings

74
00:09:23,140 --> 00:09:28,340
in the form of circles or spirals, like waves, or breeze-pushed clouds.

75
00:09:28,340 --> 00:09:35,780
Others would have had neat little stone stores or cubicles where the bodies would
be laid out on shelves.

76
00:09:40,620 --> 00:09:46,260
The grandest tombs had openings cut in the wall to create side chambers

77
00:09:46,260 --> 00:09:53,940
where important bodies could be laid out in aristocratic spaciousness, like family
vaults in a church.

78
00:09:58,660 --> 00:10:06,140
Unlike mediaeval knights, though, these grandees were buried with eagles and dogs,
or even treasure,

79
00:10:06,140 --> 00:10:12,940
the kind of thing that the Vikings, who broke into the tombs, thousands of years
later, were quick to filch.

80
00:10:15,820 --> 00:10:23,980
In return, though, these early tomb raiders left their own legacy. These wonderful
graffiti.

81
00:10:23,980 --> 00:10:29,740
"These rooms were carved by the most skilled room carver in the Western Ocean."

82
00:10:29,740 --> 00:10:32,500
"Aye, but it thorny here!"
83
00:10:32,500 --> 00:10:36,060
"Ingegirth is one horny bitch!"

84
00:10:43,220 --> 00:10:48,660
As for the Orcadian hoi polloi, well, they ranked a space in the common chamber,

85
00:10:48,660 --> 00:10:53,780
on a floor carpeted with the bones of hundreds of their predecessors.

86
00:10:53,780 --> 00:10:57,580
A crowded waiting room to their afterworld.

87
00:11:08,740 --> 00:11:14,660
For centuries, life at Skara Brae must have continued in much the same way.

88
00:11:14,660 --> 00:11:21,060
But around 2500 BC, the island climate seems to have got colder and wetter.

89
00:11:21,060 --> 00:11:28,660
The red bream disappeared, as did the stable environment the Orcadians had enjoyed
for generations.

90
00:11:28,660 --> 00:11:31,060
Fields were abandoned,

91
00:11:31,060 --> 00:11:37,700
the farmers and fishers migrated, leaving their stone buildings and tombs to be
covered

92
00:11:37,700 --> 00:11:42,300
by layers of peat, drifting sand and finally grass.

93
00:11:45,100 --> 00:11:52,260
The mainland, too, of course, had its burial chambers, like the Long Barrow at West
Kennet.

94
00:11:59,900 --> 00:12:05,940
And there were also the great stone circles, the largest at Avebury.

95
00:12:07,380 --> 00:12:11,300
But the most spectacular of all at Stonehenge.

96
00:12:19,460 --> 00:12:23,140
By 1000 BC, things were changing fast.
97
00:12:23,140 --> 00:12:30,020
All over the British landscape a protracted struggle for good land was taking
place.

98
00:12:30,020 --> 00:12:33,860
Forests were cleared so that Iron Age Britain was not,

99
00:12:33,860 --> 00:12:40,620
as was once imagined, an unbroken forest kingdom from Cornwall to Inverness.

100
00:12:40,620 --> 00:12:48,660
It was a patchwork of fields dotted with woodland copses, giving cover for game,
especially wild pigs.

101
00:12:51,300 --> 00:12:53,780
And it was a crowded island.

102
00:12:53,780 --> 00:13:01,380
We now think as many people lived on this land as during the reign of Elizabeth I,
2,500 years later.

103
00:13:02,460 --> 00:13:10,180
Some archaeologists believe that almost as much land was being farmed in the Iron
Age as in 1914.

104
00:13:14,500 --> 00:13:21,580
So it comes as no surprise to see one spectacular difference from the little world
of Skara Brae.

105
00:13:21,580 --> 00:13:24,220
Great windowless towers.

106
00:13:24,220 --> 00:13:31,700
They were built in the centuries before the Roman invasions, when population
pressure was intense,

107
00:13:31,700 --> 00:13:39,340
and farmers had growing need of protection, first from the elements, but later from
each other.

108
00:13:46,940 --> 00:13:49,460
Many of those towers still survive,

109
00:13:49,460 --> 00:13:56,620
though none are as daunting as the great stone stockade on Aran, off Ireland's west
coast.
110
00:14:00,020 --> 00:14:04,380
They didn't just spring up around the edges of the British Islands.

111
00:14:04,380 --> 00:14:11,380
All over the mainland too, the great hill forts of the Iron Age remain visible in
terraced contours

112
00:14:11,380 --> 00:14:14,580
at places like Danebury and Maiden Castle.

113
00:14:14,580 --> 00:14:17,740
Lofty seats of power for the tribal chiefs,

114
00:14:17,740 --> 00:14:24,180
they were defended by rings of earth works, timber palisades and ramparts.

115
00:14:29,940 --> 00:14:34,940
Behind those daunting walls, this was not a world in panicky retreat.

116
00:14:36,780 --> 00:14:43,980
The Iron Age Britain into which the Romans eventually crashed with such alarming
force

117
00:14:43,980 --> 00:14:46,900
was a dynamic, expanding society.

118
00:14:46,900 --> 00:14:54,100
From their workshops came the spectacular metalwork with which the elite decorated
their bodies -

119
00:14:54,100 --> 00:15:01,540
armlets, pins and brooches, and ornamental shields like this, the so-called
Battersea Shield.

120
00:15:20,340 --> 00:15:26,860
Or the astonishing stylised bronze horses, endearingly melancholy in expression,

121
00:15:26,860 --> 00:15:31,260
like so many Eeyores, resigned to a bad day in battle.

122
00:15:37,060 --> 00:15:39,740
With tribal manufacture came trade.

123
00:15:39,740 --> 00:15:47,140
The warriors, Druid priests and artists of Iron Age Britain shipped their wares all
over Europe,

124
00:15:47,140 --> 00:15:50,500
trading with the expanding Roman Empire.

125
00:15:50,500 --> 00:15:53,820
In return, with no home-grown grapes or olives,

126
00:15:53,820 --> 00:15:58,500
Mediterranean wine and oil arrived in large earthenware jars.

127
00:16:03,980 --> 00:16:08,900
So Iron Age Britain was definitely not the back of beyond.

128
00:16:08,900 --> 00:16:14,620
Its tribes may have led lives separated by custom and language, with no great
capital city,

129
00:16:14,620 --> 00:16:18,980
but taken together, they added up to something in the world,

130
00:16:18,980 --> 00:16:26,380
the bustling of countless productive energetic beehives. And what the bees made was
not honey but gold.

