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Chronicle

Season 1967 1967
TV-PG

  • 1967-02-11T00:00:00Z on BBC Two
  • 50m
  • 16h 40m (20 episodes)
  • United Kingdom
  • English
  • Documentary
For 25 years, the BBC's Chronicle archaeology series took viewers around the world to explore historical excavations and discover long-gone cultures and civilisations. With a mix of live broadcasts and filmed documentaries, 'Chronicle' brought some of the greatest archaeologists of the 20th Century into our homes.

20 episodes

Season Premiere

1967-02-11T00:00:00Z

1967x01 The Finds of the Year

Season Premiere

1967x01 The Finds of the Year

  • 1967-02-11T00:00:00Z50m

The Swan Jewel from Dunstable, medieval bronze from Barnard Castle, weird stone heads from Celtic Yorkshire... These treasures and many more, all acquired in the past year, are now, thanks to the efforts of the public from coal-miners to school-children, part of the national inheritance in our museums. Nicholas Thomas and Magnus Magnusson tell the story behind their discovery with the help of the finders, the curators, and the objects themselves.

1967-03-11T00:00:00Z

1967x02 The Other Conquest

1967x02 The Other Conquest

  • 1967-03-11T00:00:00Z50m

At about the same time as their attack on England the Normans invaded Sicily. Tonight John Julius Norwich tells the remarkable story of their hard-fought victory over that rugged island defended by a fierce Saracen enemy. The Normans set up a great dynasty which has left dazzling achievements in marble and gold.

1967-03-11T00:00:00Z

1967x03 The City That Vanished

1967x03 The City That Vanished

  • 1967-03-11T00:00:00Z50m

The ancient Greek city of Sybaris even to its contemporaries was synonymous with luxury and high living, but the actual city itself has disappeared almost without trace. Now there is fresh hope of finding it with the help of a new electronic instrument, developed in England the proton magnetometer.

1967-04-07T23:00:00Z

1967x04 Diagnosis - A.D. 70

1967x04 Diagnosis - A.D. 70

  • 1967-04-07T23:00:00Z50m

How can you possibly diagnose an illness suffered 2,000 years ago? Dr. Charles Newman, Harveian Librarian of the Royal College of Physicians, can do this from one of the most remarkable finds of recent years-nearly 200 wooden carvings of the Roman period. Many show details of ill health and were brought to the source of the Seine by pilgrims in search of a cure. Lady Brogan, an authority on Roman Gaul, discusses with Magnus Magnusson what these carvings also reveal about daily life then.

1967-04-07T23:00:00Z

1967x05 Iron Age Autopsy

1967x05 Iron Age Autopsy

  • 1967-04-07T23:00:00Z50m

This film by the Danish Television Service examines the strange case of the incredibly well-preserved bodies found in the Danish peat bogs. Why should the victims have been strangled and then thrown naked into moorland pools 2,000 years ago?

1967-05-12T23:00:00Z

1967x06 The Lost Leonardos

1967x06 The Lost Leonardos

  • 1967-05-12T23:00:00Z50m

The recent announcement of the existence of 700 drawings of mechanical inventions by Leonardo Da Vinci has caused a furore among scholars. Charles Gibbs-Smith, of the Victoria and Albert Museum, examines this important discovery and the new light which this sheds on Leonardo's missing years.

1967-05-12T23:00:00Z

1967x07 The Gate of Hell

1967x07 The Gate of Hell

  • 1967-05-12T23:00:00Z50m

In ancient legend Lake Avernus on the Bay of Naples was the site of the entrance to Hades. Could it have been the rather sinister complex of tunnels which Dr. Robert Paget has found nearby?

1967x08 Arthur: The Peerless King

  • 1967-06-09T23:00:00Z50m

How much history? How much romance? How much nonsense? An enquiry into what is really known about King Arthur, what has been added through the centuries, and what the latest excavations at South Cadbury, the reputed stronghold of Camelot, have revealed.

1967x09 The Claws of the Griffin

  • 1967-07-07T23:00:00Z50m

On a hot night in July A.D. 1500 a series of savage murders decimated the Baglioni family. The story of the downfall of this handsome and ambitious Renaissance family is told tonight in the actual palaces and streets of Perugia where it happened.

