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Time Team Special: The God of Gothic | Classic Special (Full Episode) 2007 - Augustus Pugin 

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FULL EPISODE | CLASSIC TIME TEAM SPECIAL
Tony Robinson follows the renovation of the Grange, a house in Ramsgate, Kent, formerly owned by 19th-century architect Augustus Pugin, co-creator of the Houses of Parliament. Pugin's designs for the home became a blueprint for thousands of properties built after his death and in 20 years he succeeded in changing the face of England. With the help of experts such as Grand Designs' Kevin McCloud, the Landmark Trust aims to restore a piece of history.
Original broadcast date: 1st March 2007
With thanks to:
V&A
Pugin Society
Hardman Studios
Alamy
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12 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 76   
@TimeTeamOfficial
@TimeTeamOfficial Месяц назад
Join us on Patreon for a range of extras including masterclasses, Dig Watch updates during excavations, additional interviews and 3D models. Plus your membership directly supports new digs and episodes like this one!
@Clearphish
@Clearphish Месяц назад
One of my French-speaking neighbours here in rural West Québec is a Pugin. I sent him a link to this video. It turns out that he is a direct descendant of Augustus Pugin, now four or five generations later!
@severianmonk7394
@severianmonk7394 25 дней назад
When I was a child in Montreal I wanted to change my name to Pugin but my mother wasn't a fan of neo-gothic design and thought it was a creepy name. I got over it.
@Clearphish
@Clearphish 25 дней назад
@@severianmonk7394 Nothing creepy about my neighbour. With a great partner, kids and a fine organic vegetable farm.
@harriethowell5444
@harriethowell5444 Месяц назад
This was wonderful and so pleased to have Sir Tony Robinson as narrator. There is nobody like Tony!❤❤
@kvarietyfan
@kvarietyfan Месяц назад
First, Pugin might have been just a tad manic. (Understatement). Second. These specials are a wonderful part of the Time Team experience. Thank you very much indeed.
@fionad9913
@fionad9913 Месяц назад
I had never seen this special before, it is one of my absolute favorites now. I could have done with 2 parts more! Thanks so much!!!!!
@markelder1345
@markelder1345 Месяц назад
Just when you think you have seen all the specials. Love this one!
@janielaurel
@janielaurel Месяц назад
Lovely - Pugin is one of my architectural heroes - AND a Time Team special that I had never experienced. Well done, all :)
@drtrustrum
@drtrustrum Месяц назад
I grew up as a Catholic in North Staffordshire, so Pugin's legacy was always a huge part of my life. The current state of Cotton College should be of national concern, it is a disgrace.
@angelafoxmusic7265
@angelafoxmusic7265 Месяц назад
How wonderful. I thoroughly enjoyed learning about this master. Thankyou Time Team.
@sushirules
@sushirules Месяц назад
And with Sir Tony, the penultimate presenter, telling the story. Lovely!
@frankpellow
@frankpellow Месяц назад
Really enjoyed that. Thanks for uploading
@adamsjerome1839
@adamsjerome1839 25 дней назад
I can't think of any superlatives to describe Pugin. Simply awe inspiring.
@cncshrops
@cncshrops Месяц назад
Excellent introduction to period of extravagant enthusiasm and the wealth to realise it's fever-dreams.
@bigsarge2085
@bigsarge2085 Месяц назад
Awesome!
@tinagleeson7813
@tinagleeson7813 Месяц назад
Thank you for publishing this - it was fascinating!! What an extraordinary man Pugin must have been - and how sad that his contribution to architecture in England, and the broader Commonwealth nations, was almost forgotten - until Time Team!!
@doobat708
@doobat708 Месяц назад
Never seen this special before! Thanks so much for re-releasing it! I love the Victorian movements around this type of revivalism, like Charles Rennie Macintosh as well, treating the home as a kind of Gesamtkunstwerk.
@belwynne1386
@belwynne1386 Месяц назад
This was wonderful! I learned so much…just in line with the best of Time Team.
@joannekellam191
@joannekellam191 Месяц назад
Fantastic special! I had not seen this before either. Awesome also to see Kevin McCloud from my other favorite series, Grand Designs, with a little bit here!
@seanpaula8924
@seanpaula8924 22 дня назад
Thank you Sir Tony.
@susanjane4784
@susanjane4784 Месяц назад
By far the best Tony feature I've seen. Full of love for what would otherwise be a bewildering riot of color and form. If Tony was doing a program on birds it would include details on how claws work and how feathers shape whole bodies -- but also the graceful arc of migrating species etched against the sky.
@edherdman9973
@edherdman9973 Месяц назад
Ah, just in time for a lovely evening. Thanks!
@0210rokvist
@0210rokvist 24 дня назад
Love Tonys energy
@anitapollard1627
@anitapollard1627 29 дней назад
Thank you!!!!
