Тёмный

Time Team S18-E04 Hitler's Island Fortress (Les Gellettes, Jersey) 

Reijer Zaaijer
Подписаться 102 тыс.
Просмотров 603 тыс.
50% 1

Tony Robinson doesn't usually get to decide where the Team should dig, but in this episode he chooses his first ever site for investigation: a German anti-aircraft battery built during the Nazis' five-year occupation of Jersey.
The archaeologists have never investigated anything like this before and must apply all their skills to make sense of a site now reclaimed by a forest. It's soon clear that the gun emplacements are part of a much bigger, complex fortified settlement that was home to hundreds of German soldiers equipped with a vast array of weapons.
And, unlike with older sites, the Team can talk to people who witnessed life under the occupation at first hand.
What emerges is the shocking story of a fortress island where German installations were built by slave labour and the local population began to starve as the war continued. Of terrible conditions that seem more fitting to the eras the Team usually investigate, rather than just 70 years ago.
Over three days Time Team uncover a fascinating and frequently horrifying glimpse of life during war.

Опубликовано:

 

17 мар 2013

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 422   
@silviac221
@silviac221 3 года назад
Bettany Hughes has given the best definition I've ever heard of monsters like Hitler and all the other invaders, who sometimes pass for heroes: "You have one megalomaniac individual and everyone else falling in line behind him to take over someone else's territories". It's terrifying to think that humankind falls prey to this kind of people over and over again.
@johnhenni7558
@johnhenni7558 2 года назад
Oh you mean like Britain did in India, Singapore, Hong Kong Rhodesia? You're calling the kettle black aren't you?
@elizabethschaeffer9543
@elizabethschaeffer9543 2 года назад
Putin just invaded Ukraine. Watching Time Team on Jersey is chilling. Another megalomaniac, another war. I weep.
@johnhenni7558
@johnhenni7558 2 года назад
Just as your predecessors did you believe what you're told on TV and newsprint. You'll stay fooled. Your kind of blindness makes me weep
@monikagrosch9632
@monikagrosch9632 10 месяцев назад
As a German whose dad was in the Wehrmacht I can tell you, that most of the drafted young soldiers were suite disillusioned about Hitler. What the people that were born a while after the war don’t know and can’t understand is the pressure upon the people. In each rental Building was at least ONE person that reported on you: what kind of mail you got, what people came to visit you, what you said in an unguarded moment .. and if you didn’t comply, they could first incarcerate you and if that doesn’t break you they take your Family
@barryandjackypowell8239
@barryandjackypowell8239 2 года назад
As a teenager I spent my summer holiday in 1961 with my mother staying with my grandmother on Jersey. We often walked to see the various sites used by the occupying Germans during the war, in particular the undrrground hospital. It was a chilling experience. Jacky Powell. I have found the various Time Team episodes to be particularly interesting and am very glad to be able to watch their patient and knowledgeable archaelogy. Thank you for making it so enjoyable. JackyvPowell
@j4eyes1
@j4eyes1 5 лет назад
Brilliant episode. Had personal connections for me as one set of great grandparents retired to the island and had to be evacuated prior to invasion as he had been an officer (going up through the ranks). He ended up in Northampton to become a major in the Home Guard. My grandmother was his daughter in law. She told me quite a bit about them and shared some of their memories in Guernsey. If they had stayed he would have been shot. I do know that he rook part in the defence of the island prior to invasion, presumably this started once Germany had invaded France.
@TheSilverFiend
@TheSilverFiend 9 лет назад
They are right about one thing, soldiers have been giving each other "awards" in jest for a long time, and probably since the very beginning of armies around the world.
@51WCDodge
@51WCDodge 5 лет назад
88 mm flack guns were on a quadriform mount when mobile , or to a circular mount when emplaced. At the end of the war a lot of pices were dumped over the cliffs at the north of the Island. Some pices have been recovered by the Channel Island Occupation Society and are on disply at Les Landes. Many come from other Occupied countries. A lot of the auxilary buldings were wooden prefab German Stables. Post Liberation a number were repurposed as garden sheds. There was also a wooden Luftwafe hangar at the airport used for many years by BEA and then as hire car garage.
@HannibalFan52
@HannibalFan52 2 года назад
It's nice to see they have a site that's nice and shady, instead of the usual field under the blazing sun. With cooperation from the weather, they seem to have enjoyed it.
@CharmEng89
@CharmEng89 4 года назад
Phil: Is it going to go bang? Asking all the important questions. I really like Phil!
@uwestark9778
@uwestark9778 5 лет назад
The 88mm was actually designed as a medium anti-aircraft-gun. But already in '39/40 it was also used as anti-tank and bunkercracker. So in fact it was the most feared/famous of all german artillery.
@captpaulhaugan
@captpaulhaugan 5 лет назад
The bent cone reminded me of a museum of horse drawn carts I viewed in the Azores. Many were Military. The ones that came to mind were a portable machine shop/black smith wagon and a portable food preparation wagon. Both carried fuel and had flues.
@BirdieRumia
@BirdieRumia 9 лет назад
The fake medal bit is pretty endearing. "And for you, Otto, a War Merit badge for finding my toothbrush when I was sure I'd lost it." "Danke, danke."
@schradeya
@schradeya 9 лет назад
I'm honestly surprised that Phil didn't find anything digging that hole on the beach toward the end! I was genuinely waiting for them to cut back over, and to hear Tony say something like, and wouldn't you know it, Phil, as always, has found some pottery in the hole he was digging. Lol!
