The Mary Rose A Timewatch Guide


The Mary Rose

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On the 11th of October 1982,

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one of the most important shipwrecks ever found

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emerged from the sea's murky depths.

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A global audience of over 60 million people

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tuned in to see history being made.

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There is the wreck of the Mary Rose.

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What an amazing sight.

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For over 40 years, the Mary Rose has slowly yielded up its secrets

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as the ship and its contents

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have been carefully excavated and conserved.

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And the BBC has been there every step of the way,

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to document this incredible journey.

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The history series Timewatch

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played a key role in this reporting.

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Over the last three decades, Timewatch helped chart

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the ever-changing story of Britain's greatest

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underwater archaeology project.

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Over the years the Mary Rose has delivered countless unique

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discoveries, as well as a series of cutting-edge breakthroughs,

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which, taken together,

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have transformed not just our view of this iconic ship,

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but also the Tudor age in which she sailed.

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'Even four decades on,

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'the Mary Rose is still offering challenges and opportunities

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'to historians and archaeologists.

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'Each year, new information and insights continue to emerge.'

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But that's not all. Over the last 40 years, the Mary Rose project

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has itself made history.

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It's helped to turn underwater archaeology

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into a real, credible science.

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And along the way, its produced some groundbreaking scientific advances.

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I'll be using 40 years of remarkable BBC archive film

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to chart how this amazing underwater time capsule

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has captured the nation's imagination.

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But also, how this one wreck would redefine archaeology at sea.

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For centuries, shipwrecks have fascinated and intrigued us.

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But it's only in recent decades that archaeology has allowed

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historians to use wrecks to understand the past.

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The Mary Rose played a key role in this process.

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The team working on her would help

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forge the science of underwater archaeology

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but also bring back to life this flagship of King Henry VIII.

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In her day, the Mary Rose was a formidable ship.

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Over 100 feet long,

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weighing some 700 tonnes

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and heavily armed with 91 guns.

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She was also one of the fastest ships in Henry's VIII's fleet

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and played a key part in his Navy.

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The mention of the Mary Rose might make you think back immediately to

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that magical day in 1982, when she rose out of the water,

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almost miraculously.

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But actually, that wasn't the start of the Mary Rose story.

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That was simply a milepost,

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and it followed years of hard work by archaeologists and divers.

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The tale of how the Mary Rose came to be saved

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really started some 20 years before that remarkable day in 1982.

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In fact, for nearly 500 years, Henry VIII's favourite warship

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had been all but forgotten,

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lying hidden somewhere off the south coast of England.

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But all that changed in the 1960s,

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when one man's personal crusade

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led him to the greatest discovery in British maritime history.

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His name was Alexander McKee,

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and the BBC caught up with him in the late 1970s.

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I took a dive when I was 38

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and I thought,

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"This place hasn't been explored before.

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"This is an opportunity that will come once,

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"to me only, to one generation only."

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"I'm not going to waste my time on just lobsters or

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"picking up copper and brass, and stuff like that.

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"The most important known wreck in northwest Europe is here.

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"Somewhere here.

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"And I will spend my time on that, and even if I fail,

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"I won't actually have wasted the time

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"because it was a well worthwhile objective."

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-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-McKee didn't just search the seabed at random.

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He is a historian and he conducted a very thorough

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programme of research into the wreck.

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This led him to a collection of watercolours

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made by the Dean brothers before 1840.

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The Dean brothers invented and patented helmet diving gear

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and used it for salvage.

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They stumbled on the position of the Mary Rose by accident

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and recovered cannons and other objects which were sold at auction.

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The approximate position of the map was marked

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on an Admiralty chart, which McKee found in 1966.

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This discovery was crucial.

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I knew by that time

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that even Dean had found virtually nothing of the Mary Rose

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showing above the seabed.

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He said there was nothing standing up high enough

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to which he could even attach a rope.

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So, we were looking for an invisible wreck, cos we were a 120 years later.

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At the time, many thought McKee and his team were mad,

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and that the Mary Rose would never be found.

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But McKee had a secret weapon up his sleeve.

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During the search, McKee collaborated with

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some pioneering American scientists

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who were using a new technology called sub-bottom profiling.

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This allowed the scientists to use sonar pings

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to see what lay hidden beneath the seabed.

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On a fateful day in 1967,

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the proverbial X appeared on the sonar map.

