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Time Team

历史
S14
开播:2007-01-14季终:2007-04-08
剧集列表
2007/08/27 S14 E
Prior Park, Bath - Secrets of the Stately Garden
2007/05/01 S14 E
Jamestown, Virginia, USA - Americas Birthplace
2007/04/24 S14 E
Doggerland, North Sea - Britains Drowned World
2007/04/08 S14 E13 10
In the Shadow of the Tor - Bodmin Moor, Cornwall

The Team descend on the bleak, beautiful landscape of Bodmin Moor to face one their biggest challenges yet. The dig aims to date a possible Bronze Age village of stone houses. But alongside the village is a vast and mysterious 500-metre-long stone structure. The team are joined by Peter Herring of Cornwall Heritage Trust and environmental archaeologist Ben Gearey.

2007/04/01 S14 E12 10
The Abbey Habit - Poulton, Cheshire

Tony Robinson and the team travel to the Welsh border in search of the abandoned Poulton Abbey that was once briefly used by Cistercian monks. Mick is delighted to be researching his favourite subject, monastic history. Though local archaeologists have found a chapel and plenty of other remains (including skeletons), there is no sign of the abbey. As the hunt drags on without any major progress, some of the team come up with a controversial theory. The team are joined by Mike Emery and Alan Wilmshurst from the Poulton Research Project, architectural historian Jonathan Clark, local historian Alan Thacker, and Finds specialist Debbie Klemperer.

2007/03/25 S14 E11 10
Road to the Relics - Godstone, Surrey

The team are excited at the prospect of finding a possible Roman temple. Will this be a first for Time Team?  The site is positioned close to a Roman road connecting London to the south coast and has never been excavated. Local archaeologists have wondered what lies beneath the surface for many years, and called in Time Team to help them find out.

2007/03/11 S14 E9 10
The Domesday Mill - Dotton, Devon

Time Team have never excavated a watermill before. Despite the fact that they were plentiful in historic times, these features have been under-researched. Heading to the River Otter in Devon, the team excavate a site dating back at least to the Domesday Book of 1086, yet the last mill building on the site was pulled down as recently as the 1960s. They are joined by Martin Watts (mill historian), industrial archaeologist Mike Nevell, and Finds specialist John Allan. Tony visits the working mill at nearby Otterton.

2007/03/10 S14 E10 10
The Cheyne Gang - Chesham Bois, Buckinghamshire

Archaeologists in Chesham in Buckinghamshire believe they've found the remains of a medieval building under the manicured lawns of a Georgian house.
The owner of a Chesham Bois House, is a keen gardener. She's turned up 17th-century and medieval tiles beneath the greenhouse, uncovered medieval pottery in the flowerbeds, and noticed strange lumps and bumps at the bottom of the garden.

2007/03/04 S14 E8 10
No Stone Unturned - Moss Brow Farm, Warburton, Cheshire, Greater Manchester

The team arrive at a field outside Cheshire where metal detectorists have made several valuable finds in the past, hinting the site was once a very active Roman settlement. However, the complete lack of finds causes serious concern amongst our intrepid explorers. They are joined by Mike Nevell from the University of Manchester, Roman historian David Shotter, and Robert Philpott from Liverpool Museum. Archeometallurgist Andrew Lacey fashions a simple Roman snake bracelet. Famously, this is the episode where Tony declares "We've done what we always threatened: after 160 programmes, we found - nothing."

2007/03/01 S14 E
Ramsgate, Kent - Pugin - The God of Gothic
2007/02/25 S14 E7 10
A Tale of Two Villages - Wicken, Milton Keynes, Northamptonshire

The team descend on the village of Wicken to investigate the local history. Digging in residents' gardens and surrounding fields, the team uncover a mysterious church, an ancient burial ground and evidence of a Saxon community.
Wicken, in Northamptonshire, appears to be a typical English village, with a church and manor house. But back in the medieval era there were two churches and two manor houses here, making up two separate villages. Wick Hamon and Wick Dive.