@jameshay7247
@jameshay7247 4 года назад
More likely a chip of Neolithic flint! ; )
@magster6022
@magster6022 2 года назад
Phil is a very specialized sort of genius.
@ScruovGoogul
@ScruovGoogul 9 лет назад
Those potatoes messed with his cunning plan!
@jenniferholden9397
@jenniferholden9397 4 года назад
ScruovGoogul We have to say it, its essential to all Blackadder fans.
@GrahamCLester
@GrahamCLester 4 года назад
I hope there's a monument somewhere on the island for the Russian and Eastern European forced laborers who died.
@panthera50
@panthera50 3 года назад
I wonder if those people who said it was a horror, voted for Brexit.
@Gjoufi
@Gjoufi 7 лет назад
When I was a conscript in the danish army I would have liked to see them figure out our luxurious trenches :P Given time we would even dig small holes for small kitchens or smoking. I clearly remember being the only guard on duty drinking hot coco in their trench :P
@twizz420
@twizz420 4 года назад
Have a look at the trenches in world war 1 which were sometimes gigantic rooms 80 feet under fields of mud. There was a Time Team episode where they dug one up from a cornfield I think in the French countryside.
@wi11y1960
@wi11y1960 9 лет назад
A local here in Maine escaped from Jersey back during WWII. He is now deceased. Yet he would tell anyone whom would listen of how life wasnt after the Germans altered their lives. He also went in to good detail about the escape and later how he did manage to survive his ordeal. Seems that his row boat had a small seagull outboard in it. When he loaded the boat he put the fuel at the front. Alas when the outboard ran out of fuel he had no way to refuel the out board so he pitched it all over board and rowed for 3 days till he was picked up by a British destroyer. For the British it was wonderful as he could tell them all about what the defenses were and the size of troops and so on. I will miss Denis.
@Bonesiethecat
@Bonesiethecat 9 лет назад
A thousand "Likes" sir! Would love to hear that whole story. Pity he is no longer with us.
@wi11y1960
@wi11y1960 9 лет назад
I asked Dennis Vibert of his experience and asked him if he wouldnt mind sharing what and how he did it. Dennis looked out the window of his pottery shop for a bit. As if to be looking back through time itsellf. He told of the German having regular routine of inspecting. He said it was the one flaw in their security. It was always specific. The troops came from one direction and left. So to get fuel to the hidden place was easy yet a concern. The boat was the hardest. If they found it, it would have been the end of him. He didnt say how he managed to get what he did or what the boat his boat had for cargo. There was a compass so he knew which way to go. He told of leaving at night. He told of having to hide is the shadows of other boats to evade the search light in the harbor. Sorry to say I didnt ask what were the other boats (German or fishing). He moved away from the search lights, using the oars only. The boat was heavily loaded and it set low in the water. He didnt start the engine until even the lights of the search light were well gone. Always the concern that there was a chance of getting caught. How he gave the engine enough throttle to move the boat, yet he didnt want to throttle up. The concern that the Germans might hear the motor. I asked him if he tried to float the gas can in the water to the back. He some what grimaced. He did have a second motor. How he thought the first one had gone bad. He tried the second though there was some chop to the water. Something about him trying to fuel it and water sloshing into the tank of the second motor. He said after he tossed the out board, then the fuel. The fuel cans floating away. he realized at that moment how he could have fueled his engine. He told of how quickly it seemed that the engines disappeared into the waters below, yet the gas cans were like followers and stayed with him for a while. Granted he was rowing now and the gas cans were fading away. It was a trip he had made once before. Before the Germans changed their lives. So he knew how to get there. It was a dare before. Now it was to get away and not return. He pulled on the oars. The affect of the channel was starting to affect his course. He thought he rowed for a couple of days. He remembers being too tired to pull on the oars. His food was gone as well as the water. He thought it was only going to be a ten hour trip. He reckoned it was 4 days. He said how he remembers being so dry of not having water to drink. He remembered the boat that came and picked him up. No knowledge of what became of his own boat. He knew he was safe now. He drew the land as best as he could. Running his finger across a shelf in his shop showing the basic out lay of the island. The roads, where his friends lived, where the Germans were. He did fear it was a ruse, that these men were Germans. Until he was able to go up top and see the other crew did he know that he was safe. No more reprisals. He told of how the Germans took a particular route. He told of the regular rounds they took and which way the guards were ordered to look. He told of the changing of the guard. I didnt get any story of how he came stateside or why he lived here in Maine. Yet every summer we came up to Maine how it was a special event to visit Viberts "Pine Tree Kiln".
@jdemo7167
@jdemo7167 9 лет назад
wi11y1960 Amazing...thanks for sharing.
@b1aflatoxin
@b1aflatoxin 9 лет назад
wi11y1960 Yes, a great share thank you.
@theflyingscotsman9902
@theflyingscotsman9902 7 лет назад
wi11y1960
@pamelahawn9300
@pamelahawn9300 4 года назад
Thank You so Much for putting this series up on RU-vid!
@magdatorruellas9122
@magdatorruellas9122 5 лет назад
Dear Mr. Robinson, May I PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE go with you on one of your digs. So freaking AWESOME! And yes, I know it is lots of hard work. Ready when you are.
@CorneliusSneedley
@CorneliusSneedley 9 лет назад
". . .when he came across a load of lumps and bumps, and they were very lumpy and bumpy." I almost expected him to say something about a "cunning plan" next. :)
@mrkmt49gmail
@mrkmt49gmail 6 лет назад
i just couldnt stop laughing when i read this. well done mate I liked it ..A lot.