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McKee had his target.

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The Mary Rose was the first historic wreck in British waters

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to be found using this cutting-edge technology.

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And it paved the way for all sorts of other discoveries

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around the British coast.

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Once McKee had located what he believed was

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the wreck of the Mary Rose,

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his small team of volunteer divers

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began to explore the site

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and find out exactly what was down there.

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The lead archaeologist on the project was Margaret Rule,

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who joined McKee in 1965

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and dedicated her life to understanding the Mary Rose.

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As a land archaeologist, she had to learn how to dive

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to see the wreck for herself.

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After sitting in the boat with the team of divers

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for some five years, taking notes of what THEY could see on the bottom,

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I finally decided I just had to get under and see for myself.

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It was just too frustrating for words, to sit there hearing

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about mounds and depressions and all this sort of thing, which might mean

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a ship buried there in the mud, and never be able to see it for myself.

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It was a chance not to be missed.

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-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-At that time they were still investigating

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a mass of wreckage, rather than something

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they could recognise as a ship.

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By courtesy of Portsmouth Fire Brigade,

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they were using water hoses underwater

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to blast away the overburden and anchorage wreckage.

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But the sea had helped them.

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During the winter, a scouring on the bottom had exposed

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some of the frames of the ship's timbers.

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Margaret Rule had learnt to dive in time to share the excitement.

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Well, the very first time we saw the ship,

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we saw eight or nine timbers,

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rectangular timbers, just protruding from the seabed,

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three or four inches.

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Their upper surface was very worn and eroded by gribble,

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and by teredo, the shipworm.

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But as we cleared away the mud with our hands,

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the timbers were sharp and clear, as good as the day the ship sank.

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-DAN SNOW:

-It was soon clear this was a hugely important site.

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Those involved were determined to try and excavate

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and, eventually, recover this iconic warship.

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And so, in 1979 an official body,

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The Mary Rose Trust,

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was created to oversee this epic undertaking.

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The once-amateur operation was soon transformed into a huge

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professionally led dig, the like of which had never been

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seen before or since.

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The scale was truly staggering.

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Over four years, they made 28,000 dives.

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Breakthrough followed breakthrough

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and soon they were able to put together

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a comprehensive picture of this ship

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and the men who sailed on her.

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Not only that, but The Mary Rose Project

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pushed the boundaries of what was possible

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and ushered in a whole new era of underwater archaeology.

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As the project expanded,

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new people joined the team,

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including many professional archaeologists and scientists.

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Amongst them would be Christopher Dobbs, who joined in July 1979,

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and Alex Hildred, who joined later that year.

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Everybody's very cheerful.

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Both Alex and Christopher have spent much of their working lives

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with the Mary Rose.

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It was fantastic to get involved with the Mary Rose.

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I'd just come out of university, I'd just studied archaeology.

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But, luckily, I was one of the very few archaeologists who could dive.

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And so, it meant that I could go straight into

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the most important project in the world.

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It was exciting, the anticipation every day

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of what you were going to find.

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It was challenging - getting up at, you know,

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sometimes four in the morning, to get the right tides and things.

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And this was all done without computers, you know.

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The organisation was unbelievable. It was really big.

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Before the Mary Rose,

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underwater archaeology was a haphazard affair.

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But now, for the first time, detailed work was carried out

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on the seabed itself, under the watchful eyes of archaeologists.

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It required a whole new way of working,

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bringing major logistical headaches for the team.

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Whereas on a landsite, you brief a volunteer continuously

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throughout the day, and you can stand over his shoulder and tell him

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what mistakes he's making and where he should be excavating,

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on an underwater site,

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you have to brief him before he goes into the water

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and then rely on him remembering that brief while he's on the seabed

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and working completely alone

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for the vast majority of his time in the water.

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And then, when he comes up, he has to be able to tell you exactly

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where he's worked and what he's done, so that you can brief the next diver.

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You had a really good training session because we were diving alone,

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so you had to be taught how to dive alone.

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You had to be taught the layout of the site. So, we were given

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a board that you took underwater which had a sketch plan of the site.

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You got taught how to use an airlift.

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You got a first tour of the site, which, inevitably, was by feel

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because the visibility was so bad.

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On the seabed, the archaeologists carefully removed

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the sediments to expose each new find using airlifts

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and improvised tools, like paint brushes.

