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Season 13 - Episode Guide

Episodes

Villas out of Molehills - Withington, Gloucestershire

Episode: 13x02 | Airdate: Jan 29, 2006

Villas out of Molehills - Withington, Gloucestershire

When a colony of moles brings up pieces of mosaic floor in a Cotswold field, Tony Robinson and the team investigate whether the findings could be linked to a nearby Roman villa discovered almost 200 years ago. A local spring might give a clue to the true purpose of the building. The team are joined by local archaeologist Roger Box, and Roman specialists David Neal and Richard Reece.

Manchester - Rubble at the Mill

Episode: 13x03 | Airdate: Feb 5, 2006

Manchester - Rubble at the Mill

The team set to work uncovering Manchester's first cotton mill, built by one of the fathers of the Industrial Revolution, Richard Arkwright. Over three days the team uncover the remains of a complex factory and also signs of a revolutionary steam engine that was decades ahead of its time. The team are joined by Mike Nevell from Manchester University, and Jennifer Tann (technology historian).

The First Tudor Palace? - Esher, Surrey

Episode: 13x04 | Airdate: Feb 12, 2006

The First Tudor Palace? - Esher, Surrey

The team visit Wayneflete Tower which is all that remains of a palace. Over three days they piece together the story of a site that evolved into one of the most stunning buildings of early Tudor times. They are joined by historic buildings expert Jonathan Foyle, John Guy (historian) and dendrochronologist Mick Worthington.
 

The Boat on the Rhine - A Roman Boat in Utrecht - Utrecht, The Netherlands

Episode: 13x05 | Airdate: Feb 19, 2006

The Boat on the Rhine - A Roman Boat in Utrecht - Utrecht, The Netherlands

The team is invited by Dutch archaeologists to help rescue crucial evidence from a 35-metre-long barge that once sailed the Rhine. The team has one chance to investigate the boat before the bulldozers move in.They are joined by city archaeologists Erik Graafstal and Herre Wynia, Fleur Kemmers (coin specialist) and Jaap Morel (ship archaeologist). Together with wood specialists Damian Goodburn and Esther Jansma, Phil looks at a similar barge which has been preserved and exhibited.

Court of the Kentish King - Eastry, Kent

Episode: 13x06 | Airdate: Feb 26, 2006

Court of the Kentish King - Eastry, Kent

The team descends on the orchards of Kent to search for the lost Anglo-Saxon palace of Eastry, and discover two likely contenders. Over three days, they dig the longest trench in Time Team history.  Saxon pottery has been found in a nearby field, but what was on the hill? And where was the Saxon long house, on the hill or in the current village?

 

The Monks' Manor - Brimham, Harrogate, Yorkshire

Episode: 13x07 | Airdate: Mar 5, 2006

The Monks' Manor - Brimham, Harrogate, Yorkshire

The team travels to the Yorkshire Dales to meet Chris and Barbara Bradley on their farm to uncover the remains of a monastic grange - a medieval forerunner to the grand country house, with connections to nearby Fountains Abbey. Kerry Ely is the site supervisor, and the team are joined by Jonathan Clarke (buildings archaeologist) and Mark Newman from the National Trust. Matt is "volunteered" to lead the tough life of a medieval lay brother for 24 hours.

Castle in the Round - Queenborough, Kent

Episode: 13x08 | Airdate: Mar 12, 2006

Castle in the Round - Queenborough, Kent

The team investigate the remains of Queenborough Castle[3] on the Isle of Sheppey, built by Edward III for Queen Philippa during the Hundred Years' War. The Time Team excavate the castle mound, and opinion is divided whether this unique circular structure was built for defence or as a royal bolthole from the plague. They are joined by archaeologist Oliver Creighton, medieval historian Sam Newton and architectural historian Jonathan Foyle.

Sussex Ups and Downs - Blackpatch, near Worthing, Sussex

Episode: 13x09 | Airdate: Mar 19, 2006

Sussex Ups and Downs - Blackpatch, near Worthing, Sussex

The team travels to what could be a Neolithic settlement in the Sussex Downs. Initially discovered by John Pull in 1923, the site is littered with remains of 6000-year-old flint mines. But Pull claimed to have discovered a second site nearby, which has so far eluded other diggers. The team are joined by archaeologist Miles Russell, pottery expert Sue Hamilton and wood specialist Maisie Taylor. Neolithic lifestyle specialist Jacqui Wood makes some elderflower tea and threatens to make a new hat for Phil. Phil and Francis demonstrate the relative merits of mesolithic and neolithic axes.
 