@giovanni5063
@giovanni5063 28 дней назад
Sir Tony, so pleased to hear your voice again. Best regards to you and give my best to Black Adder.
@desmcharris
@desmcharris Месяц назад
Thank you Time Team for putting up this astonishing episode. I do remember it's first airing here in Australia. It happened to coincide with a discovery of a Pugin designed chapel in Tasmania. I do wonder if it was still too much to recognise a Catholic and give honours to one in British society. That's why , perhaps he was passed over. Such a rich cast of characters in this episode. Thankyou again.
@owenfish5450
@owenfish5450 Месяц назад
I thought I had seen just about every Time Team episode/special but I had not seen this one before. I think this was the best 'special' of the series actually. Very sensitive to the topic, great detail and content. It was like opening a Taschen book and seeing it come to life. Also lovely to see younger-looking Messrs. Aterbury and McCloud feature in this one, both passionate and engrossing figures in themselves.
@amierikke6225
@amierikke6225 Месяц назад
Thank you for bringing this to us. I never heard of this person, never knew about him.
@dragonmaid1360
@dragonmaid1360 Месяц назад
He was like the architectural Mozart of his time. Id cry every time I saw some of those buildings. How stunning and beautiful
@bethannyallain5395
@bethannyallain5395 Месяц назад
I never heard of this man. Thank you for doing this ❤
@54mgtf22
@54mgtf22 Месяц назад
Time Team with Sir Tony is my comfy slippers.
@jasonmichael5055
@jasonmichael5055 Месяц назад
Sir Tony is the David Attenborough of History Documentaries. A National treasure. And I've watched everything from Australia. Just moved to Waterloo, Liverpool. Would love to get involved with Time Team
@joshhoffman1975
@joshhoffman1975 Месяц назад
How on Earth, can one man have all this output! 😲
@theladyoflife
@theladyoflife Месяц назад
It's amazing to see how you all are able to accept a discovered truth...and stand for and by it! Awesome! Thank you!
@NeungView
@NeungView Месяц назад
What?
@Davlavi
@Davlavi Месяц назад
Great episode.
@giovanni5063
@giovanni5063 28 дней назад
Seeing those artisans restoring the ceiling of the library made me wonder that if they were supine and close to the work, would it not be easier to do? Wasn't that how Michealangelo did the Sistine Chapel ceiling?
@mordillokiwi
@mordillokiwi Месяц назад
Wow, this was quite an enjoyable watch.
@stevenbrown8857
@stevenbrown8857 Месяц назад
Pugin and Isambard kingdom Brunel two magnificent minds from a different time of when Britain was Great 😊
@rickwalden7022
@rickwalden7022 26 дней назад
The god of Gothic is two separate things!
@BarbosaUral
@BarbosaUral 11 дней назад
No one can deny Pugin had immense talent. He could see a design in his mind and then draw it out. I see a person in my mind and I draw a stick figure. I'm envious of people that can see and draw like Pugin. I however overall see his architecture as gawdy as my great aunt's costume jewelry she bought all during the 20'th century. Definitely not my style.
@guyplachy9688
@guyplachy9688 Месяц назад
Exquisite re-released special! Pugin was, I feel, forgotten because of his religion. England may have opened the door for the Catholics to "re-enter" society but long-held bigotries require more that just words, they require time in which to change. Pugin was a Catholic & English society still looked, at the least, skeptically or, at the worst, contemptuously upon Catholics, whereas Barry was a Protestant and, therefore, a more socially acceptable focus for all the recognition for the rebuilding of Westminster.
@chriswilson6352
@chriswilson6352 Месяц назад
well, maybe. However the grandiose House of Lords seems counter culture to me. That gothic ornate expression of being "better" than others seems quaint now and needing to be put aside as in a museum, rather than an expression of the nation's current multi-cultural embrace. The empire and the commonwealth in their current forms would repudiate such hierarchies and Tony R does an admirable job of indicating that while also drawing attention to Pugin's genius. His values are long gone (hopefully)
@ThreadBomb
@ThreadBomb Месяц назад
They were hardly going to put a 25-year-old in charge of rebuilding Westminster, whatever his religion.
@TalmidAndy
@TalmidAndy 29 дней назад
I shared this episode with an American friend who is an architect and it was interesting to hear a very different perspective on this subject. He did purpose his comments with the fact that he does appreciate that Pugin was an excellent artist and draftsman but none of his work would have come to fruition without the skills of the stonemasons, carpenters, and plasterers who did the actual work. Phrases like "pseudo intellectual and sentimentalist waffle' we used to describe the contributions of the experts. He could see why there is a huge housing crisis in the UK as the amount of time and money spent on restoring, maintaining, and protecting buildings like this would be better spent on building affordable housing - with hundreds if not thousands being able to be placed on the grounds of each of these 'important' buildings. To be honest I don't think he's wrong.
@waynesworldofsci-tech
@waynesworldofsci-tech Месяц назад
A true polymath.
