- published: 16 Aug 2016
- views: 17594
Time Team is a British television series that originally aired on British Channel 4 from 1994 to 2014. Created by television producer Tim Taylor and presented by actor Tony Robinson, each episode featured a team of specialists carrying out an archaeological dig over a period of three days, with Robinson explaining the process in layman's terms. This team of specialists changed throughout the series' run, although it has consistently included professional archaeologists such as Mick Aston, Carenza Lewis, Francis Pryor and Phil Harding. The sites excavated over the show's run have ranged in date from the Palaeolithic to the Second World War.
In October 2012, Channel 4 announced that the final series would be broadcast in 2013. Series 20 was screened in January–March 2013. A further nine specials (essentially an irregularly scheduled 21st series) were screened between May 2013 and September 2014.
A team of archaeologists, usually led by either Mick Aston or Francis Pryor (the latter usually heading Bronze Age and Iron Age digs), and including field archaeologist Phil Harding, congregate at a site, usually in the United Kingdom. The site is frequently suggested by a member of the viewing public who knows of an unsolved archaeological mystery, or who owns property that has not been excavated and is potentially interesting. Time Team uncover as much as they can about the archaeology and history of the site in three days.
I Am may refer to:
A team is a group of people or other animals linked in a common purpose. Human teams are especially appropriate for conducting tasks that are high in complexity and have many interdependent subtasks.
A group does not necessarily constitute a team. Teams normally have members with complementary skills and generate synergy through a coordinated effort which allows each member to maximize their strengths and minimize their weaknesses. Naresh Jain (2009) claims:
Team members need to learn how to help one another, help other team members realize their true potential, and create an environment that allows everyone to go beyond his or her limitations. Teams can be broken down into from a huge team or one big group of people, even if these smaller secondary teams are temporary.
A team becomes more than just a collection of people when a strong sense of mutual commitment creates synergy, thus generating performance greater than the sum of the performance of its individual members.
Thus teams of game players can form (and re-form) to practise their craft/sport. Transport logistics executives can select teams of horses, dogs, or oxen for the purpose of conveying passengers or goods.
Coordinates: 51°47′56″N 1°04′48″E / 51.799°N 1.080°E / 51.799; 1.080
St Osyth is a village, civil parish and electoral ward (St Osyth and Point Clear) in northeast Essex. It is about 5 miles (8.0 km) west of Clacton-on-Sea, and about 12 miles (19.3 km) southeast of Colchester. It is located on the B1027 road and is named after Osyth, a saint and Anglian princess. The Essex dialect pronunciation is 'Toosey', which is still in use locally for the name of the village.
The village has a bus service with services to Colchester and Clacton. The nearest rail station can be found at Great Bentley, approximately 4 miles away.
Before being renamed to commemorate Saint Osyth, the village was called Chich (alternative spellings include Chiche and Chick).
St Osyth was the subject of an episode of Channel 4's Time Team programme, "Lost Centuries of St Osyth", (series 12 episode 9, first broadcast in February 2005). This programme sought to uncover the early origins of the village, which was presumed to have grown up at around the same time as the Priory, in the twelfth century. Many of the investigations around the current village centre found little evidence of settlement earlier than the fourteenth century; it appeared that the early village centre lay some way off, between the Priory and the river.
The Bronze Age is a time period characterized by the use of bronze, proto-writing, and other early features of urban civilization. The Bronze Age is the second principal period of the three-age Stone-Bronze-Iron system, as proposed in modern times by Christian Jürgensen Thomsen, for classifying and studying ancient societies.
An ancient civilization is defined to be in the Bronze Age either by smelting its own copper and alloying with tin, arsenic, or other metals, or by trading for bronze from production areas elsewhere. Copper-tin ores are rare, as reflected in the fact that there were no tin bronzes in western Asia before trading in bronze began in the third millennium BC. Worldwide, the Bronze Age generally followed the Neolithic period, but in some parts of the world, the Copper Age served as a transition from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age. Although the Iron Age generally followed the Bronze Age, in some areas, the Iron Age intruded directly on the Neolithic from outside the region.
The Time Team head to the town of Castor to dig in the grounds of a Church looking for remains of a substantial Roman complex. Complicating the excavation is the work of Edmund Artist who took detailed measurements and dug the area 150 years ago. They need to first find the ruins, and try and understand and confirm what Artist saw. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
A variety of places are dug, revealing medieval pottery and occupation, showing St Osyth village was an active port. A wharf is dug between tides. The adjoining field shows industry along the creek. Inland finds support this theory. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
The Time Team travel to Canterbury to understand the religious evolution of the city. They are looking for evidence of early Roman temples to the establishment in the first settlements of Monks in England. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
Tony and the team are in the village of Beadnell on the Northumbrian coast, to explore an unusual promontory, from which mysterious fragments of human bone have emerged over the last few years. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
As Sir Tony Robinson discovers, there are gaps in historians' knowledge of the strange rituals, death rites and beliefs from 2500BC, when Britain entered the Bronze Age. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
Tony and the Team uncover their largest ever range and number of items from Roman Britain, and undertake their most ambitious geophysics project to date. The archaeologists explore a spectacular site at Brancaster in Norfolk, which is believed to have been a Roman 'Shore-Fort'. Excavations could determine how large it was, what it looked like, and whether it was one of the key military outposts of Roman Britain. If the site turns out to be as significant as the Team hope, it suggests this question: Why build a major stronghold in such a far-flung corner of the country? As the Team try to answer, they unearth an unprecedented 2500 finds, which provide lessons about everything from Roman sports to the decorative arts and even cockfighting. They even find a spectacular piece of a legionar...