@jshicke
@jshicke 4 года назад
The German's, and the Japanese anti-aircraft shells had timed fuses. They had to guess the height of the aircraft, figure out how long the shell had to fly to reach that altitude, then hope it exploded near an enemy plane to do damage. American and British shells had a proximity fuse. As the shell passed through the air, it emitted radio waves. When the shell passed near an enemy plane, those radio waves were reflected back to the shell. The shell picked those returning waves up, and detonated. It was estimated that the enemy was firing thousands of shells per air craft hit. Allied anti aircraft guns were doing the same with hundreds of shells. At first, only anti-aircraft guns used these fuses, mainly to prevent the axis forces from capturing any and figuring out how to make them themselves. Later, the proximity fuses were used in artillery shells to detonate the rounds a few yards above the ground, making them much more lethal. When an artillery shells hits the ground, the force of the explosion goes upward and outward. Meaning soldiers lying on the ground, or in a trench, are harder to hit. When the shells explode int eh air, the shrapnel is focused down and outward, making it much harder to avoid injury from incoming artillery fire.
@carolynhague7199
@carolynhague7199 Год назад
Fabulous to know Tony really is interested in thé archeology and History, and isn't just 'presenting' thé series
@Hoverbot1TV
@Hoverbot1TV 10 лет назад
I bet the tin work was the toilet funnel, it would have wood seat bolted on top. A portable toilet outhouse artifact.
@trojanette8345
@trojanette8345 4 года назад
It's amazing that in just 70 years that much forestation has taken over the site. One thing that strikes me as odd is if the Germans were actively occupying the island why would they go to the trouble to bury live rounds where they 'lived and worked'? Doesn't make any sense.
@ShalomMichael
@ShalomMichael 3 года назад
The sand table that Stewart constructed reminded me of the episode of "Dad's Army" where they constructed a sand table of the town for a TEWT, training exercise without troops.
@ToadTheSprocket
@ToadTheSprocket 7 лет назад
The fake metal was cool.My grandfather division was so new they were making there own divisional patches. they took back Italy. 10th Mountain. Climb To Glory
@motorcop505
@motorcop505 5 лет назад
You must be very proud of him! Sen. Bob Dole was machine gunned while serving with them. My friend, also an Infantry major, had a father who was a major with the 10th Mountain Div. in WWII. They were an incredibly heroic unit then as now, only the mountains are in Afghanistan these days.
@rovhalt6650
@rovhalt6650 4 года назад
Took back Italy from who? The Italians?
@sharonsplat
@sharonsplat 4 года назад
From ze germans obviously.
@GavTatu
@GavTatu 4 года назад
we're only about 17 miles at the closest point to the coast of normandy, i dont know why it would have been a surprise ?
@Luxnutz1
@Luxnutz1 8 лет назад
the Bundesarchiv in Freiburg will have information on this site
@billyank1864
@billyank1864 9 лет назад
My Uncle's B-17 was damaged by flak from a battery on the Jersey Islands when they flew too low over them in 1944.
@51WCDodge
@51WCDodge 6 лет назад
That would probably have ben the battrey at Les Gillietes, where this was filmed.
@TheSpikehere
@TheSpikehere 5 лет назад
And that was the main reason Flak was sited on the Channels Islands. Not to defend the islands themselves, but to cover Allied bombing routes to mainland France.
@ingloriousbasterd3067
@ingloriousbasterd3067 6 лет назад
Right at the end I think they got it wrong...To still have that 88mm in place would be awesome.
@mrkmt49gmail
@mrkmt49gmail 6 лет назад
it was probabily us britts who nicked it anyway so its here somewhere or skripped maybe .???
@maxdecphoenix
@maxdecphoenix 5 лет назад
@@mrkmt49gmail Oh it was absolutely the british who removed it. Wouldn't leave dearmament up to the aggressors. but it was almost certainly scrapped. Melted down after the war to make pots or tins, as those cannons were obsoleted by the very end of the war when jet aircraft began to emerge. Possibly removed by Army EOD, delivered to the Navy, then dumped in the Channel or Ocean on the way back to Britain.
@robertcaffrey6097
@robertcaffrey6097 5 лет назад
That's what I was thinking. It would be very interesting to have it still in place but decommissioned. I don't think the Germans dismantled it and took it away with them, i'd say it is a museum somewhere in the Uk
@colinfaed5910
@colinfaed5910 4 года назад
@@maxdecphoenix Loads of equipment was simply loaded on landing craft and taken out to Hurds Deep, or South of Guernsey and pushed overboard. The really big guns were pushed over the cliffs, see therem here at about 1:30 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-sRiMn037EbQ.html Straight after the war anything relating to the German occupation was got rid off quickly, it was a little while after that the scrap dealers came over and started recovering steel by torching off steel bunker doors etc.
@sherryelliott4795
@sherryelliott4795 6 лет назад
Hey, it didn’t rain!
@KageShi
@KageShi 5 лет назад
@12:25 That looks to be a discharge funnel to point the fired brass clear of the weapon station.
@johnhenni7558
@johnhenni7558 2 года назад
The dramatic identification of the occupation and naming the German Army's fortifications as Hitler' s this and Hitler's that is a very British touch in his narration.
@lisakeneipp9899
@lisakeneipp9899 10 лет назад
That tin is the funnel of an old air raid siren the kind you used to have to crank
@allisonk55
@allisonk55 5 лет назад
Lisa Keneipp yes, that’s what I keep thinking it is. I’m sure a loud speaker sound system would be necessary, to get them all up and to get them to do things at a certain time. Also commands to attack etc.
@stannousflouride8372
@stannousflouride8372 8 лет назад
On Google Earth here: 49°12'28.5"N 2°09'21.0"W
@jonathaneffemey944
@jonathaneffemey944 8 месяцев назад
Thanks so much for posting.