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Once each new object had been revealed,

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it was carefully recorded and sketched,

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before being brought to the surface.

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The common misconceptions are that a wreck is either

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virtually complete, with sails furled on the bottom,

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waiting for the intrepid diver to go down

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and arrest the gold coins from its hull,

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or that it's a pile of matchwood and mud,

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with no relationship,

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nothing meaningful in it at all.

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And of course, that's a long way from the truth, really.

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Most of the processes and principals involved in land archaeology

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can be used underwater.

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It may take a little longer, in certain circumstances,

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but there's no excuse not to try and achieve the same sort of

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measure of accuracy.

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There seems to be a lot of land archaeologists who feel

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that it's not possible underwater.

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Erm, but hopefully, the Mary Rose will do something to

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improve its standing in the academic field.

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I think many people think the challenges of working underwater

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must be because it's cold and dark and you're diving deep down,

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and so on. But I think the challenges were

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more a matter of time.

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You could only spend 58 or 72 minutes,

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or occasionally 96 minutes, underwater.

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The difficulty was...that there is...there was no guidebook.

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We were breaking new grounds the whole time.

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We were trying to work as well underwater as we were on land,

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with no rules to go by.

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The vast majority of the hundreds of volunteer divers

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had no formal archaeological training.

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Each had to be carefully briefed about how and where

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to excavate before being allowed on site.

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Back on deck, the professionals were waiting to assess their finds.

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Yes, when I uncovered, I thought it might be the lid of something,

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cos it was upside down.

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-I realised...

-Yeah, it was that way up?

-It was that way up,

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that's right, with all the concretion on the outside.

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Well, it's rather nice, cos we had another one a meter east of this,

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which had a couple of marks on it.

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Yes, well, we found one initial here.

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It said something like "GC" on the side there.

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But that's the only thing we found so far.

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-And it was that way up?

-It was lying that way up, that's right.

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And you measured it...you measured it to the centre?

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Measured it from the central point, yes.

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The initial on that side might show up...

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When we've cleaned it up a bit.

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It's a pity about that crack.

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Yes. Apart from that, it seems to be fairly intact.

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A bit warped to eat dinner off, though.

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It's nice, that.

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Maybe we'll get the rest of the set.

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So many finds on the Mary Rose

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were unique or absolutely stunning,

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that I don't think we had a process

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for any individual great find.

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They had to be treated the same way.

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We needed to record where they came from,

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we needed to prepare them for raising and then lift them.

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The number of finds that came up from the Mary Rose was astonishing.

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On some days, I mean, it was never really,

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unless we were weathered off, less than about 50 or so finds,

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and sometimes up to a 100. And if we were lifting bricks,

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there would be hundreds of objects coming up at once.

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And every dive, there was a potential

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to find something which was completely,

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either unrecognisable or a real shock to you,

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you just don't expect it.

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But you have to remember that

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a shipwreck is a really unique form of archaeological site.

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It is a home, it is a community,

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it is a workplace and it's a fighting machine.

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So, there are all that gambit of objects

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that come with each one of those.

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Even seemingly mundane objects,

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like parts of the ship's rigging,

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caused immense excitement at the time, as they were

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so well preserved by the oxygen-free mud of the seabed.

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As well as finds that could answer questions about how the ship

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was sailed, there was one set of finds that would

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transform our understanding of naval warfare.

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They were the ship's cannon.

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And it was these guns that had made the Mary Rose

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such a formidable warship.

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But lifting them ready for study was a mammoth task.

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Some weighed over 2½ tonnes.

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At the time, this was an immense technical challenge,

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and the team had to feel their way,

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lifting each methodically,

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often inch by inch.

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Stop.

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RADIO COMMUNICATION: 'Swing the jib west.'

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Jib west. Roger. Standby.

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-Jib west?

-Yeah.

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That's that way.

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Some of the guns had even become fused with the wooden hull,

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as the saltwater had dissolved their iron,

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forming solid masses called concretions.

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Therefore, pneumatic drills, and even explosives, were carefully

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used to detach them before they could be lifted.

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In total, 23 almost-complete guns were raised from the wreck,

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from ship-battering cannon,

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to small anti-personnel devices.

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The sheer variety was a revelation

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and of those recovered, some were made of bronze,

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others of cast or wrought iron.