1967-07-07T23:00:00Z

1967x10 Dragons' Bones

1967x10 Dragons' Bones

  • 1967-07-07T23:00:00Z50m

No medieval dragon trailed greater clouds of misunderstanding than the great reptiles of a hundred-million years ago. Dr. Alan Charig of the Natural History Museum, London, describes to Magnus Magnusson his recent expedition to find dinosaur remains in Lesotho.

1967-08-04T23:00:00Z

1967x11 Collision Course

1967x11 Collision Course

  • 1967-08-04T23:00:00Z50m

On a stormy night in October 1707, Sir Cloudesley Shovell, victorious Admiral of the Fleet and national hero, ran his flagship on to the rocks of the Scillies. For three years a naval officer has been trying to pinpoint the site of this great disaster. Magnus Magnusson investigates whether the recent finds of cannon and other trophies mean he has at last succeeded.

1967x12 Shall the Waters Prevail?

  • 1967-08-04T23:00:00Z50m

Since the building of the Aswan High Dam, the rising waters of the Nile have drowned forever the ancient temples of Nubia. Chronicle reports on the ingenious method used to save the most famous - Abu Simbel.

1967-09-29T23:00:00Z

1967x13 Cast for Posterity

1967x13 Cast for Posterity

  • 1967-09-29T23:00:00Z50m

One of the most difficult recent problems facing British archaeologists was how to preserve the lines of the great Anglo-Saxon treasure-ship of Sutton Hoo. Chronicle reports on the ingenious solution finally adopted.

1967-09-29T23:00:00Z

1967x14 Searching for Sheba

1967x14 Searching for Sheba

  • 1967-09-29T23:00:00Z50m

An American expedition to Arabia has recently been looking for archaeological evidence to verify the existence of the Queen who came to test King Solomon's wisdom.

1967-10-27T23:00:00Z

1967x15 6000 Working Dives

1967x15 6000 Working Dives

  • 1967-10-27T23:00:00Z50m

The story of the seabed exploration by Dr. George Bass of the Pennsylvania University Museum of a rich Byzantine merchant ship which sank off the coast of Turkey 1,100 years ago and was the first underwater wreck to be excavated in a truly scientific manner.

1967x16 The Fall of Constantinople

  • 1967-11-25T00:00:00Z50m

John Julius Norwich tells the dramatic story of the fall of Constantinople and the Byzantine Empire, followed by the rise of the Ottoman Turks in the 15th Century. Using monuments in Istanbul to show the formidable artistic and intellectual achievements of the Byzantines, Norwich vividly describes the last scenes of Greek Orthodox Christianity from within the Hagia Sophia. Norwich describes the calamitous scenes of the last progress of the sacred icons around Constantinople (Istanbul).

1967-11-25T00:00:00Z

1967x17 Lepenski Vir

1967x17 Lepenski Vir

  • 1967-11-25T00:00:00Z50m

A first film report on the excavation beside the Danube which has spectacularly revealed the earliest village in Europe.

1967-11-25T00:00:00Z

1967x18 South Cadbury

1967x18 South Cadbury

  • 1967-11-25T00:00:00Z50m

Leslie Alcock describes the latest stages of the excavation of this great hill fort in Somerset.

1967-12-23T00:00:00Z

1967x19 The Last Days of Minos

1967x19 The Last Days of Minos

  • 1967-12-23T00:00:00Z50m

Was the legend of the Minotaur inspired by the worship of bulls at Knossos on Crete? Does the volcanic island of Santorini provide clues about the fabled city of Atlantis? Magnus Magnusson investigates through a detailed tour of Knossos and its archaeological finds, which date from 1700 to 1380 BC. He also explores the extraordinary life of Sir Arthur Evans, the archaeologist who discovered Knossos and the Minoan civilisation.

1967x20 121 Million Basketloads

  • 1967-09-15T23:00:00Z50m

Silbury Hill is the largest artificial mound in western Europe. Professor Richard Atkinson and Magnus Magnusson discuss what is known about this unique and extraordinary prehistoric monument.

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