@Quadflash
@Quadflash 5 лет назад
Would the German WW2 Regelbau plans provide additional insights into the purposes of the structures?
@bethbartlett5692
@bethbartlett5692 4 года назад
*Bettany Hughes!* I really appreciate this woman's Gift for communication and Passion for History/Ancient History. *Propaganda* wasn't thrown-out with the German Dishwater, it is more prevalent in the Western World today than ever. USA current chaos is observablely riddled with elite ownership manipulation of the USA Public.
@silviac221
@silviac221 3 года назад
Well said!
@KellyBurnett304
@KellyBurnett304 3 года назад
Barrack Obama legalized propaganda against the American ppl
@vickywhitesell4156
@vickywhitesell4156 5 лет назад
I do feel for John, they want geophys in impossible areas and horrible conditions, and all the bogus readings with buried modern trash, plow trenches, tree roots, modern drainage pipe. Tough job. AND all the flack he gets for miss direction that's NOT his fault.
@elizabethschaeffer9543
@elizabethschaeffer9543 2 года назад
John gets the flack on every Time Team episode. Not fair. It makes me mad every time.
@markkmiecik9797
@markkmiecik9797 5 лет назад
The unidentified large diameter metal tube may be an outhouse neck.
@thatsmethistime
@thatsmethistime 9 лет назад
It appears that during WW2 there was much less wood as today. The same story right here in the Netherlands. I wonder why there was not much wood back then. I think much more wood can influence the weather (more rain?)
@TheTokkin
@TheTokkin 9 лет назад
Presumably farming was more extensive back then as opposed to modern intensive farming. That's my speculation at least.
@rogerwilco2
@rogerwilco2 8 лет назад
+thatsmethistime More farming and more wood used as fuel and for tools and building.
@Wallyworld30
@Wallyworld30 6 лет назад
They said in another video the trees would have been cut to be used as lumber to build fortifications. Such as forms for the concrete.
@51WCDodge
@51WCDodge 5 лет назад
Fuel including wood was in very short supply. To cut down a tree with out permission meant imprisonment. The Island is 9 miles long by 5 miles wide. Agriculture was never extensive, there wasn't the room . Steep slopes known as Cotil's were ploughed with winch cables. The main fertilliser was Vraic (Seaweed) . Crops at the time were outdoor tomatoes, flowers and the Jersey Royal, a sport of the Ulster Sceptre, early potatoes. Before the Occupation the German's mounted air raids over Jersey and Guernersey. In St Helier the target was lorries loaded with potatoes waitingfor export. At the time and for many years afterwards he spuds were shipped in thin ply round barrels.
@HarleyQuinn-zi5mh
@HarleyQuinn-zi5mh 5 лет назад
Anyone else think that 'mystery peice' might just be a toilet bowl?
@nathanstanswood4931
@nathanstanswood4931 4 года назад
Or possibly a speaker cone for an air raid siren?
@mrbrianc
@mrbrianc 4 года назад
It looks like a toilet
@drpsionic
@drpsionic 3 года назад
I think it was part of an air shaft.
@machellep1
@machellep1 3 года назад
I think it’s part of a stack system for a heating stove or cooking stove
@nojustno1216
@nojustno1216 4 года назад
The fabricated War Merit Cross II class w/swords is not necessarily a "jest" award. It was probably earned by one of the German soldiers and with orders for it coming through in such a place where no official awards were available, it was fabricated until the recipient could receive the official version. I have German- fabricated pieces (two Iron Crosses and one wound badge) representing official earned awards from 3 different European wars which were found among the veteran's personal items when they returned from war. Even field created award documents were created to accompany the make-shift awards.
@HotelPapa100
@HotelPapa100 9 лет назад
Electronic timer... Not quite. The device is pyrotechnic. It's a slow burning material in two parallel circular channels. The nose is turned by a specific angle, giving the required length of burning channel, defining burning time. The whole thing is set by inserting the shell in a time setting device prior to loading it into the gun.
@stannousflouride8372
@stannousflouride8372 8 лет назад
+HotelPapa100 Nope. There were two forms of AA fuzing systems: 1. Powder train fuse - Basically a length of fuse cord that was cut at the gun right before the shell was placed into the breech. It was mainly used only early in the war as it was not reliable, Slowed rate of fire and also gave different burn times depending on atmospheric conditions. 2. Mechanical fuse - Used a mechanical timer to explode the shell after it had travelled a certain distance. Similar in useage to the powder train fuse, but much more reliable and faster to set. Here's from the SHAEF manual on the 88: FUZES.a. General. The point fuzes used with the German 88-mm high explosive shells consist of the following: A.Z. 23/ 28 The High-Explosive shell (Sprenggranate, Sprgr.) contained a relatively large charge of high explosive and any of the following types of fuzes: 1 - Percussion/impact fuze (superquick and delay). 2 - Inertia-operated mechanical time fuze. 3 - Spring-wound mechanical time fuze.
@stevebordian9873
@stevebordian9873 9 лет назад
I'm pretty sure that that piece that they cannot identify is part of a range hood or the chimney pipes for a cook stove.
@kingswoodkid1985
@kingswoodkid1985 9 лет назад
Susan Bordian it's the top of a field urinal, known as a "piss-o-phone" we still use them in the aussie army
@stevebordian9873
@stevebordian9873 9 лет назад
Ah ha. Well it vents something anyway. LOL
@kingswoodkid1985
@kingswoodkid1985 9 лет назад
lol, yeah, thats for certain!