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Before the Mary Rose cannon emerged in the early 1980s,

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little was known about the types, sizes

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and capabilities of Tudor guns.

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Anything that could be learned would radically change

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our understanding of war at sea.

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What's so exciting is that even after more than 30 years,

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new discoveries are being made.

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A couple of years ago, some of the team noticed that

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the lead cannonballs appeared to be rusting,

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which is a bit odd, given that lead doesn't rust.

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After imaging the cannonballs using powerful neutron X-rays,

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it was found some had square iron cores.

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It's possible this innovation was made to reduce the weight

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and the cost, but it's also possible that it was designed to

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increase range and accuracy, and maybe even to be a primitive

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form of armour-piercing round. And that's pretty impressive, given

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that technology wasn't thought to have existed for another 200 years.

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The recovery of the Mary Rose's guns opened up whole new fields

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of research for naval historians.

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But it was the discovery of another type of Tudor weapon

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that would make history.

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It was a weapon of which no other examples had ever been found,

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and which would give new insights into medieval warfare.

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It was the English longbow.

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-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-This chest was one of the most important

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discoveries of the 1981 season.

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The object protruding from the silt in the centre of the picture

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is the tip of a Tudor longbow.

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The longbow was the classic weapon of the medieval period.

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But almost nothing is known of how longbows of that period

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were made, how effective they were,

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what range they had,

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and still less about how they were used on Tudor ships.

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It's fairly surprising that around 200 years after gunpowder

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first appeared in Western Europe,

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the crew of the Mary Rose

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were still using the humble bow and arrow.

0:17:580:18:01

Soon after their discovery, it was decided that

0:18:040:18:06

so many longbows had been found

0:18:060:18:08

that a unique opportunity had presented itself

0:18:080:18:11

and new information could be learned.

0:18:110:18:13

Experimental archaeology would be used to test the Tudor bows,

0:18:150:18:19

and, controversially, they'd be pushed to their limits.

0:18:190:18:23

Advisors were brought in from a variety of fields,

0:18:230:18:26

including Robert Hardy, the famous actor,

0:18:260:18:28

who just happened to be an expert in the longbow.

0:18:280:18:31

To test the strength needed to draw the bows,

0:18:330:18:35

several were rigged up to a machine that would record

0:18:350:18:38

how much draw-weight each could cope with.

0:18:380:18:40

I'm going to 26.

0:18:430:18:45

-When everybody's ready.

-Yeah.

0:18:450:18:47

26.

0:18:470:18:48

One, two,

0:18:480:18:50

three.

0:18:500:18:52

20.8.

0:18:530:18:54

-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-The arrows found on the Mary Rose

0:18:560:18:58

were more than 30 inches long.

0:18:580:18:59

I'm going to 28.

0:18:590:19:01

Right.

0:19:010:19:02

23.9.

0:19:070:19:09

..Kilograms, the draw weight of the bow.

0:19:090:19:12

-Well, now, this is, I mean, it felt...

-Yeah, this is discussion.

0:19:120:19:15

-How did it look? Go on.

-It felt good to me. John?

0:19:150:19:18

-It looked good to me.

-It looked good to me.

0:19:180:19:20

Do you have any funnies in the ear?

0:19:200:19:22

Not at all.

0:19:220:19:24

Going to 30 inches, when everyone's ready.

0:19:240:19:27

And...

0:19:270:19:29

One, two, three.

0:19:290:19:32

30.

0:19:320:19:33

-24.8.

-Beautiful.

0:19:330:19:34

-DAN SNOW:

-One of the bows would be tested to destruction,

0:19:340:19:38

because the team didn't know it had been weakened

0:19:380:19:40

by exposure to the elements underwater.

0:19:400:19:43

Right.

0:19:440:19:46

-Going to eight a couple of times.

-Check.

0:19:460:19:49

Cartage. Scotch tape. That's OK.

0:19:570:19:59

These are the ones we excavated underwater

0:19:590:20:01

and this was the broken end of a box,

0:20:010:20:03

-so there was biological degradation...

-Yes.

0:20:030:20:05

..within the box at this end.

0:20:050:20:06

So, it's not surprising, but it looked so good, didn't it?

0:20:060:20:09

-Looked so good.

-Externally.

0:20:090:20:11

And, do you know, frankly, there was no alternative.