2007/02/18 S14 E6 10
A Port and Stilton - Stilton, Cambridgeshire

The team visit a site near the Roman road of Ermine Street, where a clutch of Roman objects has been discovered. But field-walking has also produced Anglo-Saxon artefacts, and it becomes apparent that the site had more historical activity than first anticipated. Unlike today, the terrain would have been largely boggy and marshy. The archaeology increasingly points to a Roman industrial site with strong evidence of pottery manufacture and export. But after the Romans left, it may have taken on an important monastic role - much to Mick's delight. The team attempt to reproduce a Roman kiln. Finally, towards the end of day three, John's geophysics uncovers a possible neolithic enclosure. They even find time for cheese tasting, though Stilton is not actually the place where Stilton cheese is made. They are joined by Philippa Walton from the PAS, and Ben Robinson of Peterborough Museum.

2007/02/11 S14 E5 10
Sharpe's Redoubt - Sandgate, Kent

The team investigate the remains of Shorncliffe Redoubt, the first fort built to defend the English south coast from invasion by revolutionary French forces in the 1790s.
The team piece together how its design and use as a training ground for light infantry troops helped to develop the modern army and defend the coast against invasion by 'the old enemy'.

 

2007/02/04 S14 E4 10
The Druids' Last Stand - Amlwch, Anglesey, North Wales

Time Team are in the Island of Anglesey in North Wales, investigating a system of earthworks, not noticed until 2006 when identified by a light aircraft. Is it Iron Age or Roman? Though the locals believe that the ancient sect of the Druids was active in this area, the team are struggling to find anything that has not been ploughed away. But towards the end of the dig they make a completely unexpected find. The team are joined by Ken Brassil of the National Museum Wales. Using traditional techniques, local archaeologists make a wicker man, with a strange resemblance to a member of the team.

2007/01/28 S14 E3 10
School Diggers Medieval - Hooke Court, Dorset

The team are in Hooke Court, Dorset to investigate a moated manor house with a mysterious past. Now used as a school, the grounds contain remains of buildings from the past 500 years and as the trenchers begin their work, the finds start to pile up. Though they are particularly looking for evidence of the Civil War, there are signs of activity from several different periods, including medieval and Tudor.[5] The team are joined by historians Sam Newton and Jonathan Foyle. The school's pupils get involved in all aspects of the dig. As usual, Stewart has his own ideas about the site, and is skeptical about the idea of a moat.

2007/01/21 S14 E2 10
There's No Place Like Rome - Blacklands, near Frome, Somerset

The team are in Somerset to investigate the remains of a small Roman villa, dating back to just after the time of the Roman invasion in 43 a.d. But previous excavations suggest it was occupied by local inhabitants rather than Roman invaders. Could it have been built on the site of an earlier, Iron Age settlement? The team are joined by Roman specialists John Creighton and Tom Moore; and Claire Ryley makes an authentic period garden. Members of the Stranglers put in a surprise appearance.

2007/01/14 S14 E1 10
Finds on the Fairway - Santon/Speke Keeill, Isle of Man

The team battle the tail end of Hurricane Gordon to investigate the last keeill standing, preserved beneath a golf course on the Isle of Man. A thousand years ago the island was dotted with these keeills, or small stone chapels, most of which have completely disappeared. Mick, an avowed enthusiast for early Christian buildings, is in his element. Sensational finds keep coming, including perfectly preserved plaited human hair, and a specimen of Ogham script. The team are joined by local archaeologist Andy Johnson, keeill expert Nick Johnson, and Viking specialist Dawn Hadley.

2006/08/25 S14 E
Time Team Live - Big Royal Dig (2006)

Over the August bank holiday, they conducted excavations in three Royal gardens for the Queen. The event, timed to celebrate the Queen's 80th birthday, was Time Team's 150th dig.  In addition to the nightly programmes on Channel 4, six hours of live coverage per day was shown on More4.

Edited into a Time Team special, "Big Royal Dig".