@stevebordian9873
@stevebordian9873 9 лет назад
Well have a good sleep. Good night.
@TheKoolbraider
@TheKoolbraider 5 лет назад
My mother was a teenager in Houlton, Maine (up north). She told me how the German POWs would wave and smile when they went by in a bus. Maine had several German POW camps in WWII.
@tripleransom4349
@tripleransom4349 4 года назад
Michigan had a ig German POW camp as well. The prisoners were used for paid farm labor. They were happy to be there instead of prisoners of the Russians.
@wobblybobengland
@wobblybobengland 4 года назад
Prisoners of war waving and smiling at a young lady, imagine that.
@jameswebb4593
@jameswebb4593 4 года назад
Great archaeologists they may be , but not weapon experts. The Americans made information films for aircrews regarding anti aircraft fire. A rule of thumb , it took an 88mm shell one second to gain a thousand feet height. Therefore an aircraft flying at 20,000 ft and in a case of a jet airliner would have travelled over three miles from the time the shell was fired. I think the passengers were safe.
@buggaboo2707
@buggaboo2707 2 года назад
@27:44 My GUESS for the metal cone is that it is used to fill sandbags
@FunkfeuerOtto
@FunkfeuerOtto 4 года назад
17:56 this is not a razor but a small bakelite Container wich held:"Losantin" a skin detoxment powder issued to all troops in case of poison gas exposure.this item is dropped almost first by the troops because it was issued in such high numbers.it usually has the production date on bottom .
@FunkfeuerOtto
@FunkfeuerOtto 4 года назад
Funny is that the same losantin Container is identified by the another "expert" in the normandy Episode (42:23) as part of a battery
@brianlampe75
@brianlampe75 4 года назад
My grandparents lived in a German occupied city and said they were very well treated. Walkways shoveled, groceries carried. So interesting to hear.
@scarletfluerr
@scarletfluerr 4 года назад
Meanwhile they were starving, brutalizing and murdering other civilians elswhere.
@RabbitSlippersBlog
@RabbitSlippersBlog 11 лет назад
I wonder if that mystery item is kind of like a chamber pot to go to the bathroom in and then dump somewhere later, say if under attack or some other circumstance. I can't picture them creating great plumbing under those circumstances, but I don't know much about this stuff.
@SimonElenor
@SimonElenor 4 года назад
I got cut off. Did they ever figure out the siren? The thin piece of cone shaped metal.
@praveenb9048
@praveenb9048 4 года назад
The novel "SS-GB" by Len Deighton is a fine piece of alternative history of mainland Britain under German occupation.
@jenniferholden9397
@jenniferholden9397 4 года назад
A lot of young people were evacuated, like my neighbor, she never saw her family again for 5 years.
@FEDERICOKUBRICK
@FEDERICOKUBRICK 5 лет назад
"My Lord, I have a cunning plan." - Baldrick
@thecaravan1
@thecaravan1 5 лет назад
“todd, far from being a fit consort for a prince of the realm, you would bore the leggings off a village idiot.”
@hoosierhiver
@hoosierhiver 4 года назад
I have a friend from Guernsey, he swore there is a pill box on the island that is haunted as hell.
@KumaBean
@KumaBean 4 года назад
You should take a wonder around the German underground hospital featured in the documentary, you could cut the atmosphere with a wooden ruler, its palpable and oppressive, many only go once and refuse to return. Me? I love it, history at its best 👍
@naycnay
@naycnay 4 года назад
@@KumaBean Screw the hospital, that's just a creepy museum. Go into the ones surrounding it. Either incomplete or rushed or whatever. Don't know what they are. Loads of them with massive rooms, all dark, stone, littered, misshapen. Haunting.
@KumaBean
@KumaBean 4 года назад
naycnay Been there, done that, survived, lol 🙂🤙🏻
@ManImJustSomeDude
@ManImJustSomeDude 3 года назад
I’d love to see Bettany Hughes tell the story of the lady that ran Sark during the war.
@trudyclay3478
@trudyclay3478 5 лет назад
Your unidentified object looks like flashing waterproofing for a hole going through a roof
@mard420
@mard420 10 лет назад
give the welshman a shovel and he didn't complain
@WOLFROY47
@WOLFROY47 7 лет назад
i dont say blame all germans, especially people that were still children at the time, but, its not good to forget what arseholes people can be in times of war, so if we remember, we can try not to repeat the mistakes of the past, if we bury the truth it will happen all over again
@51WCDodge
@51WCDodge 6 лет назад
You have obviously not lived under Occupation. The Mother of a friend wa sa child during the Occuaption, she would run if you started chopping wood. Her bedroom was in an attic above a road were slave workers wer emarched to and from the feild in which they were kept. Evry morning she was woken by the clop clop of wodden sandals, which if a slave was lucky they had, every night the same sound going the other way.
@bnipmnaa
@bnipmnaa 5 лет назад
Yeah, Willian Woods. It was all a plot to discredit Hitler. You pathetic fucking moron.
@mirola73
@mirola73 5 лет назад
Lots of men and material tied down and resources used on an island that served little purpose......
@JohnMorley1
@JohnMorley1 5 лет назад
Isn't that cone part of a siren? Seems sort of obvious to me.
@c.a.mcdivitt9722
@c.a.mcdivitt9722 2 года назад
That tin is very damaged, but it looks for all the world like the seal around a stove pipe as it goes through a wood and shingle roof.
@c.a.mcdivitt9722
@c.a.mcdivitt9722 2 года назад
Asked a local expert, and they agreed with my assessment.