0:20:110:20:14

There was no alternative. How do you learn?

0:20:140:20:16

I'm all for experimental archaeology.

0:20:160:20:18

When one has the materials,

0:20:180:20:20

that work is valid. And I think it's only valid

0:20:200:20:23

because we have such a large number, because we can say how representative

0:20:230:20:27

these samples are. And the bow which has worked today,

0:20:270:20:30

which is a real joy - the first Tudor longbow, I think,

0:20:300:20:33

to be drawn for 450 years -

0:20:330:20:36

we learnt from that how that moves.

0:20:360:20:39

Now we can go back to the mass of the material and see what that means,

0:20:390:20:42

what does that represent? Was that standard issue longbow?

0:20:420:20:45

The experiments provided some interesting results.

0:20:450:20:49

Later, computer models suggested that some of the largest bows

0:20:490:20:52

had draw-weights of up to 185 pounds.

0:20:520:20:55

That's the equivalent of lifting a fully grown man with one arm.

0:20:550:20:59

But archaeology is an ever-shifting discipline.

0:21:010:21:04

And so, in 2003, the discovery of

0:21:040:21:07

what was thought to be a bowstring

0:21:070:21:09

seemed to show that the string itself wouldn't be strong enough

0:21:090:21:12

to cope with 185 pounds of weight.

0:21:120:21:14

So, an alternate theory has been put forward, that in fact many of the

0:21:160:21:20

bows on board were actually designed to be LESS powerful,

0:21:200:21:23

so in the heat of battle, any member of the crew

0:21:230:21:26

could pick one up and shoot it.

0:21:260:21:28

In 2004, Timewatch returned to the story of the bows,

0:21:330:21:37

and Alex Hildred explained that new information had

0:21:370:21:39

emerged about the arrows used on the Mary Rose.

0:21:390:21:42

We've got about 2,300 complete arrows.

0:21:440:21:47

At the very end of all of the arrows, there is some

0:21:470:21:50

evidence for the binding. And here you can see the green,

0:21:500:21:53

which is actually the glue, that's the remnants of the glue.

0:21:530:21:56

Now, interestingly, that green colour, we've had the arrows tested,

0:21:560:22:00

and the green colour is actually very, very high in copper.

0:22:000:22:03

And when the arrow was tested both from the tip to the very...

0:22:030:22:08

from the flight, we also picked up, although you can't see it because of

0:22:080:22:11

the black staining of the iron, quite a high percentage of copper here.

0:22:110:22:14

So, it means copper glue was used for the iron head

0:22:140:22:17

as well as for the erm...the flights.

0:22:170:22:20

And that is interesting because the French were accusing the English

0:22:200:22:23

of poisoning the tips of their arrows and, in fact, copper,

0:22:230:22:26

if it goes into a wound, will actually cause huge infection,

0:22:260:22:29

and so that might be the reason why.

0:22:290:22:31

Whether it was deliberate or whether that's just the glue that was used

0:22:310:22:34

is still an unknown.

0:22:340:22:36

The bows and arrows of the Mary Rose provided a unique opportunity.

0:22:380:22:42

The huge numbers of these rare items meant that some could be tested

0:22:420:22:46

without fear of destroying valuable artefacts.

0:22:460:22:49

And so, they provided unrivalled information about Tudor warfare.

0:22:490:22:53

'Today, the work to preserve and understand them is still ongoing

0:22:540:22:58

'and new insights will undoubtedly emerge.'

0:22:580:23:01

As the archaeologists worked down through the layers of the ship,

0:23:070:23:10

they didn't just find weapons and artefacts.

0:23:100:23:13

They were also faced by the bodies of the Mary Rose's crew.

0:23:130:23:18

It was one of the most sensitive issues of the entire project.

0:23:180:23:22

The archaeologists recovered the remains of 179

0:23:230:23:27

of the perhaps 500 men lost that day.

0:23:270:23:30

The issue of the bones was a delicate one.

0:23:300:23:33

At the time, some argued that this was a war grave.

0:23:330:23:36

At the beginning, there was quite a lot of pressure to rebury them,

0:23:380:23:42

but where would you rebury them?

0:23:420:23:44

How could you mimic those conditions that kept them so well?

