Heritage! The Battle for Britain's Past
External Rating7%
201360 Min.Beendet

Heritage! The Battle for Britain's Past

Sender:BBC Four

Vorherige Episode

S01E03 - "Broken Propylaeums"

Ausgestrahlt am Mar 21, 2013, 12:00 PM

Nächste Episode

Serie beendet

Beschreibung

Series charting the movement to protect the heritage of the country, from its birth in the 19th century to the modern day.

Details

Status
Beendet
Sprache
English
Laufzeit
60 min
Erstausstrahlung
March 7, 2013
Beendet
March 21, 2013

Externe Links

Episoden (1 Staffel · 3 Episoden)

From Old Bones to Precious Stones

Charting the birth of the heritage movement and the first arguments of radical thought, from figures including John Lubbock MP, Lieutenant General Augustus Henry Lane Fox Pitt Rivers, Charles Darwin and John Ruskin. These remarkable individuals asked important questions and came up with the building blocks of a new world that valued the past. Their actions led to the first piece of legislation to safeguard prehistoric and ancient structures which until then had often fallen prey to the short-term interests of farmers and landowners.

Mar 7, 2013

60 Min.

The Men from the Ministry

The second episode reveals the unsung heroes of the heritage movement, the clever civil servants who saved the great ruins of Britain. It explores the determination of Charles Reed Peers from the Office of Works, who seized the chance in the interwar years to make history a popular cause, and looks at how the increasingly mobile British public began to embrace the idea of a day out at an historic site. As the country houses faced a crisis with owners demolishing or abandoning their homes, who would come to the rescue - the Ministry of Works or the National Trust? 

Mar 14, 2013

60 Min.

Broken Propylaeums

The final episode follows the changing fortunes of a heritage movement floored by the after-effects of World War II and looks at how people like Sir John Betjeman and Dan Cruickshank gave families access to heritage and architecture on television from the comfort of their living rooms. It looks at the preservation of sometimes ugly, certainly unpleasant parts of our built past such as workhouses and underground mineshafts, and contemplates what the future may hold for heritage in Britain - a nation faced with economic uncertainty, depleting resources and increasing challenges of sustainability.

Mar 21, 2013

60 Min.

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