An Entity of Type: television season, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org:8891

This is a list of Time Team episodes from series 12.

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dbo:abstract
  • This is a list of Time Team episodes from series 12. (en)
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  • 2005-01-02 (xsd:date)
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  • 13 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
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dbp:aux
  • St Osyth, Essex (en)
  • Chenies Manor House, Buckinghamshire (en)
  • Skipsea, East Riding of Yorkshire (en)
  • Bursledon, Hampshire (en)
  • South Shields, Tyne and Wear (en)
  • Standish, Gloucestershire (en)
  • Wemyss, Fife (en)
  • Drumlanrig, Dumfries and Galloway (en)
  • Hanslope, Milton Keynes (en)
  • Nether Poppleton, Yorkshire (en)
  • Northborough, Peterborough (en)
  • South Perrott, Dorset (en)
  • Warton near Preston, Lancashire (en)
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  • white (en)
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dbp:firstAired
  • 2005-01-02 (xsd:date)
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  • 2005-04-03 (xsd:date)
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  • 13 (xsd:integer)
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  • 2005-01-02 (xsd:date)
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  • 2005-02-06 (xsd:date)
  • 2005-02-13 (xsd:date)
  • 2005-02-20 (xsd:date)
  • 2005-02-27 (xsd:date)
  • 2005-03-06 (xsd:date)
  • 2005-03-13 (xsd:date)
  • 2005-03-20 (xsd:date)
  • 2005-04-03 (xsd:date)
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  • Time Team heads to South Perrott in Dorset, inspired by the intriguing discovery of Roman brooches and coins in a hilltop field. The Team are pretty sure they're going to uncover a Roman Temple, but the search gets off to a bad start when all the pottery turns out to be medieval and there's no sign of any buildings. Something has clearly been going on in this field, but it's not what they thought. The trenches gradually reveal their contents, painting a very different picture from a very different period. Have the Team stumbled across a Stone Age burial site that had, extraordinarily, been honoured for thousands of years right into Roman times? Prehistory specialist Miles Russell explains some aspects of Bronze Age features. (en)
  • For years, a field near Standish in Gloucestershire has yielded Roman brooches, mosaic tiles and coins. The finds point to a sizeable villa somewhere nearby - but so far none has been found. Tony Robinson and the team have just three days to solve the mystery. There are plenty of signs that people lived in the area from the Iron Age through to the Roman period, but no sign of the villa. But clue by clue the archaeologists piece together the puzzle to reveal an extraordinary picture of several generations of one family living through huge social change and gradually improving their lifestyle as Romanised Britain became more and more prosperous. (en)
  • An unusual horse bit, some posh finds and carved stonework lead Time Team on a search for a Norman hunting lodge in Northamptonshire. But it isn't long before the lodge's massive stone walls begin to look a little less impressive, and, under the forensic trowels of the diggers, the lodge shrinks in every direction. But royal forests were fiercely protected by the Norman nobility; why are there buildings here at all? Does the Domesday Book hold a clue? It seems as if this area was home to an extraordinary number of pigs... Have the Team come across one of the very first factory farms? (en)
  • In the 7th Century Viking pirates sailed up a muddy Essex creek. Legend has it they captured a lonely nun who when offered her 'modesty or her mortality', chose to die. The nun then carried her severed head up the hill to her church where she collapsed. Where she lay a spring bubbled up. The nun was St Osyth, the wife of the Saxon King of Essex, who chose the veil rather than consummating her marriage. The site of her death became a shrine and a busy settlement grew up. In the 12th Century Richard de Belmais, Bishop of London, founded a large Augustinian Priory in the middle of the village. This became a powerful establishment, which by the Dissolution in 1539 was one of the wealthiest Augustinian Monasteries in Europe. A few years ago a local boatbuilder noticed some decayed timbers sticking out of the mud in St Osyth Creek. The tides gradually revealed more of these timbers, which are on a significant bend in the channel. These timbers could be the remains of a medieval wharf which served the town in its early days, but they could also be the key to a much bigger mystery. The present town seems to date to the 15th century but the famous Priory is much older. There must have been a busy settlement servicing it - so where was the original town of St Osyth? Time Team have three days to redraw the map of this picturesque town on the Essex coast. (en)
  • The team have three days to explore the skeleton of a medieval warship found on the bed of the River Hamble near Southampton. They must prove whether it is the Grace Dieu, Henry V's naval flagship, and also find out how big it was and just why it came to grief. The team are joined by John Adams and Susan Rose . Damian Goodburn attempts to reproduce a small section of the massive ship's clinker built hull. (en)
  • Tony Robinson and the team visit Chenies Manor which is believed to have been upgraded in time for Henry VIII's visit around 1530. However, while a late 16th-century inventory suggests that an additional range of rooms fit for a king once existed, traces of them have vanished since the house fell into disrepair. Can the experts uncover the layout of the building as it appeared in Tudor times? (en)
  • Wemyss Caves, on the shore of the Firth of Forth, have been a famous landmark for centuries. Legend has it that they were occupied by the mysterious Pictish people who scared the Romans into building Hadrian's Wall; that subsequently they were home to medieval Christian hermits and later to Jacobean nobles. Now the caves are under serious threat from erosion; the sea is already lapping at the cliff just below the cave line. But Wemyss Caves have never been properly investigated. How did the enigmatic Pictish carvings on the cave wall get there? And did Picts really live in the caves or were they just passing by? Is there any evidence of hermits or other types of medieval occupation? In an intensive three days, Time Team come up with some remarkable answers, beginning the task of re-writing the history of this atmospheric site. (en)
  • Twenty years ago, during a particularly dry summer, parch marks revealed what seemed to be a huge Roman fort a few hundred metres from the Duke of Buccleuch's extraordinarily grand house, Drumlanrig Castle, in Dumfries. The discovery lay untouched until Time Team took on the challenge to investigate it further. The Team sought to answer a number of questions. Was it actually a Roman fort? If so, it was one of the most northerly ever found and therefore of special importance to Scotland's history. So when were the Romans there? No finds made previously had given any hint of the date of the structure. Time Team also wanted to identify the roads leading in and out of the fort. Was there any kind of civilian settlement or other features nearby? And could the Team work out how the Romans made their famous draco, the military standard that made a sound said to have struck fear into the hearts of their enemies? (en)
  • The villagers of Nether Poppleton, near York, join Tony Robinson and the team for some extensive digging as they try to determine the exact age of their village. The current layout follows a typical medieval pattern but a reference to the village in the Domesday Book has the experts thinking that it could date back to Saxon times at least. (en)
dbp:title
  • Animal Farm (en)
  • Hunting the Romans in South Shields - Tower Blocks and Togas (en)
  • A Neolithic Cathedral? (en)
  • Fighting on the Frontier (en)
  • Going Upmarket with the Romans (en)
  • In Search of Henry V's Flagship, Grace Dieu (en)
  • Lost Centuries of St Osyth (en)
  • Norman Neighbours (en)
  • Picts and Hermits: Cave Dwellers of Fife (en)
  • The Bombers in the Marsh (en)
  • The Manor That's Back to Front (en)
  • The Monastery and the Mansion (en)
  • The Puzzle of Picket's Farm (en)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
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rdfs:comment
  • This is a list of Time Team episodes from series 12. (en)
rdfs:label
  • Time Team (series 12) (en)
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