0:23:440:23:47

So, whilst there were ideas to rebury all of them underground,

0:23:470:23:51

or there was some weird ones to put them in between the walls

0:23:510:23:53

of Southsea Castle, into sort of certain crypts, those aren't

0:23:530:23:57

environmentally monitored. They're not under our care.

0:23:570:23:59

You can't keep control of the conditions.

0:23:590:24:01

What's more, to remove them from their burial environment

0:24:010:24:05

within the ship and to not keep them associated with the clothing perhaps

0:24:050:24:09

that was found with them, we think is wrong.

0:24:090:24:12

We've dedicated our entire new museum to the men who died.

0:24:120:24:16

And to actually separate them and not keep them together, I think,

0:24:160:24:19

is morally wrong.

0:24:190:24:21

The human remains of the Mary Rose would provide

0:24:210:24:23

an extraordinarily rich source of information about Tudor life.

0:24:230:24:28

Much of this would be revealed through the infant

0:24:280:24:31

science of osteoarchaeology -

0:24:310:24:33

the study of human bones.

0:24:330:24:35

The first assessment was undertaken by Ann Stirland in the early 1980s,

0:24:370:24:41

and some of her initial work focused on determining the age of the crew.

0:24:410:24:45

If we take these two long bones,

0:24:480:24:51

which are femora,

0:24:510:24:53

we can see that they look different.

0:24:530:24:55

And they look different because

0:24:550:24:58

the articular ends on this bone

0:24:580:25:01

are present,

0:25:010:25:02

but they're absent on this bone.

0:25:020:25:05

This is because in young people

0:25:050:25:08

and adolescents, children,

0:25:080:25:10

these ends are only fixed, if you like, by cartilage.

0:25:100:25:14

And this allows the shaft of the long bone to grow,

0:25:140:25:18

which is how we grow taller.

0:25:180:25:20

These ends fuse on to the bone

0:25:200:25:23

and they do so at certain ages,

0:25:230:25:25

which are different for boys and girls,

0:25:250:25:28

which is why men are generally taller than women.

0:25:280:25:31

And according to the condition of the bones,

0:25:310:25:34

whether these are joined and present or absent

0:25:340:25:38

or JUST joined, as in this case,

0:25:380:25:41

so we can give an age range.

0:25:410:25:43

The youngest that I've encountered so far

0:25:430:25:46

is an individual aged between 12 and 15 years.

0:25:460:25:50

And the oldest is somebody,

0:25:500:25:52

at a rough estimate, in their 40s.

0:25:520:25:54

Ann Stirland's work also shed light on the injuries

0:25:540:25:57

sustained by the crew, perhaps whilst on duty.

0:25:570:26:01

So far, we have three fractured legs and three fractured ribs.

0:26:010:26:06

We have some very interesting spines.

0:26:070:26:10

If we look at these spines here,

0:26:100:26:13

we have, if we look at the back of them,

0:26:130:26:16

a difference in the shape of the vertebral bodies,

0:26:160:26:21

where we have compression in the mid spine,

0:26:210:26:26

As we can see, these are nothing like as deep as these.

0:26:260:26:30

And if we look on the bodies themselves, we have these

0:26:310:26:35

impressions which are called Schmorl's nodes.

0:26:350:26:39

It can only happen when a person is very young

0:26:410:26:44

and the intervertebral disc ruptures.

0:26:440:26:47

And because it can't spread out from between the bones,

0:26:470:26:50

it leaves an impression on the body

0:26:500:26:53

of the vertebra when it's still in this very young and forming state.

0:26:530:26:57

The Americans, interestingly enough, call this "snowmobiler's back"

0:26:570:27:02

and I think that probably bobsleigh teams and tobogganers

0:27:020:27:06

have the same sort of anomalies these days.

0:27:060:27:10

-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-Spinal injuries like that

0:27:100:27:12

could have resulted from a fall

0:27:120:27:14

from the rigging or from a rash jump over the side of the ship

0:27:140:27:17

into a longboat. It's impossible to be sure.

0:27:170:27:20

-DAN SNOW:

-In 2004, when Timewatch revisited Ann's research,

0:27:210:27:26

further study of the spinal injuries suggested some might have

0:27:260:27:29

been caused by a very different activity.

0:27:290:27:32

The back of his spine has got these enormous curved...

0:27:320:27:36

Sticky-out bits, I think...