131
00:16:27,940 --> 00:16:35,700
So the Romans would have known all about this strange but alluring world of fat
cattle and busy forges.

132
00:16:35,700 --> 00:16:41,660
Evidence of its refinement would certainly have found its way to Rome.

133
00:16:43,860 --> 00:16:49,380
Along with the glittering metalware came stories of alarming cults

134
00:16:49,380 --> 00:16:53,620
which might have prompted the usual Roman dinnertime discussions.

135
00:16:53,620 --> 00:17:00,700
All very interesting, I dare say, but would we really want to call them a
civilisation?

136
00:17:08,660 --> 00:17:12,900
Supposing they would have seen an ancient sculpture
137
00:17:12,900 --> 00:17:18,060
like this haunting stone face with its archaic, secretive smile,

138
00:17:18,060 --> 00:17:25,380
the eyes closed, as if in some mysterious devotional trance. The nose flattened,
the cheeks broad.

139
00:17:25,380 --> 00:17:33,460
All so spellbindingly reminiscent of things the Romans must have seen in Etruria,
or on the Greek Islands.

140
00:17:33,460 --> 00:17:38,500
Would they then have said, "This is a work of art"? Probably not.

141
00:17:38,500 --> 00:17:46,260
Sooner or later they'd have noticed that the top of the head is sliced off, scooped
out like a boiled egg,

142
00:17:46,260 --> 00:17:48,860
to hold sacrificial offerings.

143
00:17:48,860 --> 00:17:55,420
Then they would have remembered stories that Rome told about the grizzly brutality
of the Druids.

144
00:17:55,420 --> 00:18:02,020
Perhaps they'd have taken note of stories told by the northern savages themselves

145
00:18:02,020 --> 00:18:06,460
of decapitated heads who were said to speak mournfully

146
00:18:06,460 --> 00:18:12,580
to those who had parted them from the rest of their body, warning of vengeance to
come.

147
00:18:12,580 --> 00:18:16,740
Then they would have thought, "Well, perhaps not.

148
00:18:16,740 --> 00:18:23,500
"Perhaps we don't want to have much to do with an island of talking heads."

149
00:18:30,140 --> 00:18:37,380
So why did the Romans come here, to the edge of the world, and run the gauntlet of
these ominous totems?

150
00:18:37,380 --> 00:18:44,220
It was the lure of treasure - all those pearls Tacitus was convinced lay around
Britain in heaps.

151
00:18:44,220 --> 00:18:49,820
But even more seductive was what Roman generals craved the most,

152
00:18:49,820 --> 00:18:54,780
the prestige given to those who pacified the barbarian frontier.

153
00:18:57,060 --> 00:19:04,980
So in the written annals of Western history, the islands now had not only a name,
Britannia, but a date.

154
00:19:04,980 --> 00:19:10,260
In 55 BC, Julius Caesar launched his galleys across the Channel.

155
00:19:15,260 --> 00:19:17,740
Julius Caesar must have supposed

156
00:19:17,740 --> 00:19:21,980
that all he had to do was land his legions in force,

157
00:19:21,980 --> 00:19:28,940
and the Britons, just cowed by the spectacle of all those glittering helmets and
eagle standards,

158
00:19:28,940 --> 00:19:31,580
would simply queue up to surrender.

159
00:19:31,580 --> 00:19:38,980
They would understand that history always fought on the side of Rome. Trouble was,
geography didn't.

160
00:19:41,820 --> 00:19:46,180
Not once, but twice Julius Caesar's plans were sabotaged

161
00:19:46,180 --> 00:19:50,900
by that perennial secret weapon of the British - the weather.

162
00:19:50,900 --> 00:19:54,980
On the first go round, in 55 BC, a cavalry transport,

163
00:19:54,980 --> 00:20:00,100
which missed the high tide and was four days late, finally got going
164
00:20:00,100 --> 00:20:05,300
only to run directly into a storm and be blown right back to Gaul.

165
00:20:09,380 --> 00:20:13,300
A century later, Claudius, the club-foot stammerer,

166
00:20:13,300 --> 00:20:19,460
on the face of it the most unlikely conqueror of all, was determined to get it
right.

167
00:20:19,460 --> 00:20:24,500
If it was to be done, he thought, it had to be done in such massive force

168
00:20:24,500 --> 00:20:28,660
that he would not repeat the embarrassments of Julius.

169
00:20:28,660 --> 00:20:34,220
So Claudius' invasion force was immense, some forty thousand troops.

170
00:20:34,220 --> 00:20:41,580
The kind of army which could barely be conceived of, much less encountered in Iron
Age Britain.

171
00:20:41,580 --> 00:20:46,780
Claudius did succeed where Julius Caesar had failed,

172
00:20:46,780 --> 00:20:50,860
through a brilliant strategy of carrot and stick.

173
00:20:54,180 --> 00:20:59,180
Yes, he would seize the largely undefended oppida, or towns,

174
00:20:59,180 --> 00:21:07,460
and strike at the heart of the British aristocracy, its places of status, prestige
and worship.

175
00:21:07,460 --> 00:21:14,740
But for those chieftains sensible enough to reach for the olive branch rather than
the battle javelin,

176
00:21:14,740 --> 00:21:22,220
Claudius' plan was to give them, or rather their sons, a trip to Rome and watch
their resistance melt.

177
00:21:26,460 --> 00:21:31,340
While they were in Rome, many of them must have begun to notice

178
00:21:31,340 --> 00:21:36,420
that life for your average patrician was, well, exceptionally sweet.

179
00:21:36,420 --> 00:21:40,060
So, before long, they began to hunger for a taste of themselves.

180
00:21:40,060 --> 00:21:46,260
If there were sumptuous country villas amidst the olive groves of the Roman
countryside,

181
00:21:46,260 --> 00:21:52,380
why could there not be sumptuous country villas amidst the pear orchards of the
South Downs?

182
00:21:52,380 --> 00:22:01,140
Just fall in line, be a little reasonable, judicious support... see what you would
end up with.

183
00:22:01,140 --> 00:22:05,180
The spectacular palace at Fishbourne.

184
00:22:11,500 --> 00:22:17,780
The man who built it was Togidubnus, King of the Regenses in what would be Sussex -

185
00:22:17,780 --> 00:22:22,340
one of the quickest to sign up as Rome's local ally.