@thomasvandevelde8157
@thomasvandevelde8157 4 года назад
And what about radar/searchlight emplacements? I suspect Trench 6 was a Radar because of it´s flat location, as opposed to hills banning it´s ´sight´ otherwise. Radars can´t see over hills, well they could not. Now they can, some types.
@philaypeephilippotter6532
@philaypeephilippotter6532 4 года назад
I may be wrong but I don't think that the *NAZIs* ever made radar work.
@thomasvandevelde8157
@thomasvandevelde8157 4 года назад
@@philaypeephilippotter6532 Oh they most definitely got it to work, in fact one can state without blushing they were actually ahead in Radar-technology until the start of 1942. They churned out thousands of gun-laying Radars of the type Wurzburg ´A´ with every bigger Flak battery alone, which is what I´d expect some traces should´ve been found: the guns are worthless unless you know where to fire at.Bear in mind that the German Radar-effort went entirely in the opposite direction of the Allied one: they were defending instead of attacking, hence huge bombproof, long-range Radars dotted all along the French, Belgian, Dutch, Danish and Norwegian Coastline was obviously the best way to go for them. Inside Germany itself there was the ´Jagdschloss´ type ´round-lookers´ for air traffic observation, and plotting interception of incoming bomber raids on a big PPI CRT-screen. They also kept Civil Defense informed, as once they analyzed what the target of that night was, they sent the people of that area into the shelters. By 1945 quite the collection of Radars had piled up, and some of the larger installations were now rotated 180 degrees, peering into now-Communist airspace. The ex-Reich Defense system was positioned ideally for Western countries going into the Cold War, smaller nations, ravaged by WW2 had no infrastructure so they kept using German sets for quite some time, even into the 1970s. The Allies stole more than one technology in the Radar-arena from the Germans too. Regards
@Skyfire_The_Goth
@Skyfire_The_Goth 4 года назад
"So generous given the situation" Well, the islanders probably realized what most people keep trying to point out alot with armies, the low soldiers and even most of the high ranking military people were simply following orders that they most likely didn't like but had no choice, it was either follow orders or be thrown in a deep dark prison somewhere at best and straight out killed on the spot at worst and being humans they didn't like seeing the soldiers etc. going hungry. I'm going to go out on a limb and say they probably wouldn't have shared with Hitler or any of the Nazi leadership if they were there starving.
@philaypeephilippotter6532
@philaypeephilippotter6532 3 года назад
Most of the soldiers posted to the *Channel Islands* were chosen for their decency. The *NAZIs* wanted 🇬🇧 to think that they were actually rather _nice_ - it didn't work.
@MosBikeShop
@MosBikeShop Год назад
Phil digging a telephone system makes me smile.
@nielssuijkerbuijk7741
@nielssuijkerbuijk7741 7 лет назад
exploding casings? Am i wrong or are they way too careful
@arkilos2253
@arkilos2253 6 лет назад
not so much the casing they were afraid of o much as the potential of an unused working end, which could have lead to several wounded or dead. And when working with ammunition and artillery ordinance of any kind, until you know otherwise, you must always treat it like a live round.
@johndeeter4030
@johndeeter4030 6 лет назад
I wonder the same thing..You can tell this was not one to worry about..I guess spending 18 years in the military and being around weapons you can tell the difference..
@mrkmt49gmail
@mrkmt49gmail 6 лет назад
YOUR RIGHT MATE ,but they gotta make it sound horific or no bums on seats = no big pay check and that stuff wont placate folks like me who know german officers and a camp guard from gersy or gernsey who were given citizen ship and still had their uniforms in cupboard ready for rememberence day parade where I here they marched up the mall as wellinhonour of all of the fallen . the word nazi is confused badly the brits think every german was a nazi but we still remember some of them and i,ve gota say ,(as I come from british navey stock}that theythey were more honest and upright than most of the english i grew up with
@tinderboxcreations
@tinderboxcreations 5 лет назад
That casing had no primer, no shell and had two dirty great holes from either a pick axe or bullets. It was nothing but a corroded empty brass tube. The bomb disposal bloke just wanted to be seen blowing something up.
@drpsionic
@drpsionic 3 года назад
It's a pity they did not leave the big guns so history students could be given tours of the installation and see what the guns looked like in position.
@philaypeephilippotter6532
@philaypeephilippotter6532 3 года назад
It's a small island. Would you want to keep such reminders of *NAZI* occupation of your home?
@PalleRasmussen
@PalleRasmussen 10 лет назад
You cannot help thinking why they did not go and get some German veterans. The 319th Division was an old-style infantry division with 15-17.000 men, plus the FLAK units, Ost Batallions, etc. Should be possible to find a survivor.
@briansmith9439
@briansmith9439 10 лет назад
My thought exactly! LOL
@I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music
I'd bet some of those guys wound up settling there after the war and were laughing at this excavation as it happened.
@RamblinRick_
@RamblinRick_ 9 лет назад
This is the second time I've seen them dig a German fortification. I wondered then as well. Go find a German soldier or two who was there. They'll tell you everything that went on there and about the layout. Not tapping that resource is an archaeology failure.
@hilaryc3203
@hilaryc3203 9 лет назад
777scubadiver But this is merely a 3 day test dig. If someone picks it up to do a full study, then that would be part of the studies.
@HotelPapa100
@HotelPapa100 9 лет назад
Hilary C Its not just a test dig. It's a TV program. considerable preparation goes into these. It definitely would have added something to the show.
@dave-in-nj9393
@dave-in-nj9393 4 года назад
I am thinking that metal detectors would be the first thing on the site.