0:27:360:27:38

Yes, articulations, which are growths. They're much,

0:27:380:27:41

much bigger than you normally see them.

0:27:410:27:44

But, better still, further up...

0:27:440:27:47

..up here, in the spine,

0:27:480:27:50

they get even more extreme, these articulations,

0:27:500:27:54

even more curved.

0:27:540:27:55

And here, this one,

0:27:550:27:58

in life, that will have been fused.

0:27:580:28:01

He would not have been able to move that back one very much.

0:28:010:28:04

And I wonder if he was one of the men

0:28:040:28:07

who was involved with the breech loader.

0:28:070:28:09

You know, lifting that breech block up and down all the time.

0:28:090:28:13

Years of research time also allowed Ann Stirland to compare

0:28:130:28:17

the Mary Rose bones with other archaeological finds on dry land.

0:28:170:28:21

-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-In order to investigate the health of the crew,

0:28:240:28:27

the bones were compared with a group of young men

0:28:270:28:30

buried in a medieval cemetery in Norwich.

0:28:300:28:33

The men from Norwich had far more pathological changes

0:28:330:28:38

of a fairly dramatic nature.

0:28:380:28:40

There was leprosy in the group.

0:28:400:28:42

There was six cases of venereal syphilis in the group.

0:28:420:28:45

There was tuberculosis in the group.

0:28:450:28:47

There was evidence of dietary deficiency etc.

0:28:470:28:50

On the other hand, the Mary Rose men were fit

0:28:500:28:55

and strong and healthy. The bones are extremely robust.

0:28:550:28:58

-DAN SNOW:

-Spending over 30 years working with the bones

0:28:580:29:01

led Ann Stirland to build up a relationship with these men who had

0:29:010:29:04

lost their lives 500 years before.

0:29:040:29:06

'Whenever one works on a group of skeletons

0:29:090:29:11

'from an archaeological site,

0:29:110:29:13

'the most thrilling thing about it is that you're actually

0:29:130:29:16

'touching the people.

0:29:160:29:17

'You're not looking at bits of pot.

0:29:170:29:19

'You're actually looking

0:29:190:29:21

'and touching the people, and that's what engages me.'

0:29:210:29:25

The bones of the crew have helped us build a fuller

0:29:250:29:27

picture of the hard lives the ordinary sailors must have faced.

0:29:270:29:30

But there were other bones found in the excavations

0:29:330:29:35

that would play a crucial role in the development of

0:29:350:29:38

a new archaeological science -

0:29:380:29:40

ancient DNA.

0:29:400:29:41

In the 1980s, DNA sampling was in its infancy,

0:29:430:29:45

and there was a concern that you wouldn't be able to get

0:29:450:29:48

usable DNA off ancient skeletons like this,

0:29:480:29:51

because they'd been handled by archaeologists and contaminated.

0:29:510:29:54

But then, tests were done on pig bones that were

0:29:540:29:57

found on the Mary Rose,

0:29:570:29:59

and it was discovered that you could get DNA,

0:29:590:30:02

even if they had been contaminated by archaeologists.

0:30:020:30:05

It was a breakthrough moment.

0:30:050:30:06

It was the first time this procedure had been used successfully.

0:30:060:30:09

It paved the way for DNA to be used

0:30:090:30:11

in all future archaeological excavations.

0:30:110:30:13

The work on the Mary Rose bones is ongoing.

0:30:150:30:18

And recently, isotope analysis of tooth enamel,

0:30:180:30:21

which shows where someone lived as a child,

0:30:210:30:24

has revealed some intriguing information

0:30:240:30:26

about where these men might have come from.

0:30:260:30:28

Many of the crew appear to have been Englishmen from the West Country.

0:30:290:30:33

But some were born as far away as southern Europe, perhaps even Spain,

0:30:330:30:37

and that's led some historians to speculate that one of the reasons

0:30:370:30:40

for the loss of the Mary Rose could have been

0:30:400:30:43

a miscommunication between the captain

0:30:430:30:45

and foreign-speaking members of his crew.

0:30:450:30:47

Every aspect of the Mary Rose Project

0:30:500:30:52

had its own dedicated specialists.

0:30:520:30:55

From the divers and archaeologists at sea,

0:30:550:30:57

to pathologists, historians and the scientists tasked with

0:30:570:31:01

conserving the countless delicate objects.