186
00:22:22,340 --> 00:22:28,180
He was rewarded with enough wealth to build himself something fit for a Roman.

187
00:22:28,180 --> 00:22:34,460
Only the extraordinary mosaic floors survive, but the place was as big as four
football pitches,

188
00:22:34,460 --> 00:22:40,820
grand enough for someone who now gloried in the name of Tiberius Claudius
Cogidumnus.

189
00:22:40,820 --> 00:22:47,580
He couldn't have been the only British chief to realise on which side his bread was
buttered.

190
00:22:47,580 --> 00:22:55,740
All over Britain, rulers thought a Roman connection would help in their pursuit of
local power and status.

191
00:22:55,740 --> 00:23:00,580
The person we think of as embodying British national resistance to Rome,

192
00:23:00,580 --> 00:23:08,180
Queen Boudicca of the Iceni, came from a family of happy, even eager collaborators.

193
00:23:08,180 --> 00:23:16,260
It only took a policy of stupidity, arrogance and brutality on the part of the
local Roman governor

194
00:23:16,260 --> 00:23:21,660
to turn her from a warm supporter of Rome into its most dangerous enemy.

195
00:23:22,460 --> 00:23:30,220
In a show of brutal arrogance, the local governor had East Anglia declared a slave
province.

196
00:23:30,220 --> 00:23:36,500
To make the point about exactly who owned whom, Boudicca was then treated to a
public flogging

197
00:23:36,500 --> 00:23:39,820
while her daughters were raped before her.

198
00:23:42,220 --> 00:23:49,380
In 60 AD, Boudicca rose up in furious revolt, quickly gathering an army bent on
vengeance.

199
00:23:49,380 --> 00:23:55,140
With the cream of the Roman troops tied down, suppressing an insurgency in North
Wales,

200
00:23:55,140 --> 00:24:03,260
Boudicca's army marched towards the place symbolising the hated Roman colonisation
of Britain. Colchester.

201
00:24:03,260 --> 00:24:07,180
It helped that it was lightly garrisoned.

202
00:24:07,180 --> 00:24:14,660
After a fire-storm march through eastern England, burning Roman settlements, it was
the city's turn.

203
00:24:14,660 --> 00:24:22,100
The frightened Roman colonists then had to fall back to the one place they were
sure they'd be protected,

204
00:24:22,100 --> 00:24:27,060
by their Emperor and their Gods - the great temple of Claudius.

205
00:24:32,300 --> 00:24:39,660
If the terrified Romans thought they'd escape the implacable anger of Boudicca,
they were out of luck.

206
00:24:39,660 --> 00:24:47,500
With thousands of them huddled in the temple above these foundations, she began to
set light to it.

207
00:24:47,500 --> 00:24:53,740
They must have been able to smell the scorch and the smoke and the fire coming
towards them

208
00:24:53,740 --> 00:25:01,260
as their new imperial city burned down with themselves and everything else here
buried in smoking ash.

209
00:25:01,260 --> 00:25:04,300
Thousands died in this place.

210
00:25:04,300 --> 00:25:06,740
Boudicca had her revenge.

211
00:25:18,980 --> 00:25:22,140
But her triumph couldn't last.

212
00:25:24,780 --> 00:25:29,300
The lightly defended civilians of Colchester were one thing,

213
00:25:29,300 --> 00:25:37,100
now she'd have to face a disciplined Roman army, fully prepared for all that she
could throw at them.

214
00:25:39,940 --> 00:25:47,820
Sure enough, when the two forces met, Boudicca's swollen and unwieldy army was no
match for the legions.

215
00:25:47,820 --> 00:25:53,980
Her great insurrection ended in a gory, chaotic slaughter.

216
00:26:31,260 --> 00:26:37,340
Boudicca took her own life rather than fall into the hands of the Romans.

217
00:26:42,100 --> 00:26:46,900
Lessons have been learned the hard way, at least for some.

218
00:26:46,900 --> 00:26:54,180
And so when barbarians started attacking Roman forts in the north the Romans knew
exactly what to do.

219
00:26:55,860 --> 00:27:03,060
In 79 AD, an enormous pitched battle took place on the slopes of an unidentified
highland mountain

220
00:27:03,060 --> 00:27:05,620
which Tacitus calls Mons Graupius.

221
00:27:05,620 --> 00:27:12,420
The result - another slaughter - but not before the Caledonian general, Calgacus,

222
00:27:12,420 --> 00:27:19,620
delivered the first great anti-imperialist speech on Scotland's soil.

223
00:27:19,620 --> 00:27:21,780
"Here at the world's end,

224
00:27:21,780 --> 00:27:27,220
"on its last inch of liberty, we have lived unmolested,

225
00:27:27,220 --> 00:27:32,220
"to this day, defended by our remoteness and obscurity.

226
00:27:33,420 --> 00:27:36,900
"But there are no other tribes to come.

227
00:27:36,900 --> 00:27:41,180
"Nothing but sea, and cliffs, and these more deadly Romans

228
00:27:41,180 --> 00:27:46,260
"whose arrogance you cannot escape by obedience and self-restraint.

229
00:27:46,260 --> 00:27:49,380
"To plunder, butcher, steal,

230
00:27:49,540 --> 00:27:52,500
"these things they misname "Empire".
231
00:27:52,500 --> 00:27:58,140
"They make a desolation and they call it peace."

232
00:28:05,340 --> 00:28:08,780
Of course, Calgacus never said any such thing.

233
00:28:08,780 --> 00:28:15,380
This was the speech written long after the event by Tacitus, and it's Roman, not
Scottish.

234
00:28:15,380 --> 00:28:19,620
Yet this burning sentiment would echo down the generations.

235
00:28:19,620 --> 00:28:26,740
Like Britannia itself, the idea of free Caledonia was from the first a Roman
invention.

236
00:28:28,380 --> 00:28:31,860
There was one Emperor, Spanish by birth,

237
00:28:31,860 --> 00:28:36,620
who knew even the world's biggest empire needed to know its limits

238
00:28:36,620 --> 00:28:43,580
and he, of course, was destined, in Britain, at any rate, to be remembered by a
wall.

239
00:28:44,940 --> 00:28:51,380
When we think of Hadrian's Wall, we tend to think of the Romans rather like US
cavalrymen,

240
00:28:51,380 --> 00:28:58,260
deep in Indian country, defending the flag, peering through the cracks and waiting
for smoke signals.

