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Wessex - The only way is Wessex

Ian Hislop tells the story of four great Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms of England, looking for traces of their legacy today. In today’s final programme in the series he reaches Wessex.

With current debate about the stability and durability of the United Kingdom, Ian Hislop felt it was a good time to explore how it was that England, the core of that union, came to be. In this series he tells the story of four great Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms, East Anglia, Northumbria, Mercia and Wessex, celebrating their golden ages and trying to understand their journey from groupings of assimilated peoples from across the North Sea to powerful kingdoms, and ultimately a single entity.

In spite of a relatively limited written record, it's a period of history that is being constantly re-written, thanks to the impact of new archeological techniques and the rise of the amateur detectorists. Ian hears from authorities on the early medieval period including Michael Wood, Marc Morris, and the British Museum’s curator of Medieval coinage, Gareth Williams, as well as talking to people with local interests in the Anglo-Saxon story.
He's on the look out for ways in which these regional identities have left a mark beyond the occasional use of their names for utility companies or railway services, and he explores the factors that kept the Kingdoms apart but eventually drew them together; common enemies, a unifying language, the church and the residual aspiration to be as the Romans once were.

In this final programme in the series, Ian arrives in Wessex, the Kingdom that held out against the Viking horde and turned the tide against the invaders. But how inevitable was it that Wessex should be the Kingdom that united the Anglo-Saxons to create Anglia? And how stable was that final iteration of the Anglo-Saxon world?

Producer: Tom Alban

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Wed 25 Aug 2021 11:00

Broadcasts

  • Mon 23 Aug 2021 20:00
  • Wed 25 Aug 2021 11:00