@Power_Prawnstar
@Power_Prawnstar 17 дней назад
Kevin Mcleod.......yes!
@susiemartin3144
@susiemartin3144 Месяц назад
Fab! 👍👍
@adeptusmagi
@adeptusmagi Месяц назад
so if Pugin designed the infamous wall paper then its public domain now
@davidevans3227
@davidevans3227 Месяц назад
people looking young
@Awitsaduck
@Awitsaduck 25 дней назад
Is it only me who finds his style very gaudy? I don't like it at all. I do however, love the episode. Great stuff as ever. Hardman might have survived until this episode but barely lasted another year beyond that.
@ThreadBomb
@ThreadBomb Месяц назад
It's worth saying overtly that Pugin was a bit of a nut. He wanted British society to return to the Middle Ages, not just in architecture and decoration but in social and political structure. His profession was just a means to bring about that aim.
@classicambo9781
@classicambo9781 Месяц назад
5:10
@fexdammit
@fexdammit Месяц назад
20:45 budget job.... that blokes pits are blurry....
@grabtharshammer
@grabtharshammer Месяц назад
More Ikea than B&Q?
@TheDesertwalker
@TheDesertwalker Месяц назад
If it ain't Tony......it ain't TT.
@doncook2054
@doncook2054 Месяц назад
Another Victorian who invented what we think is historically accurate...and isn't. Sigh..
@andrewbantick6311
@andrewbantick6311 Месяц назад
OCD 🤔
@michaelkinsey4649
@michaelkinsey4649 Месяц назад
Tuned in Torrent of adverts Tuned out.
@medievalladybird394
@medievalladybird394 Месяц назад
What a pity, I can't remember ads. I was in the live chat. Next time join the chat. Maybe you won't get any advertisement 🤔
@Jack-hy1zq
@Jack-hy1zq Месяц назад
RU-vid Premium.
@medievalladybird394
@medievalladybird394 Месяц назад
@@Jack-hy1zq that ofcourse is a possibility michael will be aware of. I don't have prime either. Have a nice evening from Germany.
@theladyoflife
@theladyoflife Месяц назад
Get RU-vid premium.....you will discover a whole wide new world!
@TheSilentPrince-mt5mx
@TheSilentPrince-mt5mx Месяц назад
I'd recommend Opera as a browser if a 'torrent' of ads bothers you. Set the onboard ad-blocker appropriately and Google doesn't get the ache but most adverts are filtered out.
@kevinjamesparr552
@kevinjamesparr552 Месяц назад
Great ideas fantastic vision wokaholoc but wrong about religion which is but man made.nonsense and insult to God.Loved the program though as I think Pugin was a one off
@grabtharshammer
@grabtharshammer Месяц назад
My question is, was he really that clever? What did HE design, rather than just copy from Medieval designs? Was he just Autistic and was just very much into EVERY detail being just perfect? But at the same time he was just re-hashing medieval things as he saw them? What did he do that could only be described as innovative? - Serious question, I don't know much about him or architectural design, just asking from the viewpoint of someone who just sees an overall picture.
@juliesiefke1173
@juliesiefke1173 Месяц назад
Isn’t “re-hashing things the way they see them” what every artist does? In every medium? How many poetic or musical ways are there to say “I love you.” Or “I’m lonely.” Or “Praise the Lord, for all his works are wonderful.” How many re-tellings are there of Romeo and Juliet? Or Beauty and the Beast? How many paintings of The Last Supper? Or Sunflowers? Or a nude woman? Pugin departed from the current architectural style (Georgian) and brought his love of gothic design to a new era of fabrication. Gothic was the shape, and the “window dressing” but underneath it was designing a building for FUNCTION, how people were going to use it, or designing a space for how people would experience it-that’s the theatre influence. Then he clothed it and accessorized it (to excess) in Gothic “fabric.” His work was an homage to medieval design, not a copy. Every artist stands on the shoulders of other artists who influenced them.
@janwellington8663
@janwellington8663 Месяц назад
@@juliesiefke1173 Couldn't have said it better myself. (I'm an autistic artist.)
@ThreadBomb
@ThreadBomb Месяц назад
@@juliesiefke1173 Put it another way: did Pugin do anything artistically original? Is there something we could describe as a unique Pugin characteristic, beyond simple pastiche?
@gregb6469
@gregb6469 Месяц назад
So what is the new Labour government going to do with that beautiful Lords' Chamber when they abolish the House of Lords, house illegal immigrants in it?
@AnnaAnna-uc2ff
@AnnaAnna-uc2ff Месяц назад
Good idea!
@anything6398
@anything6398 Месяц назад
They'll be in power soon enough 😢
@ledacedar6253
@ledacedar6253 22 дня назад
I’d like to see research exposing the no doubt many previously poor and not poor, now deeply malnourished children & babies, youth & parents & seniors!
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