241
00:28:58,260 --> 00:29:01,300
A place where paranoia sweated from every stone.

242
00:29:01,300 --> 00:29:04,620
It wasn't really like that at all.

243
00:29:04,620 --> 00:29:11,340
As fantastically ambitious as this was, stretching 73 miles from the Solway to the
Tyne,
244
00:29:11,340 --> 00:29:17,020
and although Hadrian probably conceived it in response to a rebellion

245
00:29:17,020 --> 00:29:23,500
on the part of the people whom the Romans referred to as Britunculi, nasty,
wretched little Brits,

246
00:29:23,500 --> 00:29:30,660
almost certainly he didn't mean it as an impermeable barrier against barbarian
onslaught from the north.

247
00:29:35,780 --> 00:29:42,140
The wall was studded with mile castles, and turrets, and forts, like this one at
Housteads.

248
00:29:42,140 --> 00:29:46,060
But as Britain settled down in the 2nd century AD,

249
00:29:46,060 --> 00:29:50,100
these places became up-country hill stations,

250
00:29:50,100 --> 00:29:55,980
more like social centres and business centres than really grim heavily-manned
barracks.

251
00:29:57,540 --> 00:30:05,140
The purpose of the forts became not to prevent people going to and fro so much as
to control/observe them.

252
00:30:05,140 --> 00:30:10,420
The forts became a place where a kind of customs scam was imposed

253
00:30:10,420 --> 00:30:14,620
on those trying to do business on one side or the other.

254
00:30:14,620 --> 00:30:19,060
It may be better to think of the wall not as a fence but a spine

255
00:30:19,060 --> 00:30:25,420
around which control of northern Britain toughened, hardened and prospered.

256
00:30:25,420 --> 00:30:31,300
If we can now imagine Hadrian's Wall as not such a bad posting,

257
00:30:31,300 --> 00:30:36,620
it's because our sense of what life was like at the time has been transformed

258
00:30:36,620 --> 00:30:39,140
by a recent astonishing find.

259
00:30:39,140 --> 00:30:41,980
The so-called Vindolanda Tablets.

260
00:30:41,980 --> 00:30:48,020
They're scraps of Roman correspondence, jottings, scribblings, and drafts of
letters

261
00:30:48,020 --> 00:30:52,540
thrown away as rubbish by their authors, almost 2000 years ago.

262
00:30:52,540 --> 00:30:57,300
For 25 years, archaeologists here have been digging up these letters:

263
00:30:57,300 --> 00:31:01,420
1,300 of them from 7 metres below the ground.

264
00:31:01,420 --> 00:31:06,580
Up they've come, lovingly separated from dirt, debris and each other,

265
00:31:06,580 --> 00:31:09,140
and painstakingly deciphered.

266
00:31:09,140 --> 00:31:13,460
At once poignantly fragile and miraculously enduring,

267
00:31:13,460 --> 00:31:20,340
the voices of the Roman frontier in the windy north country, loud, clear and
strong.

268
00:31:22,180 --> 00:31:26,140
"Decorian Masculus to Tribune Cerrialis, Greeting.

269
00:31:26,140 --> 00:31:30,740
"Please give instructions as to what you want us to do tomorrow.

270
00:31:30,740 --> 00:31:36,260
"Are we all to return with the standard, or half? My troops have no beer. Please
order some to be sent."

271
00:31:36,260 --> 00:31:42,660
"I've sent you two pairs of socks, two pairs of sandals and two pairs of
underpants.

272
00:31:42,660 --> 00:31:48,020
"Greet Epus Tetricus and your mess mates with whom I pray you get on well."

273
00:31:48,020 --> 00:31:53,820
"..I implore your mercifulness not to allow me, an innocent man from overseas,

274
00:31:53,820 --> 00:32:01,060
- "to have been beaten by rods..."
- "I invite you to my party on the 3rd day before the Ides of September.

275
00:32:01,060 --> 00:32:08,180
"Please come as the day will be so much more enjoyable to me if you were here."

276
00:32:08,180 --> 00:32:14,620
A world of garrisons and barracks had now become a society in its own right.

277
00:32:18,580 --> 00:32:25,020
From the middle of the 2nd century it makes sense to talk about a Romano-British
culture,

278
00:32:25,020 --> 00:32:32,140
and not just as a colonial veneer imposed on the resentful natives, but as a
genuine fusion.

279
00:32:38,220 --> 00:32:42,340
And nowhere was this clearer than here in Bath.

280
00:32:56,140 --> 00:33:04,140
The quintessential Romano-British place. At once mod con and mysterious cult,
therapy and luxury.

281
00:33:04,140 --> 00:33:12,700
A marvel of hydraulic engineering, and a showy theatre of the waters of healing.

282
00:33:12,700 --> 00:33:16,700
The spa was an extravaganza of buildings

283
00:33:16,700 --> 00:33:24,180
constructed over a spring that gushed a third of a million gallons of hot water
into the baths daily.

284
00:33:56,180 --> 00:34:03,860
When you soaked yourself at Bath you washed your body and soul - ablution and
devotion at the same time.

285
00:34:03,860 --> 00:34:08,860
Much of the bathing, as well as the flirting, gossip and deal making

286
00:34:08,860 --> 00:34:12,940
went on in this austerely grandiose great bath.

287
00:34:14,700 --> 00:34:19,380
But the spiritual heart of the place was the sacred spring,

288
00:34:19,380 --> 00:34:24,020
a ferny grotto where water collected,

289
00:34:24,020 --> 00:34:28,260
and where the devotees of the presiding goddess, Sulis Minerva,

290
00:34:28,260 --> 00:34:34,580
could look through an especially constructed window at the altar erected in her
honour,

291
00:34:34,580 --> 00:34:39,180
and occasionally could throw gift offerings in her way.

292
00:34:41,660 --> 00:34:47,780
Bath was not the only place where Romano-Britons could wallow in the well-being of
the province.

293
00:34:54,020 --> 00:35:00,220
In Dover, the Romans built this 96-bedroom hotel. Now 20 feet below street level,

294
00:35:00,220 --> 00:35:05,540
but the last word in luxury for any VIP disembarking from Gaul.

295
00:35:09,260 --> 00:35:13,460
By the 4th century, however, Rome was in deep trouble,

296
00:35:13,460 --> 00:35:18,980
attacked by barbarians and undermined by endless political turmoil.

297
00:35:18,980 --> 00:35:25,780
Britannia couldn't remain detached from the fate of the rest of the empire forever.

