The Ridgeway Mystery: You NEVER knew! [13:28]

By Free Republic | Created at 2024-10-19 05:18:39 | Updated at 2024-10-19 07:37:55 2 hours ago
Truth
Transcript
·The Problem
0:08·[Music] you might be surprised to learn that right now I'm walking on one of the
0:11·possible remnants of doggerland and yet I'm in the middle of Southern England
0:16·in Hertfordshire let me [Music] explain the year is 1913 and a man named Clement
0:24·Reid would publish a book entitled submerge forests it's a fascinating read and perhaps
0:30·the first book dedicated to the existence of a long lost land joining Britain to Mainland
0:35·Europe Clement was sure that land must have existed there and he came to that conclusion
0:41·based on plant and geological studies that he did longed for the day that a uh something tangible
0:48·would come to light and perhaps one day we would find the stone Circles of the Antiquities now
0:53·buried well below the North Sea had Clement Reed survived until 19 31 his dream would have come
1:01·true 25 Miles off the coast of Norfolk a trowler boat brought up a lump of Pete and inside that a
1:09·barbed spear made from antler was found sat there wedged in the Peete and dated at 10,000 to 4,000
1:18·BC and nearly 100 years on we learned so much more about what the land looks like under the
1:24·North Sea from the rivers estries Marshland to other events such as the tsunami in six ,200 BC
1:31·so the various sea level rises over time but how does all of that relate to here in hartfordshire
·The Ridgeway
1:38·so this is the Ridgeway and it stretches from way back in that direction to Overton Hill the
1:48·sanctuary near aere in Wiltshire all the way in the distance there to Beacon Hill
1:54·in hertfordshire that's as it is in its current official form today we know it probably stretched
2:00·a lot further in either direction from that route and we also know it to be over 5,000
2:06·years old some have said early near liic maybe even late mesic so what was going on in the UK
2:13·at that time now I have a theory on this route on this ancient trackway which likely spanned
2:19·from the east coast of England to Lyme Regis on the Dorset Jurassic Coast now I'm no academic
2:25·in this field I'm not an archaeologist and I'm not historically trained so sometimes
2:30·give my own small theory on an idea or a subject and that's okay I've have no reputation to lose
2:36·but this idea this notion this Theory well it struck me as really obvious now I'll come to
2:42·that theory shortly but first of all something really important very much relates to this
2:46·and it's going to help us piece together this Theory a much more modern perspective on all of
2:50·[Music]
2:54·this just so turns out that today a new route that spans across the country is being launched
·The Great Chalk Way
3:03·the great chalk way and that's going to help me explain my theory perfectly so if we accept that
3:09·the old Ridgeway was indeed a lot longer than the current form we see today and did indeed
3:15·take that direction and Route we implied earlier well this is great because and now the great chalk
3:20·way is set to recreate England's oldest route taking in 400 miles 11 counties they're picking
3:28·up some established uh National trails and popular long-distant Pathways we're now at dunstable Downs
3:34·we're going to and take a look find out a bit more context which will definitely help us with today's
3:38·story wow hiy hello how are you you right I'm [Music] [Applause] [Music] good dearly beloved
3:58·we're gathered here today the reason is we're gathered here today is for the great chalk way
4:02·and the launch of the great chalk Way project and Route but the whole thing is about 400 m
4:08·long reestablishing a prehistoric long-distance route that would have been used by our ancestors
4:14·between the ice ages West Stow has evidence of human activity 440,000 years ago that's on
4:20·Route so the history is deep the scenery is wonderful and I just want to invite you all
4:28·to take a look at the information board get acquainted with this and spread the
4:34·word so it's not often you explain the evidence before the theory itself there's good reason
·The Evidence
4:43·for that to bear with me let's go take a look at barbar Castle up on the Ridgeway so we're
4:50·just south of Swindon over there high up on the Ridgeway it's a gorgeous day today Blue Sky no
4:56·Breeze and I think the old Ridgeway is that way in the new Ridgeway goes down that way towards
5:02·ogborne St George either way right ahead of me is a very beautiful barbrey castle Iron Age Hill Fort
5:09·now up here we'd have a whole Maze of uh ancient history through different eras importantly we have
5:16·Iron Age occupation here at least 40 roundhouse imprints were found here we have Iron Age pottery
5:22·and we even have Iron Iron Age blacksmith's hoarde including all kinds of equine stuff
5:28·so that's great with this hillfort we have 2,500 year old construction really gorgeous construction
5:36·beautiful views probably 30 or 40 mil on this really clear day but it didn't end there in terms
5:43·of the date of this site on the Ridgeway because to the Northwest we have a bowl Barrow probably
5:49·of bronze Age construction and then there's more because in 2013 I think just to the uh back on
5:56·the east side over there where they found a flint knife and they dated it to 5 to 7,000 BC that's
6:05·perfect let me explain why so why are we all here well it's because paths really matter they connect
6:12·us they connect us to where we're going to where we've been I always think that when I'm walking
6:17·it's like the spine of a story that you're telling as each step is taken because I have such passion
6:23·for archaeology and diversifying the people who feel welcome and included in the outdoors I think
6:30·that's a really fantastic way not in into nature connection into Heritage but into connecting with
6:37·communities that are alive and existing around us today because paths don't exist in abstraction
6:44·they don't exist in a social vacuum when you're walking any section of this route the Peddars
