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| Bettany
Hughes This is the Public Record Office in London with its vast 95 miles of archive and these are just two examples of the kinds of things you can find here. They're statements signed by Guy Fawkes. One before and one after he was tortured and seeing the second, he can scarcely write. |
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| Documents like these bring us face to face with people from the past and that's what this series is about. We'll be travelling all over the country, seeking out stories of weird taxes, mediaeval land protests, strange church rituals, and the experiences of soldiers and criminals. Human history written down as it happened. | ||
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Alan
Macfarlane Kings College Cambridge England is absolutely fantastic for its records. There's no other country in the world which approaches it. That is to say if you went to great civilisations like China, Japan, Islam, you would never find anything like the English records. |
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| Partly, it's because of their continuous length. There are good records back for 500 years and fairly good records back for 1,000 years. In England, because of the general trustfulness and interest in truth and relaxed feeling towards those who keep our records, this meant that they are very trustworthy. | ||
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Bettany
With a thousand years of records to choose from, where to start? At the Public Record Office they've got every kind of historical document you can conceive of. Tax accounts, wills, speeches, treaties, charters, seals, and an x-ray of Hitler's skull. But I'm on the trail of something else unique. The first nation-wide census made a generation after the Norman Conquest of 1066, the Domesday Book. |
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Elizabeth
Hallam Smith |
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| Bettany Obviously it's a very, very precious artefact itself, but why is it so significant? Elizabeth It's one of England's great national icons. It's a picture of life at the start of this millennium. Bettany But I'm right in thinking, aren't I, that there were two books? Elizabeth Yes, Great Domesday and Little Domesday, which couple together 37 pre-1974 counties in England and a little bit of North Wales as well. These are the facsimiles here. Now I'm going to move the original because don't film it open because it is very precious. |
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| Elizabeth That is Latin, yes, that's the language of government and of the church. Bettany And what kind of picture does it give of the country both pre- and post-conquest? Elizabeth Well, let's go now to Warwickshire. I've got an example here, very small village, lands of William Fitzansculth. This little place is held by Richard Falhide, 120 acres and there are five billings and four bordars who are unfree peasants, and this little place is worth 20 shillings both in 1066 and at the time of Domesday. Bettany And what's the name of the village? Elizabeth This place is Birmingham. Bettany The city? |
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Elizabeth Yes, now the City. Very small place at that time. William the Conqueror was an absolutely terrifying figure. He appears as such on the Bayeux Tapestry and the native English was so afraid of him and of the survey that they nicknamed the survey Domesday Book, from the Day of Judgement against which there could be no appeal. |
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Philip |
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