298
00:35:25,780 --> 00:35:32,700
At some point, Dover's significance for Britannia changed from a port of entry to a
defensive stronghold,

299
00:35:32,700 --> 00:35:36,620
and a welcome mat gave way to the "Keep Out" sign

300
00:35:36,620 --> 00:35:44,140
in the shape of massive walls built smack through the grand hotel's lobby.

301
00:35:45,580 --> 00:35:49,140
This is the sort of wall the Romans built at Dover.

302
00:35:51,780 --> 00:35:56,700
This is Porchester, a Roman shore fort, a truly colossal structure,

303
00:35:56,700 --> 00:36:04,820
that makes all too clear the scale of threat the Romans felt the barbarians posed.

304
00:36:04,820 --> 00:36:13,180
Inside it lies a Norman castle, built a thousand years later, and now completely
dwarfed by it.

305
00:36:15,220 --> 00:36:22,660
It was one of several such forts strung out along the southern and eastern coasts.

306
00:36:22,660 --> 00:36:30,260
Not even fortifications like those of Porchester or Hadrian's Wall could work
without adequate troops.

307
00:36:30,260 --> 00:36:36,060
As more and more legionaries were sucked back to fight for Rome on the continent,

308
00:36:36,060 --> 00:36:41,460
and as Picts and Saxons, spotting the weakness, started raids from the north and
east,

309
00:36:41,460 --> 00:36:47,220
Britannia couldn't help but feel the chill of vulnerability.

310
00:36:47,220 --> 00:36:51,660
And when, in the year 410, Aleric the Goth sacked Rome,

311
00:36:51,660 --> 00:36:56,180
and the last two legions departed to prop up the tottering empire,

312
00:36:56,180 --> 00:37:00,540
that chill developed into an acute anxiety attack.

313
00:37:04,700 --> 00:37:10,380
This was one of the genuinely fateful moments in British history, the legions
departing.

314
00:37:10,380 --> 00:37:17,260
No, it was not like Hong Kong in 1997. There were no flags flying or pipers piping.

315
00:37:17,260 --> 00:37:22,700
The Governor was not driving around his courtyard, seven times pledging to return.

316
00:37:22,700 --> 00:37:29,100
Doubtless, many of the Romano-British did hope and expect to see the eagles back
some day.

317
00:37:29,100 --> 00:37:32,420
The tax collectors, and the magistrates,

318
00:37:32,420 --> 00:37:39,780
and the town counsellors, poets, potters, musicians, newly Christian priests all
said to themselves,

319
00:37:39,780 --> 00:37:42,300
"Well, this couldn't go on forever.

320
00:37:42,740 --> 00:37:48,140
"We couldn't always look to Mother Rome, and Mother Rome is half infested with
barbarians anyway.

321
00:37:48,140 --> 00:37:51,660
"We can handle this. We've got the Saxon shore forts,

322
00:37:51,660 --> 00:37:56,900
"we can hire barbarians to deal with other barbarians. We can handle this.

323
00:37:56,900 --> 00:37:59,820
"We CAN handle this!"

324
00:38:06,740 --> 00:38:14,180
For the less confident, there was only one thing to do - bury their treasure and
head for the hills...

325
00:38:15,420 --> 00:38:22,500
..planning, as refugees always do, to return when the worst was over and dig it all
up again.
326
00:38:24,100 --> 00:38:32,860
But in the case of this horde of 15,000 gems, medals and exquisite silver tigress,
they never did.

327
00:38:39,860 --> 00:38:47,820
It was instead discovered in 1992 at Hoxne in Suffolk, and is now kept in the
British Museum.

328
00:38:55,220 --> 00:39:00,460
Some force was needed to stop the barbarians in the north and west

329
00:39:00,460 --> 00:39:06,860
from exploiting the yawning vacuum of power left by the exit of the legions.

330
00:39:08,180 --> 00:39:15,700
At first, the warriors from north Germany and Denmark sailing up-river in their
wave horses seemed a boon,

331
00:39:15,700 --> 00:39:18,060
not a curse.

332
00:39:18,060 --> 00:39:23,780
When one local despot named Vortigen naively imagined he could use the imported
barbarians

333
00:39:23,780 --> 00:39:29,380
as his own personal military muscle, but neglected to pay them, as per the
contract,

334
00:39:29,380 --> 00:39:33,860
he made one of the more spectacular blunders in British history.

335
00:39:33,860 --> 00:39:40,300
Furious at being stiffed, the Saxons turned on the local population they'd been
hired to defend,

336
00:39:40,300 --> 00:39:46,100
and when they'd finished burning and pillaging, they took land in lieu of pay,

337
00:39:46,100 --> 00:39:52,540
settling down amidst the understandably dismayed native population.

338
00:39:52,540 --> 00:39:55,820
Dismayed but not, I think, terrified,
339
00:39:55,820 --> 00:40:00,140
for although earliest chroniclers of the coming of the Saxons

340
00:40:00,140 --> 00:40:04,300
thought of Vortigen's faux pas as heralding some apocalypse,

341
00:40:04,300 --> 00:40:11,740
it wasn't as if someone turned the lights out on Roman Britannia and declared the
Dark Ages had begun.

342
00:40:11,740 --> 00:40:17,340
The long process by which Roman Britannia morphed into the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms was
gradual.

343
00:40:17,340 --> 00:40:21,380
Not sudden. An adaptation not an annihilation.

344
00:40:24,260 --> 00:40:28,260
For a long time, the Saxons were a tiny minority,

345
00:40:28,260 --> 00:40:31,580
numbered in hundreds rather than thousands,

346
00:40:31,580 --> 00:40:36,420
living in the midst of a strongly Romano-British population.

347
00:40:36,420 --> 00:40:40,740
As different as these cultures were, they were still neighbours.

348
00:40:40,740 --> 00:40:46,620
The vast majority still tried, and succeeded, in living some sort of Roman life.

349
00:40:47,700 --> 00:40:51,620
Here we're at Wroxeter in Shropshire, the Roman Viriconium.

350
00:40:51,620 --> 00:40:56,820
There's wonderful evidence of this make-do, hybrid, improvised world,

351
00:40:56,820 --> 00:41:01,620
poised between Roman ruins and Anglo-Saxon beginnings.