@colinfaed5910
@colinfaed5910 4 года назад
It they were just going to look for metal objects, yes, but as they are generally picking an area and digging it all up very carefully they will find anything that's there, metal or not.
@BlackIjs
@BlackIjs 2 года назад
We have a 1943 Mk 1X 40mm anti-aircraft gun at our Legion. It's tiny compared to these!
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer 4 года назад
Jersey and Guernsey were declared open as you might declare a city an open City. Great Britain understood they could not defend Jersey in Guernsey without essentially killing everybody on the islands, collaterally. It was too close to what would become occupied France. So I don't know if it was just a Changing of the Guard so to speak as opposed to a true invasion. That does not alter the fact that German troops occupied territory of the United Kingdom. Perhaps that memory had some bearing on the response to the Argentine invasion of the Falkland Islands.
@johnhenni7558
@johnhenni7558 2 года назад
Another British conceit if cobdemning another nations aggression (rightly so) yet completely blind to one's own country's aggressive nature. You'll have noticed that the Malvinas do not lie alongside England in the Channel, no?
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer 2 года назад
@@johnhenni7558 The Falklands has been British territory for centuries. The people that live there are British citizens. They have voted to remain so. It is Argentina that seeking imperialist steps.
@johnhenni7558
@johnhenni7558 2 года назад
Ok. You know much more about the Falklands than I do. Since the Malvinas were and are very distant from Britain, some fairly determinated English persons must have ended up there. All this detail (sorry for rambling) is just to State the obvious. Both GB and Germany have agressively persued self interest and war- like imperial behavior. I can imagine you'll have strong ( and for you) disagreements with everything I have written, so I'll quit now. Good day
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer 2 года назад
@@johnhenni7558 Argentina's dictator, Pinochet pursued an imperialist policy to invade the Falklands. The purpose wasn't to take the islands, it was distract civil unrest in Argentina. How do you distract someone's attention away from an internal enemy? You give them a new external one. Wondering why you didn't include that. I also wonder why there is no mention of Russian imperial ambitions in the Ukraine. Or their imperial ambitions starting in 1938, 1939. IE. Finland and Poland, later part Romania.
@johnhenni7558
@johnhenni7558 2 года назад
You're wrong about Pinochet. He was dictator in Chile.
@ExUSSailor
@ExUSSailor 10 лет назад
I love Phil's accent.
@davidshepherd397
@davidshepherd397 5 лет назад
it sounds like something out of Monty Python
@rodritchison1995
@rodritchison1995 2 года назад
Wiltshire. Part of Wessex. Which is why Phil retired from Wessex Archeology.
@WachdByBigBrother
@WachdByBigBrother 10 лет назад
They are digging all around yet they don't immediately send something like a robot, down into the bunker entrance they showed in the beginning.
@ANTINUTZI
@ANTINUTZI 10 лет назад
Gawd, but if Phil weren't Stanley Holloway's spitter!
@roberthonan3492
@roberthonan3492 4 года назад
An archeologist is Matt!
@WyattRyeSway
@WyattRyeSway 3 года назад
Grainy video but still worth a watch.
@royfr8136
@royfr8136 4 года назад
The actual building plans are probably available for this site. Or it was a generic set up of an anti air craft site. In short.....WHATEVER!
@51WCDodge
@51WCDodge 6 лет назад
What annoys me about this is no credit is given to the Channel Island's Occupattion Society,. They are the ones who have kept the intrest in such sites alive, and continue to do so.Following the Occupation most people just wanted to forget, there wa a lot of change and heartache going on. No reognition is given to loacl experts, they lived through it they know from first hand experience.
@MultiMangaGuy
@MultiMangaGuy 9 лет назад
well the silly thing about the subhuman thing is not so new to be honest every large nation have been using that term just look at the romans how they treated the caputred provinces and so on :)
@grumblesa10
@grumblesa10 8 лет назад
+Jasonsenipor Clearly you were there, and of course witnessed interactions...
@csmith563
@csmith563 5 лет назад
As tRump is treating MANY people Now...
@maxwebster7572
@maxwebster7572 5 лет назад
Belgian Congo....
@onefeather2
@onefeather2 5 лет назад
Don't blow up the old shell, my God ,it is a part of history, put it in something so it can be viewed by people.
@karmicpopcorn6440
@karmicpopcorn6440 3 года назад
Too unstable
@billya3509
@billya3509 5 лет назад
27.32 looks like a cone from pa or alarm system
@dave-in-nj9393
@dave-in-nj9393 4 года назад
wow, I finally found where my namesake came from
@naycnay
@naycnay 4 года назад
Ha, New Jersey? I'm mates with the direct descendants of the family that gave NJ it's name...
@baongoc9889
@baongoc9889 3 года назад
2:15 exactly how I and my class acted during our field trips when we were at school.
@man4machine740
@man4machine740 9 лет назад
I wonder if the crushed conical debris could be part of a still.
@bethbartlett5692
@bethbartlett5692 5 лет назад
lol - could ya possibly be Irish!?! ❤🍀
@MrAlumni72
@MrAlumni72 5 лет назад
It looks to me like the base of a 20mm Oerlikon.
@cayminlast
@cayminlast 5 лет назад
I think it may be a 'urinal funnel', we had such devices in and around our bush camps. They were around six feet long and the skinny end was buried about three feet deep. Most large tents had one nearby.
@57WillysCJ
@57WillysCJ 10 лет назад
That old video footage of Hitlers army marching through town reminds one of Roman soldiers doing the same.
