Her legacy is she helped many prisoners who with her support and teachings. Helped them eventually flourish with self confidence and grow Australia basically because of her indirectly.. Could you say shes the true mother of Australia because if it wasn't for her, Many more prisoners would've died enroute to Australia and died in Australia as they would've of had any hope or any future prospects except reverting back to crime again.. A very underrated Hero to Australia also and its very tragic she isn't celebrated much more in Australia for her role in quite literally shaping Australia as many descendents of Prisoners today in Australia indirectly owe their existence because of Elizabeth Fry 🌏🌏 Well done Elizabeth Fry 🎉🎉
@paulfri15693 күн бұрын
To the World she's important also... A true hero for humanity 🎉
@JonFrumTheFirst6 күн бұрын
Why is it that these guys who claim to be 'druids' need to wear their hair and beards long? Is it required to join the union?
@DisobedientSpaceWhale10 күн бұрын
Lovely stuff 🗞️
@Zhang100000020 күн бұрын
Fantastic. Well done. Watched through entirely.
@patrickcoke578527 күн бұрын
I need to know my family.. the Coke family l am talking about
@gandhithegreat328Ай бұрын
Should have just left it where it was. You literally destroyed it by “preserving it”
@Zhang100000020 күн бұрын
Great bot name.
@davehart1027Ай бұрын
It's a farm, I have nothing to back this up. Its pure speculation, but theoretically that place could be used to grow mussels
@karengray2650Ай бұрын
She helped women convicts coming to Australia. The women convicts on the ship The Rajah sewed a quilt top using fabric, thread and needles donated by Fry’s charity. The quilt known as the Rajah quilt is a very special treasure for Australians who know about it and is held by the National Australian Art Gallery in Canberra. It’s been on display recently. It’s very fragile. There are some interesting talks about it on KZbin.
@paulfri15693 күн бұрын
Indeed Sir and she should be celebrated in Australia also as she saved many lives indirectly with giving Prisoners who went to Australia hope + belief in themselves to become self-sufficient + most of people with purpose in life.. She even though been English should be more celebrated and understand that she literally had a positive impact on Australia's future quite literally...
@annekelive2 ай бұрын
Great Presentation. I’m visiting Norfolk next week. Whilst I might not get to visit Norwich. It certainly wets my appetite to do so in the near future.
@debbieharry3872 ай бұрын
love it!!!!
@seanmcnally66582 ай бұрын
Thanks. This was an interesting perspective and outline of the discover and complications around seahenge.
@jonathanredman84972 ай бұрын
Just found you on KZbin. Very interesting but I have a question about GarageBand. How do you export files to you laptop? Doesn’t GarageBand mix down and render to stereo?
@iainneilson14532 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this informative video. As an amateur archaeologist, I am aware that archaeology is destructive: once a site has been fully excavated, there may, as in this case, be nothing left to see. However, the site would, in any case, have been covered and lost repeatedly, until it eventually disappeared completely. What can be learned from recovery and detailed study of the timbers can tell us much about climate, availability of resources, tools, techniques and workforce required to construct such structures, as well as develop theories of why and how they were built. I appreciate that this may run counter to the sentiments of those who believe that they are the guardians of ancient beliefs, and that the removal of the timbers may represent an attack on those beliefs. I think it is important to acknowledge that the destruction of a site is irreversible. But I also believe that what can be learned adds to our knowledge and understanding of ancient technology and thinking, and helps reduce often irrational speculation about the origin and purpose of sites of worship, habitation and burial.
@avenueb2 ай бұрын
Unfortunately the trams will need to be re-built very much as they were.
@pauljamesschuback96763 ай бұрын
Superb presentation
@AhmedH.mohammed3 ай бұрын
very good
@nfkngd3 ай бұрын
RIP..🙏💛💚
@steverichards5753 ай бұрын
Terry in the best city shirt ever . A great servant .
@stuartcalow7373 ай бұрын
Excellent. Very enjoyable to this retired digger from the. N.A.U./ N.P.S team. 😊 Found a small undercroft in Pottergate!. If I may say,your lecturing style is perfect. Duke St. keeps threatening to start demolition and then the crucial archaeology between Westwick St Duke St. and the river. It'll be like the Somme. Bet they do it in winter! Got to meticulously record the late Med,business before the pleasure of digging the Angles ,Danes and Normans!
@MarissaPinching3 ай бұрын
Dr. Pinching is my great great grandfather. He and his wife, Lorina’s sister, ended up in Arizona.
@NorfolkRecordOffice3 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@judithparker46084 ай бұрын
THE....OGHAM....RUNIC TREES
@gleannmhuire4 ай бұрын
Great piece of work. Thank you.