352
00:41:01,620 --> 00:41:07,380
When the bath house stopped functioning, the citizens took the tiles and used them
for paving.
353
00:41:07,380 --> 00:41:12,180
And when the roof of the great basilica threatened to fall in

354
00:41:12,180 --> 00:41:15,780
the citizens demolished the whole building themselves.

355
00:41:15,780 --> 00:41:19,180
Inside the shell they put up a new timber structure,

356
00:41:19,180 --> 00:41:25,180
spacious and elegant enough to give the sense they were still living some sort of
Roman lifestyle,

357
00:41:25,180 --> 00:41:28,980
although in an increasingly phantom Britannia.

358
00:41:31,460 --> 00:41:35,860
Eventually, though, the adaptations became ever more makeshift -

359
00:41:35,860 --> 00:41:39,620
the fabric of Roman life increasingly threadbare,

360
00:41:39,620 --> 00:41:43,260
until it did indeed fall apart altogether.

361
00:41:45,300 --> 00:41:49,980
The island was now divided into three utterly different realms.

362
00:41:49,980 --> 00:41:54,300
The remains of Britannia hung on in the west.

363
00:41:54,300 --> 00:42:00,980
North of the abandoned walls and forts, the Scottish tribes, for the most part,
stayed pagan.

364
00:42:00,980 --> 00:42:06,860
England, the realm of Anglo-Saxons and Jutes, was planted in the east,

365
00:42:06,860 --> 00:42:11,380
all the way from Kent to the kingdom of Bernicia in Northumbria.

366
00:42:18,140 --> 00:42:24,980
Saxon chiefs often built settlements on the ruined remains of old Roman British
towns, not least London.
367
00:42:24,980 --> 00:42:30,020
Like many invaders, they hankered after what they had destroyed.

368
00:42:31,860 --> 00:42:36,900
Showier pieces of their armour often bare startling resemblances to Roman armour,

369
00:42:36,900 --> 00:42:41,660
and their leaders aspired to be something more than war chiefs.

370
00:42:41,660 --> 00:42:45,700
They wanted to be known as dux, a Roman duke.

371
00:42:45,700 --> 00:42:52,340
But in one crucial respect the Germanic tribal societies were utterly different
from the Romans.

372
00:42:52,340 --> 00:42:57,340
Theirs was a culture based on the blood feud and punishment by ordeal.

373
00:42:58,460 --> 00:43:04,140
It was an entire social system. Its plunder was the glue of loyalty.

374
00:43:13,660 --> 00:43:20,180
But the Saxons were no more immune to change than the Romans had been before them.

375
00:43:20,180 --> 00:43:26,820
To look at the relics recovered from the Sutton Hoo burial site is to be teased by
a powerful question.

376
00:43:26,820 --> 00:43:34,620
Did the Saxon lord buried here find his resting place in a pagan Valhalla or a
Christian paradise?

377
00:43:36,540 --> 00:43:41,540
The history of the conversions between the 6th C and the 8th C

378
00:43:41,540 --> 00:43:46,580
is another crucial turning point in the history of the British Isles.

379
00:43:53,020 --> 00:43:59,340
But while the legions had long gone, the shadow of Rome fell once again on these
islands.

380
00:43:59,340 --> 00:44:03,580
This time, though, it was an invasion of the soul,
381
00:44:03,580 --> 00:44:09,500
and the warriors were carrying Christian gospels rather than swords.

382
00:44:09,500 --> 00:44:15,860
The process began in a country that had never been touched by Roman rule in the
first place.

383
00:44:15,860 --> 00:44:19,900
The land the Romans called Hibernia. Ireland.

384
00:44:21,780 --> 00:44:29,180
One of the most famous of the early missionaries to Ireland, St Patrick, was a
Romano-British aristocrat -

385
00:44:29,180 --> 00:44:33,100
"the Patrician," or Patricius as he called himself.

386
00:44:33,100 --> 00:44:39,340
So there was nothing remotely Irish about the teenager who was kidnapped and sold
into slavery

387
00:44:39,340 --> 00:44:43,420
by Irish raiders some time in the early 5th Century.

388
00:44:47,060 --> 00:44:54,100
It was only after he'd escaped, probably to Brittany, been ordained then visited by
prophetic dreams,

389
00:44:54,100 --> 00:44:59,300
that he returned to Ireland, this time the messenger of the gospel.

390
00:45:02,140 --> 00:45:06,460
Patrick understood that the monastic ideal of the retreat

391
00:45:06,460 --> 00:45:10,900
was perfectly matched with the needs of local royal clans.

392
00:45:12,100 --> 00:45:16,860
So monasteries like Aran, off the Gulf-swept Irish coast,

393
00:45:16,860 --> 00:45:21,340
with their beehive cells, and encircling stone walls,

394
00:45:21,340 --> 00:45:25,940
looked like a stronghold, an encampment for God.

395
00:45:34,580 --> 00:45:40,220
But what about the dragon slayers on the mainland? Who converted them?

396
00:45:45,660 --> 00:45:48,220
One man gives us the answer.

397
00:45:49,820 --> 00:45:57,620
To school children of my generation, growing up in the 1950s, he will always be the
Venerable Bede.

398
00:45:59,140 --> 00:46:03,460
Bede was not just the founding father of English history.

399
00:46:03,460 --> 00:46:09,340
Arguably, he was also the first consummate storyteller in all of English
literature.

400
00:46:09,340 --> 00:46:15,900
He was not exactly well-travelled. He spent virtually his entire life here in
Jarrow.

401
00:46:15,900 --> 00:46:22,180
But in a few lines he could conjure up not just the world of holy men and hermits,

402
00:46:22,180 --> 00:46:28,380
but the world of the great halls of Saxon Kings, their firelight and roasting meat,

403
00:46:28,380 --> 00:46:31,740
or the death throes of a great warhorse.

404
00:46:31,740 --> 00:46:36,780
His masterful grip on narrative made Bede not just an authentic historian

405
00:46:36,780 --> 00:46:40,940
but also a brilliant propagandist for the early church.

406
00:46:43,900 --> 00:46:47,700
Bede sees without any starry-eyed sentimentality

407
00:46:47,700 --> 00:46:55,140
what could overcome the mistrust of the pagan kings when asked to abandon their
traditional gods.

408
00:46:55,140 --> 00:46:59,940
According to the most touching speech in Bede's entire history,

409
00:46:59,940 --> 00:47:06,060
the clinching moment of persuasion for one noble was nothing more than a gambler's
bet.