@rahowhero
@rahowhero 9 лет назад
Probably coz they were modelled on Rome, salutes, marches, eagle standard etc
@wmcbarker4155
@wmcbarker4155 5 лет назад
and look...most of the now civilized world still follows Roman Law
@billya3509
@billya3509 5 лет назад
ye were there were ya? lmfao
@HO-bndk
@HO-bndk 5 лет назад
Roman soldiers didn't "march"
@sandrahastings3436
@sandrahastings3436 5 лет назад
That "old video " is called film.
@gretchenvandewalle1068
@gretchenvandewalle1068 4 года назад
Want more? Read 'The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrow about the occupation of Guernsey during WW2.
@marylavine2632
@marylavine2632 4 года назад
Wonderful read
@nathanhunt6032
@nathanhunt6032 4 года назад
It'd be a good place, the best way to deal with unexploded ordnance is to hit hard with a hammer make sure it doesn't go off
@Wallyworld30
@Wallyworld30 6 лет назад
Just looking at a map Jersey doesn't look geographically like it should belong to the Brits. I'm sure it has a rich history to it but to me it seems like it she be part of France.
@51WCDodge
@51WCDodge 5 лет назад
Jersey does not belong to the Brits. The Brits belong to us! We clobbered them in 1066. It wasn't part of France it was part of Normandy. Normandy, the Northern Men's land was given to the Norse people by Charles the Bald in 867, to keep them off his back. Then we toook Engalnd in 1066. John Lackland screwed it up on 1204 and all the land went back to France , except us, we chose to reamain loyal to Le Duc, he in return allowed us to use the Roayl Seal of Three Lions, so thier NOT English lions, two are Norman and the third is from Aquitaine. The French have tried to concquer us since then, on one occasion they disturbed the Lieutent Governers breackfast at 7 am. This so incensed his butler that he got a pistiol and shot at the French . At 7:15 am the rembarked and left. Jersy does not have a Govenor, we are a Bailiwick not a colony, the Head of State is the Duke of Normandy, who also happens to be the English Monarch. The last invasion of United Kingdom soil was 6th January 1781 when the Franch came back, they were again kicked out following what is known as the Battle of Jersey,. The comannding officer Major Person wa skilled, he wa srevenged by his Officer Servant a black man known as Pompey. Whole lot was painted by ironically if you know the full story an American Artist, called The Death of Major Pierson. Original in National Gallery in London, copy in the States Chamber in Jersey.
@yooper6161
@yooper6161 2 года назад
I think after 20 years Tony is more than an amateur. Four minutes in and I'm still hoping to see Mick.... 😥😢😭😫😫
@kevinmorrice
@kevinmorrice 5 лет назад
i went there, its worth a visit
@GhostFortress001
@GhostFortress001 4 года назад
*MEH!!!*
@bozaiwarrior
@bozaiwarrior 4 года назад
At 33:31 that shell case has no primer.
@blaggercoyote
@blaggercoyote Год назад
They don`t know the difference between an empty case and a live round!
@jbelme1
@jbelme1 4 года назад
It’s so cute how afraid they are of spent casings.
@becgould3772
@becgould3772 4 года назад
The still find live ammo in the UK it's why they are being careful.
@Tom-uv7ry
@Tom-uv7ry 4 года назад
They dont what they're dealing with until its out of the ground so they have to treat it as if it's live thats why its done people have died before dealing with stuff like that there was a war remember and bombs of all description got dropped all over europe and Britain
@JeffBilkins
@JeffBilkins 11 лет назад
240p? in 2013? WTF!
@WOLFROY47
@WOLFROY47 7 лет назад
the guns the guns they made me deaf you know, true, ( slight adaption from the hunchback of notre dame ) no ear protection in those days, cotton wool soaked in wax if you were smart, but you still went deaf in one ear
@scottpowers4728
@scottpowers4728 5 лет назад
can really tell quality issues-
@CoxJoxSox
@CoxJoxSox 5 лет назад
What happened to all the big guns?
@philaypeephilippotter6532
@philaypeephilippotter6532 4 года назад
Taken away and melted down.
@KellyBurnett304
@KellyBurnett304 3 года назад
42:10 Tea and chocolates for those murders?!? Ridiculous! 😡🤬
@gaskelldave
@gaskelldave 5 лет назад
Tony once played a character in the Jersey based cop TV drama Bergerac. According to imdb the episode was called "My name's sergeant Bergerac" and Tony's character was called Shlomo Denkovitz, an incompetent fraudster. 21st Jan 1990.
@KumaBean
@KumaBean 4 года назад
I remember that one! 😂👌
@SuperFriendBFG
@SuperFriendBFG 4 года назад
In this episode of Time Team. Phil gets to watch an explosion.
@stoneblue1795
@stoneblue1795 4 года назад
Were these islands named after cows, or were cows named after these islands?
@naycnay
@naycnay 4 года назад
Ha. The cows are named after the islands. As are knitted jumpers. As are sports tops.
@tomsaxton9534
@tomsaxton9534 6 лет назад
why don't they use metal detectors , much safer
@derekrohan9619
@derekrohan9619 4 года назад
Tom Saxton ... they did, literally use them a few times in the show
Далее
Time Team S19-E10 How to Lose a Castle
46:58
Просмотров 466 тыс.
A Village Affair | FULL EPISODE | Time Team
46:18
Просмотров 260 тыс.
Time Team S19-E08 Secrets of the Dunes
46:40
Просмотров 339 тыс.
Time Team S19-E07 The Only Earl Is Essex
46:52
Просмотров 401 тыс.
Lord Of The Isles | FULL EPISODE | Time Team
47:07
Просмотров 485 тыс.
Time Team S18-E07 The House of the White Queen
47:48
Просмотров 633 тыс.