Spotted Phil Harding in the background. Nice to know he is still with Time Team even if he cannot dig anymore. Hi Phil! Great to see you.
@theoldfart8632Ай бұрын
Phil is not involved in Time Team. He has been involved in Waterloo Uncovered for many years now.
@dereksanders7905Ай бұрын
Phil is not with TimeTeam. He works with Wessex Archaeology and Waterloo Uncovered but not with TimeTeam.
@CataSmershАй бұрын
Even though is not involved with Time Team, would have expected to be interviewed, that was strange...
@jlelliottonАй бұрын
Waterloo Uncovered posted a video on their KZbin with an interview with Phil
@bookman7409Ай бұрын
@@jlelliotton But which title?
@jtmckinneyАй бұрын
This is so awesome! I am so happy to see Phil Harding, miss him and his personality but so happy to see he's still helping in some way since he can't dig. Love what you guys are doing for veterans and for the history of that battle. Cheers from Asheville, NC!!
@Davlavi2 күн бұрын
Loving this thanks.
@sushirulesАй бұрын
I was first introduced to the dig at Waterloo when Phil Harding joined the Vets at the site. Was historically fascinating, and glad for the followup and having been able to donate to the ride.
@janettecopestake320Ай бұрын
Thank you. Thank you for supporting veterans and taking such care with the site.. What an impact Waterloo is still having on us. From NZ.
@60sPsycheFanaticАй бұрын
Without it Abba would be singing about Prestonpans
@reanehooper308523 күн бұрын
Holy crap, i had to backup and watch again. Yup, it was Phil Harding. I love that he is still somehow involved in archeology after he retired. Kudos to the Time Team updates.
@mwaythosАй бұрын
Terrific project. Best of luck with the next season and those potential new burials.
@Wiccanglen13 күн бұрын
Loved to hear Phil's laugh!! 🤣
@maudieg8459Ай бұрын
It is interesting to be exposed to the realities of a much earlier military event. The human and animal skeletons are vivid reminders of the real experience of war. I also appreciate the fact that these archaeology teams are working with veteran volunteers. It is gratifying to know these veterans are finding some satisfaction, learning, and even emotional healing through this experience.
@shellygenter8585Ай бұрын
*Shrieks* PHILLLLLLLLL!
@janetsanders5356Ай бұрын
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
@markroth9827Ай бұрын
Time Team is AWESOME !
@lancerbiker5263Ай бұрын
What a great cause. I loved John's testimony. I suspect most bodies were simply covered over and ultimately plowed under .Horse fatality has been a consequence of our warring trait for millennia. The generosity of the French to allow these excavations, other than the bar owner, was conspicuously absent.
@paweomernik5618Ай бұрын
Great EP. Thank you for the effort of all involved. Great cause as well.
@christenneson8162Ай бұрын
Need to have more Phil Harding!😊
@christopherroser1849Ай бұрын
To Time Team, thank you for your vlogs .i wish i could be a patreon but all i can do is Merry Christmas to you and your families . May your troubles be less and your blessings be more and nothing but happiness come through your door.
@southeastcoastalphotographyАй бұрын
History Hit did a great video on some skeletons from waterloo either last year or year before last. Definitely worth the watch it was hosted by Dan Snow.
@SumalethАй бұрын
Great to see Phil, and it's always fun to have a Time Team x Two Men in a Trench crossover episode. :)
@barrydysert2974Ай бұрын
15:21 PHIL!!! 🙏💜⚡
@bigsarge2085Ай бұрын
Fascinating!
@iriseddathompson37168 күн бұрын
Great seeing Phil Harding. I miss his laughter.
@Qsoutdoors-NZАй бұрын
Loving it, still miss Kent my home county even though been gone 25 years.
@MjolknirnАй бұрын
4:05 "[...] as they learn the skills". Immediately sees a volunteer stab their trowel into the ground 😅🤣
@alanmcmillan6969Ай бұрын
Very Well done!
@magster6022Ай бұрын
Soldiers learning a new meaning of "in the trenches."