410
00:47:06,260 --> 00:47:11,500
"It seems to me, my lord, that the present life of men here on Earth

411
00:47:11,500 --> 00:47:17,300
"is as though a sparrow in wintertime should come to a house and very swiftly fly
through it,

412
00:47:17,300 --> 00:47:22,180
"entering in one window and straight away passing out through another,

413
00:47:22,180 --> 00:47:27,020
"while you sit at dinner...in a hall made warm with a great fire,

414
00:47:27,020 --> 00:47:32,100
"while outside, there are the raging tempests of winter, rain and snow.

415
00:47:32,100 --> 00:47:38,180
"For that short time it be within the house, the bird feels no smart of the winter
storm

416
00:47:38,180 --> 00:47:43,860
"but soon passes again from winter back to winter and escapes your sight.

417
00:47:43,860 --> 00:47:48,460
"So the life of man here appears for a little season.

418
00:47:48,460 --> 00:47:53,060
"But what follows, or what has gone before, that surely we do not know.

419
00:47:53,060 --> 00:47:59,220
"Wherefore if this new learning has bought us any certainty methinks it is worthy
to be followed."

420
00:47:59,220 --> 00:48:05,180
It's typical of Bede to put these words in the mouth of a nobleman,

421
00:48:05,180 --> 00:48:11,540
for the Church in Anglo-Saxon England was just really a branch of the aristocracy.
422
00:48:11,540 --> 00:48:15,020
St Wilfred the aristocratic Bishop of York

423
00:48:15,020 --> 00:48:23,220
deliberately used part of Hadrian's Wall to build at Hexham a basilica worthy of
Roman authority.

424
00:48:23,220 --> 00:48:31,180
For Bede and St Wilfred, it was crucial the Roman, not the Irish Celtic Church, won
over Britain,

425
00:48:31,180 --> 00:48:38,820
for what they passionately desired was the reconnection of a converted country with
its Roman mother -

426
00:48:38,820 --> 00:48:42,100
a true homecoming.

427
00:48:42,100 --> 00:48:47,340
The authority of the Roman Saxon Church, though, didn't guarantee protection.

428
00:48:47,340 --> 00:48:51,860
Bede himself had had forebodings before he died in 735.

429
00:48:51,860 --> 00:48:58,380
Sure enough, half a century later, in 793, the Anglo-Saxon chronicle reports:

430
00:48:58,380 --> 00:49:01,660
"Dire portents appeared over Northumbria.

431
00:49:01,660 --> 00:49:08,660
"Immense whirlwinds and flashes of lightning, and fiery dragons were seen flying
through the air.

432
00:49:08,660 --> 00:49:11,180
"A great famine followed.

433
00:49:11,180 --> 00:49:13,700
"A little after, on 8th of June,

434
00:49:13,700 --> 00:49:20,500
"the ravages of heathen men miserably destroyed God's church at Lindisfarne."

435
00:49:20,500 --> 00:49:24,660
The heathen men were, of course, the Vikings.
436
00:49:33,940 --> 00:49:41,620
If you look long enough and hard enough at any culture, you're gonna find something
good to say about it,

437
00:49:41,620 --> 00:49:47,740
and historians of the Vikings, understandably distressed at the rape and pillage
stereotype,

438
00:49:47,740 --> 00:49:54,340
have asked us to think of things other than sail, land, burn and plunder to say
about the Vikings.

439
00:49:54,340 --> 00:50:00,500
They've said, "Look at their metalwork, look at their ships, look at the great
poetic sagas."

440
00:50:00,500 --> 00:50:04,860
So we know they did come bearing more than just a nasty attitude.

441
00:50:04,860 --> 00:50:08,260
They came carrying amber, fur and walrus ivory.

442
00:50:08,260 --> 00:50:15,740
But somehow, though, this vision of the Vikings as rapid transit, long-distance
commercial travellers,

443
00:50:15,740 --> 00:50:19,980
singing their sagas as they sailed to a new market opening

444
00:50:19,980 --> 00:50:25,380
I don't think would've cut much ice with the priests here at the cathedral at
Bradwell-on-Sea,

445
00:50:25,380 --> 00:50:29,860
a crab scuttle from the area where I grew up as a child.

446
00:50:34,260 --> 00:50:39,580
There'd been a church here at Bradwell-on-Sea for over 200 years.

447
00:50:39,580 --> 00:50:43,860
It had originally been built on remains of an old Roman fort,

448
00:50:43,860 --> 00:50:50,060
and I can't help thinking that the priests would have found their stone defences
reassuring
449
00:50:50,060 --> 00:50:57,740
as they waited nervously for the Viking raids they knew could strike hard and
fierce at any moment.

450
00:51:03,500 --> 00:51:07,540
In addition to land, Vikings were keen on one other merchandise.

451
00:51:07,540 --> 00:51:10,580
People, whom they sold as slaves.

452
00:51:13,260 --> 00:51:18,540
A thousand such slaves were taken from Armagh in one raid alone.

453
00:51:18,540 --> 00:51:24,580
A burial dated to 879 contained a Viking warrior with his sword,

454
00:51:24,580 --> 00:51:30,460
two ritually-murdered slave girls, and the bones of hundreds of men, women and
children -

455
00:51:30,460 --> 00:51:34,660
his very own body count to take with him to Valhalla.

456
00:51:42,900 --> 00:51:50,020
On the positive side, though, there was one thing that the Vikings did manage to
do, however inadvertently.

457
00:51:50,700 --> 00:51:53,380
They created England.

458
00:51:53,380 --> 00:51:57,260
By smashing the power of most of the Saxon kingdoms

459
00:51:57,260 --> 00:52:03,260
the Vikings accomplished what, left to themselves, the warring tribes could never
have managed.

460
00:52:03,260 --> 00:52:08,620
Some semblance of alliance against a common foe.

461
00:52:08,620 --> 00:52:12,980
To push back the Vikings to repair some of the damage they'd done

462
00:52:12,980 --> 00:52:17,220
would need more than just a competent tribal warrior chief.

463
00:52:17,220 --> 00:52:23,100
It would need someone who had a vision, and a vision not just of victory but of
government.

464
00:52:23,100 --> 00:52:28,260
Someone who could harness Anglo-Saxon energy and determination to Roman military
discipline.

465
00:52:28,260 --> 00:52:35,980
They'd need a local Charlemagne, someone with the intelligence and imagination of a
truly Roman ruler.

466
00:52:40,540 --> 00:52:43,260
And he, of course, was Alfred.