Birthplace of the Confessor - Islip, Oxfordshire

Episode: 13x10 | Airdate: Mar 26, 2006

Birthplace of the Confessor - Islip, Oxfordshire

The team descends upon the sleepy Oxfordshire village of Islip, the birthplace of Edward the Confessor, for one of the most challenging and intriguing excavations of the series. They are joined by architectural historians Sam Newton and Jonathan Foyle. Helen and Sam visit Westminster Abbey to view original documents relating Edward to Islip.

Early Bath - Ffrith, Flintshire, North Wales

Episode: 13x11 | Airdate: Apr 2, 2006

Early Bath - Ffrith, Flintshire, North Wales

The team descend on the village of Ffrith in North Wales to discover if it is built on the remains of a Roman mining town. The main street runs along the route of Offa's Dyke. The dig involves excavating two gardens and the playing field, but the team are frustrated in their attempts to find a Roman bath house. The team are joined by archaeologist Chris Martin and historian David Mason.

The Taxman's Tavern - A Roman Mansio - Alfoldean, Horsham, Sussex

Episode: 13x12 | Airdate: Apr 9, 2006

The Taxman's Tavern - A Roman Mansio - Alfoldean, Horsham, Sussex

Time Team travel to Alfoldean in West Sussex to uncover a Roman mansio or stopping-place, and hence the story of the whole settlement. The dig takes place in ploughed fields on both sides of the A29, or what the Romans knew as Stane Street. But atrocious weather and the sheer scale of the site push the team's resources to the limits. They are joined by Roman Sussex specialist Miles Russell and archaeologist Mike Luke. Phil gets a new hat. They are visited by pupils from the nearby Christ's Hospital School. Farrier Cliff Barnes uses the school forge to make hipposandals - precursors of the modern horseshoe.

Scotch Broch - Applecross near Skye, Scottish Highlands

Episode: 13x13 | Airdate: Apr 16, 2006

Scotch Broch - Applecross near Skye, Scottish Highlands

Tony and the team journey to Applecross in the north west of Scotland to excavate a broch, a monumental dry-stone tower that was one of the largest Iron Age structures in Britain. But they are hampered by stony soil and a massive overhead power line. They are joined by Scottish Iron Age specialists Ian Armit, Andy Heald, Cathy Dagg, Noel Fojut.

Specials

The Big Royal Dig

Episode: S13 Special | Airdate: Dec 31, 2006 (120 min)

No image (yet).

In this 2-hour special, timed to coincide with the 80th birthday of Queen Elizabeth II, Time Team (and special guest Neil Oliver) receive "unprecedented access" to three of Britain's most famous ancestral buildings in late August 2006. It also marked the 150th dig conducted by Time Team.  Tracing the history and evolution of each site, they begin with excavating a strange midden-like mound at Holyrood. They then turn their attention to the original structures and gardens of the former Buckingham House – in particular an ornamental canal and traces of the River Tyburn. Meanwhile, at Windsor Castle the team seeks evidence of Henry III's first building on the site – a great hall, and evidence of a Round Table (tournament) from the time of Edward III. Back at Holyrood, they search for evidence of a cloister destroyed by Henry VIII.

Time Team Live - Big Roman Dig (2005)

Episode: S13 Special | Airdate: Jul 2, 2005 (35 min)

No image (yet).

Time Team's Big Roman Dig (2005) saw the "Big dig" format altered, in an attempt to avoid previous controversies, through the coverage of nine archaeological sites around the UK which were already under investigation by professional archaeologists. Time Team covered the action through live link-ups based at a Roman Villa at Dinnington in Somerset – itself a Time Team excavation from 2003. Over 60 other professionally supervised excavations were supported by Time Team and carried out around the country in association with the programme. A further hundred activities relating to Roman history were carried out by schools and other institutions around the UK.

Material from the Big Roman Dig relating to the Roman villa site at Dinnington, Somerset; along with material from the earlier episode at the same site - Time Team series 10, episode 2 "Mosaics, Mosaics, Mosaics" - was used in a Time Team Special, "The Big Roman Villa".

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