@kathymcbride24254 ай бұрын
a very informative and enjoyable talk thank you chris x
@kathymcbride24254 ай бұрын
thanks and well said x
@g.dalfleblanc634 ай бұрын
Hello, can you tell me if Horsford castle (just north of Norwich) was ever in the hands of the Howard family? Horsford motte & bailey was built by Walter de Caen and his son Robert fitz Walter was Sheriff of Norfolk & Suffolk. In 1069 Roger Bigod, Robert Malet and Ralph de Gael (then Earl of Norfolk), defeated the Dane Sweyn Estrithson's invasion attempt near Ipswich. After Ralph de Gael's fall in 1074, Roger was appointed sheriff of Norfolk & Suffolk, and acquired many of the dispossessed earl's estates. Roger Bigod is a direct ancestor of the Howards.
@jamesjefferies37624 ай бұрын
Thank you. Fantastic educational video, very well presented. Can't see why there was so much controversy, but then you can't please everyone. Still, those that blinker themselves from science shouldn't stop the quest for knowledge of our distant past. If you had not carried out your work as you did I would never have been able to watch your fascinating and informative lecture. You have enriched the history of the human race.
@hawklord1004 ай бұрын
The point you mention about the electrical discharge experience likely indicates that the site was chosen in pre-history as a place where 'unseen' forces could come into play during auspicious moments and as you know all of the 'ancient' gods were the unseen natural forces.
@hArtyTruffle5 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this process with us. Great care and consideration was taken to conserve this awesome part of our history ✨
@mancroft5 ай бұрын
Pity the sound quality isn't better.
@rootsandvulture5 ай бұрын
The echo stops after a few minutes, if that is what you mean 👍🏼
@rootsandvulture5 ай бұрын
Very interesting talk
@Banquet...5 ай бұрын
Lovely ❤
@jennywren89375 ай бұрын
My father-in-law took my husband on a train journey, and back to Thetford war memorial, for a few moments reflection. Thank you for these words.
@lyngrove41786 ай бұрын
This is a fascinating mini-documentary about the Red House and the wealth of material housed in its archive. And so nicely presented by Dr Hilton. I've never yet visited but plan to this summer.
@jennywren89376 ай бұрын
Looking forward to any diaries from Kimberley, Wicklewood, Wymondham, Carleton Forehoe and Thetford. I really enjoyed these snippets. Thank you.
@johnlusumpa90256 ай бұрын
Where can I find more of your soundscapes?
@loesroos79847 ай бұрын
Would you consider making a nature soundscape for a project in panama? Or helping ?
@NorfolkRecordOffice7 ай бұрын
Hi, I think it is unlikely we would be able to find the time as we have many events planned over the next few months. But do feel free to email in to [email protected] with some more details and we can have a look.
@jennywren89377 ай бұрын
Just showd ths to my husband, lov't❤ Descendants from Wicklewood, Carleton, Thetford and Suffolk here, gooin back 1770odd. Still speak'n proppa over brekfst. Thanks so much frm cuppla olfowk.
@jennywren89377 ай бұрын
Brilliant. Unstone evri darn word boi !
@myoldmate5 ай бұрын
Me too. I laarfed till the teers run down moi leg. I grew up hearing this, and it's gut-wrenching realising that there are so few people left that know or care about this part of our heritage.
@whitneylake21077 ай бұрын
Fantastic. Thank you for the lecture
@Teapottedplant7 ай бұрын
Very helpful, clear, and informative.
@lorrainebarry71848 ай бұрын
my great great grandad was from Norfolk i never got to know him but i have the utmost respect for him and im here as i wanted to learn a little bit about your people my greagreat grandad came to australia in the 1800s
@johnnywarnerperfectroad668 ай бұрын
Excellent job Thank you
@paulfri15698 ай бұрын
Great content.
@paulfri15698 ай бұрын
My great ancestor 🌟
@byronbreese34548 ай бұрын
From 1985 to 1988 I lived in East Anglia, taking regular visits to the Norfolk coast. During the pandemic I began watching decades' worth of Time Team, including the episode about "Seahenge." Yes, thanks to KZbin, all the great British television unseen by me three decades ago I got caught up on. This presentation is an outstanding gift to continue learning about and understanding the site and the controversies attached to it. Thank you!
@geoffreywilliams93249 ай бұрын
I had not heard of this site before. I wonder why you felt it necessary to destroy this site at all . .
@XtalQRP9 ай бұрын
Did you watch the video? The site was being destroyed by storm action and coastal erosion. Norfolk has the highest rates of coastal erosion in Europe. Inaction would eventually result in the site being lost, potentially within years. Instead the site has been comprehensively recorded and the individual timbers preserved for all of us.