@scottchenoweth4937Ай бұрын
I am at 12:17. Why can you not test the horses' tooth plaque to see where they lived / were born? You do that for people you find.
@AnaPerunikaАй бұрын
I love you guys ❤️
@debbralehrman5957Ай бұрын
Thanks👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
@garydargan6Ай бұрын
I'm wondering how the veterans feel about excavating the limbs of soldiers given what they've been through. I assume they had support available to them. My father had similar but more direct exposure to this sort of thing in WW2 and I know it affected him badly for the rest of his life.
@johnbartlett5317Ай бұрын
Is Phil going to make an appearance?
@JulianneTureАй бұрын
Just spotted him!
@ChristianThomas-wf5dlАй бұрын
You beat me to it, love me some Phil. Saw him momentarily, must have been from the 2022 dig. Hope he's okay.
@johnbartlett5317Ай бұрын
@ I saw him do an interview from a few months ago, so he seems okay. I wish he would participate in a Time Team special with Tony.
@aengusmacnaughton137515 күн бұрын
Uncle Phil!!!!!
@Eivin-HjornevikАй бұрын
Is Sir Phil back on the team ? ❤❤❤❤❤
@dereksanders7905Ай бұрын
No, afraid not. Phil is very involved with Wessex Archaeology and Waterloo Uncovered.
@johnkeady2357Ай бұрын
I'm sure he has a lifetime invitation. Miss him but love he's still active!
@gregedmand9939Ай бұрын
Blücher! 🌩️ 🐴
@meeseificationАй бұрын
HAHAHAHA 😂 thought instantly of Young Frankenstein!
@Lucius1958Ай бұрын
70=E 70=E
@RedHeadedTsunamiАй бұрын
Is the great mound of the Lion a built up structure? Has that been checked? I don't doubt that most all the bones were taken away to be used elsewhere. Just wondering.
@wartsnall7332Ай бұрын
Yes, the mound is a man-made structure, it built by the Dutch whilst Belgium was still part of the Kingdom of the United Netherlands. When Wellington saw it he exclaimed "They've ruined my bloody battlefield!", or so legend has it. As far as I know, no archaeology has even been undertaken on the mound. But, I'd be happy to be corrected if I am wrong about that.
@bookman7409Ай бұрын
"War is all hell, you cannot refine it." -W. T. Sherman Pedantic? Perhaps, but it's still part of the history of the 19th Century, and archeology is somewhat related to history, no?
@DefaultName-jx7kvАй бұрын
This is Digging Britan with a.. splash of TT!!! You as much as we appreciate what you are bringing us by way of patrons! You have still not figured out the balance. Patron contributer. This has turned into an Archology news network 15k patrons at $$$$.
@hectorpascalАй бұрын
@0:43 When did "Harwich" start being pronounced Harr-witch?😂
@DefaultName-jx7kvАй бұрын
Bring him back to TT!
@JulianneTureАй бұрын
I have to say, this was hard to watch. As ghastly as war is, all those slaughtered animals and mutilated combatants are the stuff of nightmares.
@ramblejackАй бұрын
Put me right off sugar on my cereal, that has.
@anneeh1591Ай бұрын
Never going to look at sugar the same way any move .
@SpuktasticAudioАй бұрын
I thought it was about the journey.
@andershansson2245Ай бұрын
The second battle of Lützen was in 1813.
@richardhartman523427 күн бұрын
I thought the material to create the Lion's Mound was taken from the soil on the battlefield, damaging all the archaeology.
@aengusmacnaughton137515 күн бұрын
In France, but no French veterans?
@sparkyprojectsАй бұрын
Harwich and Norwich, the W is silent
@jcollins3182Ай бұрын
The sugar story really threw me. That sort of thing was common?
@anna_in_aotearoa316626 күн бұрын
That was a new one to me as well!! 😳 I'm familiar with various other stories of historical cadaveric shenanigans, but hadn't previously encountered anything talking about that particular agri-industrial (mis)use of battlefield remains? Interesting that it was vehemently opposed by the authorities, but persisted in by the locals. Can't help wondering what the participants' mental justification was for all that, esp. given religious context of the time!
