Michael Wood's Story Of England

2010
Michael Wood's Story Of England

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 Romans To Normans Sep 21, 2010

With the help of the local people and using archaeology, landscape, language and DNA, Michael uncovers the lost history of the first thousand years of the village, featuring a Roman villa, Anglo-Saxons and Vikings and graphic evidence of life on the eve of the Norman Conquest.

EP2 Domesday To Magna Carta Sep 28, 2010

Wood's unique portrait moves on to 1066 when the Normans build a castle in Kibworth. He reveals how occupation affected the villagers from the gallows to the alehouse, and shows the medieval open fields in action in the only place where they still survive today. With the help of the residents, he charts events in the village leading to the people's involvement in the Civil War of Simon de Montfort. Intertwining the local and national narratives, this is a moving and informative picture of one local community through time.

EP3 The Great Famine And The Black Death Oct 05, 2010

Wood's fascinating tale reaches the catastrophic 14th century. Kibworth goes through the worst famine in European history, and then, as revealed in the astonishing village archive in Merton College Oxford, two thirds of the people die in the Black Death. Helped by today's villagers - field walking and reading the historical texts - and by the local schoolchildren digging archaeological test pits, Wood follows stories of individual lives through these times, out of which the English idea of community and the English character begin to emerge.

EP4 Peasants' Revolt to Tudors Oct 14, 2010

Wood's gripping tale moves on to dramatic battles of conscience in the time of the Hundred Years' War. Amazing finds in the school archive help trace peasant education back to the 14th century and we see how the people themselves set up the first school for their children. Some villagers join in a rebellion against King Henry V, while others rise to become middle class merchants in the textile town of Coventry. On the horizon is the Protestant Reformation, but the rise of capitalism and individualism sow the seeds of England's future greatness.

EP5 Henry VIII To The Industrial Revolution Oct 19, 2010

The tale reaches the dramatic events of Henry VIII's Reformation and the battles of the English Civil War. We track Kibworth's 17th century dissenters, travel on the Grand Union Canal and meet an 18th century feminist writer from Kibworth who was a pioneer of children's books. The story of a young highwayman transported to Australia comes alive as his living descendants come back to the village to uncover their roots. Lastly, the Industrial Revolution comes to the village with framework knitting factories, changing the village and its people forever.

EP6 Victoria to the Present Day Oct 28, 2010

In this final episode, helped by today's villagers Michael uncovers the secret history of a Victorian village more colourful than even Dickens could have imagined. Recreating their penny concerts of the 1880s, visiting World War I battlefields with the school and recalling the Home Guard, local land girls and the bombing of the village in 1940, the series finally moves into the brave new world of 'homes for heroes' and the villagers come together to leave a reminder of their world for future generations.
8.1| 0h30m| TV-PG| en| More Info
Released: 21 September 2010 Ended
Producted By: Maya Vision International
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Groundbreaking series in which Michael Wood tells the story of one place throughout the whole of English history. The village is Kibworth in Leicestershire in the heart of England - a place that lived through the Black Death, the Civil War and the Industrial Revolution and was even bombed in World War Two.

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Reviews

Alessandro Vincinni These series tell English history via life of a single village called Kibworth in Leicestershire. This is right in the middle of British nowhere, but you will be surprised by interesting historical connections this place has. Woods engages villagers in archaeological digs in their backyards and then has professional archaeologists to analyze samples of ceramics to date and describe the finds. It's amazing how much small pottery shards can tell you. He also goes to archives and traces lives of various village families, this bit was somewhat more boring. Overall it resembles Michael's other series, where he tries to trace history via life of ordinary people. However in his Alexander or Trojan war series the history itself is much more dynamic and interesting and the places are much more colorful. Michael is as engaging and fun to watch as in his other series but the material is arguably less entertaining here.Another unfortunate bit is that many major and interesting events of English history are not even mentioned here (ex. hundred years war, many events of Elizabeth I reign, era of great geographical discoveries etc.) since they left no mark on Kibworth. So these series convey the spirit of English countryside and people very well but they are not good if you want to time-travel through major events of English history.
angelofvic This is a fascinating and superb series that very colorfully and entertainingly covers the entire history of England, from pre-Roman times to the 1950s, via the villages of Kibworth in the county of Leicestershire. Through various means -- archaeological, documents, topographical studies, and local and oral history -- we find out the true story of real and ordinary people. History comes vividly alive in a way that the endless successive repetition of wars, monarchs, and squabbling aristocrats never can.We are never patronized or asked to indulge in glorious fantasies here. History is told via the words of the people themselves -- through, for instance the amazingly in-depth documents and scholarship that have been preserved throughout the centuries in this uniquely placed village. As it turns out, there's a lot more here than even remotely meets the eye. We get a much fuller and more comprehensive and understandable history of this England than I ever would have thought possible.The great thing about this series is that it was aimed for a British audience but it's so clearly understandable and tangible that Americans and any other nationality can easily understand it as well.The series is gloriously and beautifully filmed and scored, and Michael Wood is an unfailingly charming, engaging, charismatic, and knowledgeable presenter.I promise you will learn much more than you ever thought you didn't know about English history. If, for instance, you are a fan of the films of Ken Burns, or Michael Wood's other programs (e.g., The Story of India), or Simon Schama, you are sure to love this series.Unfortunately when the series aired on PBS it was severely butchered to the point of incomprehensibility and was missing missing 40% of the footage (two hours and two episodes), and the timeframes were all mixed up and confused. (The same goes for the streaming video version viewable on pbs.org.)But fortunately both the Region 1 (available on Amazon.com) and Region 2 (available on Amazon UK) DVD sets contain the FULL original UK version, as it aired on the BBC. The DVD sets are the full thing, and it's definitely worth the purchase price to be able to see the entire unbutchered series, complete with all of the extremely relevant information that was cut when it was televised on PBS.(The only thing disappointing about this series is the subtitles -- or rather lack thereof. I do NOT at all recommend it for the deaf or hearing impaired, because the subtitles are so ridiculously incorrect and botched up as to be worse than useless. That's the same case with the Region 2 version and the online version, so there's no help there either.)