6:51·way the ickneild way the Ridgeway or the Wessex Ridgeway you're walking through living landscapes
6:59·[Music] so back to doggerland back to the gradual climate change and the melting ice
·The Theory
7:05·of Northern Europe you can map the sea level changes over the last 20,000 years place that
7:11·into terrain models and you can broadly give you the shape of Northwestern Europe over that
7:17·period from the very early stages of this ice age of this ice Retreat you could hardly make
7:22·out the shape of the UK and Ireland as we see it today but at this point we start to see something
7:27·significant you see the populations that we now know would have existed here likely slowly moving
7:33·south the hunter gatherers of the tundra being moved South by the ever increasing sea levels
7:38·well around 6,200 BC well they'd have faced very dramatic change one that many would not
7:46·survive this path really matters this bringing together of the four to create something that's
7:55·greater than the sum of its parts I find that so incredibly exciting Because the actual linking
8:02·up of the paths represents what we all are here to do which is connect our organizations and our
8:09·different interest groups into something that is greater than the sum of its parts we have to work
8:16·out ways to make this investable we have to work out ways that this is a proposition to the people
8:24·with pots of money to say that is something I'm going to back that is something I'm going to back
8:29·because of nature that is something I'm going to back because of climate resilience biodiversity a
8:35·tackling the biodiversity crisis tackling our health and well-being challenges paths do it
8:42·all Studies have suggested that off the northwest coast of Norway this Monumental tsunami would have
8:51·started now all along the east coast of Scotland where we have deposits which are able to uh allow
8:58·us to see dates of this event 6,200 BC give or take now further Studies have suggested that the
9:05·Mesolithic population would have been wiped out to the tune of 25% now that event itself wouldn't
9:11·raise the sea level as a whole of course the sea does retract after such an event but perhaps not
9:16·only did it change the face of the landscape maybe new Lakes were carved out areas became
9:22·much more marshy perhaps it also changed the lives of the people that lived there not only
9:27·the event itself but perhaps they moved forward moved South in fear of such an event well perhaps
9:34·their story passed on for Generation to generation the tales of that event is this a route that would
9:42·have meant people could trade from one Coastline to another meeting other communities on route or
9:48·were all roads leading to a for example I don't know what the answer is I don't know that there
9:53·is one definitive answer because as many people Journey along a path have as many reasons to walk
9:59·on that path themselves there's no one fixed answer and I think that's the same for people
10:04·Travelers and pilgrims now as well we walk for different reasons but we all gain some of the
10:09·shared benefits or maybe there's a bit that you will love and revisit again and again and again
10:13·or maybe it's the scale of that long pilgrimage that appeals to you whichever way it is the great
10:20·chalk way is ours and it's for the future as well thank you everybody [Applause] [Music]
·Avebury and Sanctuary
10:33·the barbury Castle isn't the only place with mesic fins along the Ridgeway they're lited
10:38·along here it doesn't take much research I think upington segsbury watlington and even at the far
10:44·end of the modern one the uh Beacon Hill near dunable well that had them too but just a few
10:51·years back Professor Vincent Gaffney led a team that took some core samples from various features
10:57·Within doggerland chucking huge crane likee cone sample equipment over the side of their
11:03·boats deep into the North Sea now the dates they gathered from these cores varied hugely but one
11:10·date one area produced something quite staggering that date 4,500 BC to 3,100 BC well that's well
11:20·into the near lithic a near liic landscape way off of the now Coast so let's move from there
11:26·let's keep moving away from the melting ice in the increasing sea levels let's move away from
11:31·the ever disappearing landscape our ancestors may be talked of waves and water and Marshland
11:37·to the safety of High Ground let's head to the Ridgeway we now know that by at least 4,000 BC
11:45·this area had significance it was more than just dwellings and of the next two Millennia we start
11:51·to see significant change here the neic people building monuments like their lives depended on it
11:59·I do wonder if the Stroger event and uh maybe others like it combined with the shrinking ice
12:05·and the ever rising sea levels gave people this sort of inbuilt fear and stories that
12:11·lasted through generation to generation as they slowly move South South East and perhaps
12:16·onto what we now know as Mainland Britain and perhaps from the wash down the Ridgeway the
12:22·safe route is the Ridgeway the high place away from that primal fear that that Primal instinct
12:29·and perhaps I'm romanticizing that whole View and putting it all together and too much of a
12:33·small box maybe it spans obviously eras more but the fact there was a onetime incident a tsunami
12:41·6,200 BC well maybe that was the last straw and that fair Instinct it was inbuilt and it never
12:47·went away and now we have a Ridgeway that had been used for thousands and thousands of years a route
12:52·to safety maybe a route to the sanctuary so I've really enjoyed today's video big thanks to those
12:59·the uh the great chalk way what a great event that was yesterday the opening of that route
13:03·they're looking for volunteers they're looking for promotion they're looking
13:05·for people to make it aware of a national thing so I'll put a lot of good links in
13:10·the description below in the meantime thanks for watching we'll see you this time next week
13:28·[Music]
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