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Timewatch

Season 2002 2002

  • 2002-01-04T21:00:00Z on BBC Two
  • 1h
  • 11h 50m (12 episodes)
  • United Kingdom
  • English
  • Documentary
Timewatch is a long-running British television series showing documentaries on historical subjects, spanning all human history.

12 episodes

Season Premiere

2002-01-04T21:00:00Z

2002x01 The Making of Adolf Hitler

Season Premiere

2002x01 The Making of Adolf Hitler

  • 2002-01-04T21:00:00Z1h

An investigation into new research about the first 30 years of the Nazi leader's life. The programme challenges the claim. made in `Mein Kampf' that he had a long-held blueprint for politcial power, revealing instead that Hiter was a drifter and opportunist. Also assesses the evidence for and against Hitler's homosexuality.

The Iron Bridge is an icon of the Industrial Revolution the world’s first metal structure and an outstanding example of 18th-Century British technical ingenuity.Yet, incredibly, no-one knows how this vast aerial jigsaw spanning the river Severn in Shropshire was actually constructed. Timewatch sets talented young engineer, Jamie Hillier, the task of solving the mystery.

2002x03 Death of the Battleship

  • 2002-01-18T21:00:00Z1h

Following the military and civilian divers working to unravel the reasons behind the sinking of both HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse by the Japanese Air Force in the South China Sea in December 1941, a loss considered to be one of Britain's greatest maritime disasters.

The story of the No Gun Ri massacre in which Korean civilians were killed by the American army. Uses eyewitness accounts (from the civilians and army) as well as recently declassified documents.

2002-02-08T21:00:00Z

2002x05 Jubilee Day

2002x05 Jubilee Day

  • 2002-02-08T21:00:00Z1h

A look back at how Britain celebrated the Queen's Silver Jubilee in 1977.

2002-04-19T20:00:00Z

2002x06 Myths of the Titanic

2002x06 Myths of the Titanic

  • 2002-04-19T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary exploring the public's enduring fascination with the White Star Line's most famous ship, the Titanic. The programme attempts to uncover the truth behind the many myths which have grown up around her sinking in 1912, and asks why the tragedy continues to attract such attention.

2002-05-10T20:00:00Z

2002x07 Battle for Berlin

2002x07 Battle for Berlin

  • 2002-05-10T20:00:00Z1h

Timewatch looks at the Red Army's sweep to Berlin and battle for the city, and the great loss of life and suffering endured. Historian Antony Beevor looks at the scale and tactics of the battle, and at the rapes, murder, looting and destruction that went on against the civilian population, not just Germans but liberated camp and slave labour victims as well.

After the Soviets forced the Germans to surrender, Joseph Stalin secretly purged Leningrad, executing the people who had ensured it's freedom, and imprisoning their families. This documentary draws on previously classified Russian documents and survivors' testimony to explain the dictators actions.

Documentary investigating what really occurred at the 1876 Battle of Little Bighorn : the scene of Custer's Last Stand. The programme aims to reveal the truth behind the events that have passed into American folklore, exposing as myth the Hollywood image of the chivalrous soldier who gave his life defending his crack troops against a ferocious attack from a deadly enemy.

The story of Akhenaten, the heretic king of Egypt, who introduced a new religion and demanded that he be worshipped like a god on Earth.

2002-12-14T21:00:00Z

2002x11 Murder at Harvard

2002x11 Murder at Harvard

  • 2002-12-14T21:00:00Z1h

In 1849, Harvard professor John White Webster was hanged for the slaying and dismemberment of prominent Bostonian George Parkman, apparently over money. Historian Simon Schama investigates the case in the light of ongoing doubts about Webster's guilt, and attempts to solve the celebrated murder mystery once and for all.

2002x12 The Victorian Way of Death

  • 2002-05-04T20:00:00Z50m

Dan Cruickshank investigates the circumstances and rituals surrounding death in Victorian Britain by piecing together the fate of five apparently unrelated corpses.

The story he uncovers is one of bizarre extremes - of bodysnatchers and the bodies they snatched; of inner-city graveyards so overflowing that the limbs of the dead could be seen protruding from the newly dug earth; of the great new cemeteries where a tomb cost as much as a terrace of houses in east London; of the suspicious resistance which greeted the 'heathenish' practice of cremation; and of the carnage of the Western Front where Victorian ideals about death - and the afterlife - were finally shattered by the violence of the Great War.

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