What the Romans Did for Us

What the Romans Did for Us
Genre Documentary
Directed by Inge Samuels
Presented by Adam Hart-Davis
Composer(s) Deborah Mollison
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of episodes 6
Production
Producer(s)
Editor(s) Peter Parnham
Running time 23 minutes
Distributor BBC
Release
Original network BBC Two
Original release 6 November (2000-11-06) – 11 December 2000 (2000-12-11)
Chronology
Followed by What the Victorians Did for Us
External links
Website

What the Romans Did for Us, is a 2000 BBC documentary series "looking at the innovations and inventions brought to Britain by the Romans".[1] The title of the programme is derived from the cult movie Monty Python's Life of Brian, referencing the famous scene where the People's Front of Judea discuss "What have the Romans done for us?"

Production

In 2003, the series was re-edited into 10-minute sections for broadcast as programme fillers.

Reception

Awards

Nominated for Best Feature at the British Academy Television Awards 2001.

Episodes

The White Cliffs of Dover
These are the White Cliffs of Dover, and this must have been the first bit of Britain that the Romans saw when they came to invade. In fact they came in force in about May of AD 43. That wasn’t the first time they had visited the islands because Julius Caesar had come over a hundred years earlier, but he only stayed for a few weeks. In AD 43 the Romans meant to stay.
Adam Hart-Davis

Episode one: Life of Luxury

After hundreds of years of occupation many generations of people in Britain had grown up surrounded by Roman culture, and after a long period of stability that culture was showing visible signs of wealth, success and good living.
Adam Hart-Davis

Episode two: Invasion

In this series I’m going to see what the Romans brought with them and what they left behind when finally they went home 400 years later. Why did they come? Well, partly for the glory, partly for the farmland, and for the minerals like copper, lead and gold, and simply to trade. We'll be returning to those things later in the series, but for the moment lets see how they established their first foothold.
Adam Hart-Davis

Episode three: Building Britain

Within 30 years of the invasion there were 60,000 Roman troops in Britain, they had come from some of the most advanced places in Europe, and to them this sort of settlement must have seemed primitive. This is the story of how they transformed the landscape and laid the foundations for the countryside and the cities that we have today.
Adam Hart-Davis

Episode four: Arteries of the Empire

When Britain became Roman the Britons gained access to the finest goods the Empire could offer. The Roman economy was fuelled by trade, but they had trouble meeting the demand for luxury goods like jewellery. What they needed was the raw materials, the ores, and that is one of the principal reasons that the Romans came to Britain and stayed here for 400 years, but this trade would have been impossible without their amazing network of roads.
Adam Hart-Davis

Episode five: Edge of Empire

The Roman Army took nearly 50 years to work their way up, through their new province, to what is now Scotland. But they never really conquered these northern tribes, and they remained a thorn in the flesh of Roman Britain. By about AD 120, the northern frontier ranged from Wallsend in the east, to Carlisle in the west, and the emperor Hadrian said, "Build a wall, and keep all the others out." This remains the best known frontier anywhere in the Roman world, and it's the perfect place from which to contemplate life at the edge of empire.
Adam Hart-Davis

Episode six: Ahead of Their Time

The Romans ruled Britain for nearly four hundred years. They brought with them all sorts of revolutionary new concepts, from the hot bath to the hamburger. In this programme, I'm going to look at some of their wackier technology, like the first robot, and the slot machine; inventions that were literally centuries ahead of their time.
Adam Hart-Davis

References

  1. "What the Romans Did For Us". BBC Two. Retrieved 2012-12-23.
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