@biggstavros5876Ай бұрын
Hey TT presenters, you should pronounce Harwich the same way you pronounce Norwich.
@DefaultName-jx7kvАй бұрын
The fact he was not allowed on the Sutton hoo site is a $%%^ travesty!
@markimpey102Ай бұрын
I would like to know what the evidence is for the mass shooting of wounded horses. The method might have been the use of a farrier's axe as it would not provoke undesirable reactions from other animals around. The wound in the skull would be very similar but of varying diameters. Were there shot from firearms associated with the remains apart from those from the battle itself? Just curious.
@marfitaАй бұрын
Oh, cannONball.
@DawnDeeАй бұрын
Harwich is pronounced ha-rich
@johnborland413321 күн бұрын
I was rather disappointed in the production. I tuned in to watch an archeological excavation, not a group therapy session or a self-congratulatory commercial about "Look at us! We're biking to raise money!" While both may have merit, far too much air-time was devoted to them.
@simonlaw9234Ай бұрын
Hah which? FFS.
@murieleylers6388Ай бұрын
I only made it 12 minutes into this video. As a pacifist and a horse woman, I found it too distressing.
@anna_in_aotearoa316626 күн бұрын
As the site supervisor was commenting: this kind of historical research can be extremely disturbing for sure... It's a very visceral reminder of the suffering both human & non-human animals experience in conflict zones. Even today when animal combatants are largely obsolete from our battlefields, we do still see suffering of animal companions in conflict e.g. the pets lost or left behind in Ukraine's evacuation zones? I really wish we could evolve past the tribalism, greed & egomania that continues to spark these sorts of events, but sadly right now I think we're heading into another period of increased global conflict exacerbated by environmental crisis...
@PoppaPickyАй бұрын
Hard to consider joining the Patreon, if they are going to ignore one of the cornerstones of Timeteam’s origins and lasting success. Wow, I wonder what happened there to freeze out Phil??
@philroberts7238Ай бұрын
Do you know the circumstances? Perhaps he chose, for one reason or another, not to participate.
@PoppaPickyАй бұрын
@ It is possible, but Phil is very passionate about archaeology and the Waterloo site, and loves the spotlight! Lets see how it progresses
@HattieFord-dx6ksАй бұрын
There’s no drama - Phil only arrived after Lawrence and Harry had left! He’s in the background of footage WU’s cameraman took but he wasn’t on site at the same time as the Time Team guys.
@janerkenbrack3373Ай бұрын
I thought the bones of the Englishmen were ground to make bread? Oh, wait. That was for bread of the giant, never mind.
@peterbriggs3408Ай бұрын
Har-wich? 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@medievalladybird394Ай бұрын
Really? Isn't Harwich pronounced Harridge?(sort of) Or have things changed since 1961?😂
@snodrog5Ай бұрын
For Time Team to intentionally ignore Phil Harding's contributions to Waterloo Uncovered is arrogant ignorance.
@philroberts7238Ай бұрын
That's only an assumption on your part.
@HattieFord-dx6ksАй бұрын
Phil wasn’t on site at the same time as the Time Team guys. He only arrived after they left, so he’s in the background of later footage supplied by WU’s cameraman but that’s it - no drama or deliberate snubbing.
@jppalm3944Ай бұрын
200,000: died and they found a cannon shot
@margaretmcallister5422Ай бұрын
I watch Time Team for archaeology - NOT lycra-clad rumps. Get on with the digging and explanations. Cut the cute rubbish!
@charleswhitfield8915Ай бұрын
Great and interesting video but why can’t anyone in England speak English anymore? In the opening 30 seconds “Harry and myself” should be Harry and I and the Harwich mis pronounced Har-which If you broadcast this stuff you have a duty to get things right just like fact checking.
@ClockworkChainsawАй бұрын
Wow, grumpy old man, much? Language evolves, no matter how much you complain. And everyone can get place names wrong.
@westcommonroom9737Ай бұрын
Please give the military work a rest. I'm sure it's worthwhile but Aldbourne twice, D Day and then this????