467
00:52:44,820 --> 00:52:51,180
Our cherished image of Alfred is of the hero on the run, up against steep odds,
muddling through,

468
00:52:51,180 --> 00:52:55,460
taking it on the chin when getting scolded for burning the cakes.

469
00:52:57,420 --> 00:53:03,500
But the story which really tells you all you need to know about Alfred isn't set in
the swamps of Somerset

470
00:53:03,500 --> 00:53:10,940
but on the Palatine Hill of Rome. It's more startling, illuminating, and it happens
to be true.

471
00:53:13,100 --> 00:53:20,780
As a small boy, Alfred's father King Aethelwulf sent him on a special mission to
Rome to see Pope Leo IV,

472
00:53:20,780 --> 00:53:25,460
probably to ask the Pope's help in the struggle against the Vikings.

473
00:53:25,460 --> 00:53:32,380
In a ceremony, the Pope dressed the little fellow in the Imperial purple of a Roman
consul

474
00:53:32,380 --> 00:53:40,300
and wound a sword belt around his waist, turning little Alfred into a true Roman
Christian warrior.
475
00:53:43,580 --> 00:53:50,140
On a second trip, Alfred spent a whole year in the Eternal City along with his
father,

476
00:53:50,140 --> 00:53:54,100
walking the ruins of the empire and the sacred sites.

477
00:53:54,100 --> 00:53:59,300
It was surely this experience which made him what he was - a philosopher prince,

478
00:53:59,300 --> 00:54:07,260
someone who in more than a literal sense translated the works of Roman wisdom for
Anglo-Saxon consumption.

479
00:54:07,260 --> 00:54:12,900
Through Alfred, England got something it hadn't had since the legions departed -

480
00:54:12,900 --> 00:54:17,180
an authentic vision of a realm governed by law and education.

481
00:54:17,180 --> 00:54:22,340
A realm which, since Alfred commissioned a translation of Bede into Anglo-Saxon,

482
00:54:22,340 --> 00:54:29,620
understood its past and its special destiny as the Western bastion of a Christian
Roman world.

483
00:54:32,780 --> 00:54:35,460
First he had to win those battles.

484
00:54:35,460 --> 00:54:42,340
He took the throne of Wessex when, despite recent victory, the collapse of his
kingdom seemed imminent,

485
00:54:42,340 --> 00:54:47,580
and with it the entirety of Anglo-Saxon England.

486
00:54:47,580 --> 00:54:49,860
It was on Athelney Island

487
00:54:49,860 --> 00:54:54,140
that the heroic legend of Alfred, fugitive on the run,

488
00:54:54,140 --> 00:54:57,780
finally turning the tide against his enemies, was born.
489
00:54:59,740 --> 00:55:03,060
By the spring of 878

490
00:55:03,060 --> 00:55:07,100
Alfred had managed to piece together an alliance of resistance,

491
00:55:07,100 --> 00:55:12,140
and at King Egbert's stone on the borders of Wiltshire and Somerset,

492
00:55:12,140 --> 00:55:15,980
near the site of this 19th-C folly built to celebrate it,

493
00:55:15,980 --> 00:55:22,940
he took command of an army which two days later fought and defeated Guthrum's
Vikings.

494
00:55:27,300 --> 00:55:33,820
His victory, a holding operation, forced the Vikings to settle for less than half
the country.

495
00:55:35,100 --> 00:55:40,540
But when in 886 Alfred entered London, rebuilt over the old Roman site,

496
00:55:40,540 --> 00:55:44,060
something of a deep significance did happen.

497
00:55:44,060 --> 00:55:50,500
He was acclaimed "The Sovereign Lord of all the English people not under subjection
to the Danes."

498
00:55:50,500 --> 00:55:53,780
So it appears that during Alfred's lifetime

499
00:55:53,780 --> 00:56:00,940
the idea of a united English Kingdom had become conceivable and even desirable.

500
00:56:04,820 --> 00:56:10,300
The Alfred jewel, found not far from Athelney, has inscribed on its edge,

501
00:56:10,300 --> 00:56:15,420
"Aelfred Mec Heht Gewyrcan" - "Alfred caused me to be made".

502
00:56:15,420 --> 00:56:19,820
The same might well be said of his reinvention of the English monarchy.
503
00:56:20,660 --> 00:56:28,100
The enormous, haunting eyes which dominate the figure are said to be symbols of
wisdom, or sight -

504
00:56:28,100 --> 00:56:32,380
apt qualities for a ruler whose ambitions were so lofty.

505
00:56:32,380 --> 00:56:35,460
Alfred's special gift was indeed

506
00:56:35,460 --> 00:56:40,740
to be able to see clearly England's place in the scheme of things -

507
00:56:40,740 --> 00:56:45,980
the debt of his realm to antiquity and his bequest to posterity.

508
00:56:48,740 --> 00:56:56,060
With his realm transformed, Alfred made possible a true Anglo-Saxon renaissance in
the 10th century,

509
00:56:56,060 --> 00:57:00,460
creating stunning works of Christian art and architecture.

510
00:57:00,460 --> 00:57:04,780
But the long shadow of Rome still fell over all this brilliance.

511
00:57:04,780 --> 00:57:12,180
Alfred's grandson would be crowned "the first King of England," in a great Roman
style coronation.

512
00:57:12,180 --> 00:57:17,740
And where did this momentous event happen? Well, where else but Bath?

513
00:57:23,300 --> 00:57:29,460
We shouldn't get ahead of ourselves. England's been conceived, not yet born

514
00:57:29,460 --> 00:57:35,740
and to the north, Pictland has even further to go before it's recognisably a
kingdom of Scotland.

515
00:57:35,740 --> 00:57:39,740
But for a generation or two, it did look as though

516
00:57:39,740 --> 00:57:46,700
the grafting of Anglo-Saxon culture onto the legacy of Roman Britain had produced
an extraordinary flowering.

517
00:57:46,700 --> 00:57:51,740
But the shoots were still green, the buds were tender and vulnerable,

518
00:57:51,740 --> 00:57:55,500
and before this new kingdom had a chance to mature

519
00:57:55,500 --> 00:58:00,780
it would be cut down by the devastating blow of an invader's axe.

520
00:58:22,980 --> 00:58:27,740
Subtitles by Valerie Maguire BBC - 2000

521
00:58:27,740 --> 00:58:30,860
E-mail us at subtitling@bbc.co.uk

You might also like