Time Team are called to a site that covers several fields and lies between two villages ¿ Wickenby to the west and Lissington to the east. It lay hidden for centuries until discovered by a local metal detectorist, Keith Kelway. Over the years Keith has recovered more than 300 metal artefacts from the area. Most are Roman, with some Iron-Age and Anglo-Saxon material. Can the Team identify what the site was used for?
Two large earthworks can be seen at Gear and Caer Vallack in Cornwall. Sited on top of adjacent hills, they were thought by Victorian archaeologists to be Iron-Age hillforts but little is understood about their origins. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
In early 2006 an aerial photographic survey of Anglesey produced a remarkable image. On the slopes south of the town of Amlwch approximately four miles from the island's north coast - a large pentangular earthwork could be seen. The earthwork, known as Y Werthyr, has long been known about - but until the photograph was taken nobody knew its full extent. It had never been excavated, nor properly identified. If comparisons with other sites on the island are correct, however, Y Werthyr is one of a small group of pentangular or polygonal enclosures that date from the middle to late Iron Age. This was the time when, according to classical sources, the island of Anglesey was the centre of the ancient Britons' druidic priesthood. Y Werthyr presented Time Team with a rare opportunity to excavat...
On the edge of the river Thames, a series of posts driven into the riverbed have been found. Also 2 Bronze Age spearheads. Are these the remains of London's first bridge or the supports of a platform where Bronze-Age people made offerings. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
The Time Team head to the town of Castor to dig in the grounds of a Church looking for remains of a substantial Roman complex. Complicating the excavation is the work of Edmund Artist who took detailed measurements and dug the area 150 years ago. They need to first find the ruins, and try and understand and confirm what Artist saw. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
A variety of places are dug, revealing medieval pottery and occupation, showing St Osyth village was an active port. A wharf is dug between tides. The adjoining field shows industry along the creek. Inland finds support this theory. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
The Time Team travel to Canterbury to understand the religious evolution of the city. They are looking for evidence of early Roman temples to the establishment in the first settlements of Monks in England. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
Tony and the team are in the village of Beadnell on the Northumbrian coast, to explore an unusual promontory, from which mysterious fragments of human bone have emerged over the last few years. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
As Sir Tony Robinson discovers, there are gaps in historians' knowledge of the strange rituals, death rites and beliefs from 2500BC, when Britain entered the Bronze Age. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
Tony and the Team uncover their largest ever range and number of items from Roman Britain, and undertake their most ambitious geophysics project to date. The archaeologists explore a spectacular site at Brancaster in Norfolk, which is believed to have been a Roman 'Shore-Fort'. Excavations could determine how large it was, what it looked like, and whether it was one of the key military outposts of Roman Britain. If the site turns out to be as significant as the Team hope, it suggests this question: Why build a major stronghold in such a far-flung corner of the country? As the Team try to answer, they unearth an unprecedented 2500 finds, which provide lessons about everything from Roman sports to the decorative arts and even cockfighting. They even find a spectacular piece of a legionar...
Time Team are called to a site that covers several fields and lies between two villages ¿ Wickenby to the west and Lissington to the east. It lay hidden for centuries until discovered by a local metal detectorist, Keith Kelway. Over the years Keith has recovered more than 300 metal artefacts from the area. Most are Roman, with some Iron-Age and Anglo-Saxon material. Can the Team identify what the site was used for?
Two large earthworks can be seen at Gear and Caer Vallack in Cornwall. Sited on top of adjacent hills, they were thought by Victorian archaeologists to be Iron-Age hillforts but little is understood about their origins. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
In early 2006 an aerial photographic survey of Anglesey produced a remarkable image. On the slopes south of the town of Amlwch approximately four miles from the island's north coast - a large pentangular earthwork could be seen. The earthwork, known as Y Werthyr, has long been known about - but until the photograph was taken nobody knew its full extent. It had never been excavated, nor properly identified. If comparisons with other sites on the island are correct, however, Y Werthyr is one of a small group of pentangular or polygonal enclosures that date from the middle to late Iron Age. This was the time when, according to classical sources, the island of Anglesey was the centre of the ancient Britons' druidic priesthood. Y Werthyr presented Time Team with a rare opportunity to excavat...
On the edge of the river Thames, a series of posts driven into the riverbed have been found. Also 2 Bronze Age spearheads. Are these the remains of London's first bridge or the supports of a platform where Bronze-Age people made offerings. No copyright infringement has been intended by the uploading of this video; I am simply trying to share this amazingly interesting series.
En medio del mar
Buscando un puerto y anclar
Tu vienes y vas
Asi como las olas
Soñando solo en tu libertad
Sin admitir que la verdad te da miedo
Volver amar
Y yo te quiero liberar
Y tu no vez lo que te puedo dar
Toma de mi, toma mi alma y te dare mi alegria
Toma mi cuerpo y sanare tus heridads, totalmente
Toma de mi, toma mi fe y sere yo el mar de tu isla
Toma mi amor y volveras a la vida misma, lentamente
No te arrepentiras, no
Ya no des marcha atras
Ya no des marcha atras
Volando iras al fondo
De la soledad
Nada puedo hacer
Cierra tus alas
Para no volar
Sonando solo en tu libertad
Sin admitir que la verdad te da miedo
Volver amar
Y yo te quiero liberar
Y tu no vez lo que te puedo dar
Toma de mi, toma mi alma y te dare mi alegria
Toma mi cuerpo y sanare tus heridas, totalmente
Toma de mi, toma mi fe y sere yo el mar de tu isla
Toma mi amor y volveras a la vida misma, lentamente
Toma de mi, toma mi fe y sere yo el mar de tu isla
Toma mi amor y volveras a la vida misma, lentamente
No te arrepentiras, no
Ya no des marcha atras