0:31:010:31:03

In fact, before the dives even began, a lab had been created

0:31:050:31:09

back on shore to help process each individual find.

0:31:090:31:13

And soon, thousands were flooding into the stores.

0:31:130:31:16

The scientists were breaking new ground all the time.

0:31:170:31:21

-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-Wooden objects that are in water for a long time

0:31:230:31:26

absorb moisture in varying degrees.

0:31:260:31:29

It depends on the type of wood.

0:31:290:31:31

The water becomes crucial to their structural strength.

0:31:310:31:34

And to conserve them, it must be removed in a controlled way

0:31:340:31:38

and replaced with an inert substance.

0:31:380:31:40

The usual approach is to submerge fragments of wood

0:31:410:31:44

or leather in an oily chemical called polyethylene glycol,

0:31:440:31:47

as preparation for freeze-drying.

0:31:470:31:49

This was a powder scoop.

0:31:490:31:51

The copper blade was found with it.

0:31:510:31:53

Different types and weights of wood

0:31:540:31:56

require different periods in a PEG solution.

0:31:560:31:59

This carved panel was very worm-eaten, as well as waterlogged.

0:32:000:32:05

The chemical displaces most of the water in the molecular

0:32:050:32:08

structure of the objects

0:32:080:32:09

and then they can be frozen, which stabilises them completely.

0:32:090:32:12

On one particular day, the Mary Rose deep-freeze contained

0:32:140:32:17

a leather bucket...

0:32:170:32:19

..a tray of leather fragments...

0:32:220:32:24

..a wooden bowl...

0:32:270:32:29

..and one of a pair of leather thigh boots,

0:32:330:32:36

all awaiting the final stages of conservation,

0:32:360:32:38

when they will be placed in the freeze-drying unit.

0:32:380:32:41

Under a vacuum, in a very low temperature,

0:32:420:32:45

all the residual moisture can then be vaporised

0:32:450:32:47

and removed from within the structure of the materials.

0:32:470:32:51

This minute sundial,

0:32:530:32:55

the Tudor equivalent of a wrist watch,

0:32:550:32:57

shows how successful the treatment can be.

0:32:570:33:00

When the Mary Rose Trust was set up in 1979,

0:33:000:33:02

it was really done extremely well,

0:33:020:33:05

because what they started to do first

0:33:050:33:07

was to set up the conservation labs.

0:33:070:33:09

There was no point in us going out diving and raising lots of objects

0:33:090:33:12

until the labs were ready.

0:33:120:33:14

So, these were built first and then when the dive season started,

0:33:140:33:18

it meant there were laboratories for the first aid for the finds,

0:33:180:33:21

and then the eventual treatment were all ready and waiting.

0:33:210:33:25

There was even a team of specialist draughtsmen

0:33:250:33:28

brought into record the finds in meticulous detail,

0:33:280:33:31

as the eye could capture things no camera could.

0:33:310:33:34

Especially on the Mary Rose, you never know what you're going to find,

0:33:350:33:38

you get such a variety of work.

0:33:380:33:41

It's nice to get such decorated objects here as you do get.

0:33:410:33:44

And things that people have never seen before.

0:33:440:33:48

I'm very interested by all the different shoes,

0:33:480:33:50

because not very much is known about Tudor shoes.

0:33:500:33:54

There's never been such a wide selection of them around before.

0:33:540:33:57

Shoe specialists like to see the different parts that make up

0:33:570:34:00

the shoe, so they know exactly how they were made.

0:34:000:34:03

These are three different rulers

0:34:030:34:04

that have recently been found on the Mary Rose.

0:34:040:34:06

And, again, the markings and the numbers

0:34:060:34:09

on the ruler show up better in the drawing.

0:34:090:34:12

Those are quite interesting numbers.

0:34:120:34:14

The ten's back to front and there's a line through the nought.

0:34:140:34:17

The seven's on its side.

0:34:180:34:20

And the six is rather strange.

0:34:200:34:23

It's quite interesting to emphasise these kind of details.

0:34:230:34:26

Some of the most delicate and surprising objects found

0:34:260:34:29

in the sediments were pieces of clothing.

0:34:290:34:33

The work to conserve and understand these fabrics

0:34:330:34:35

wasn't just done by professional archaeologists,

0:34:350:34:38

but by volunteers with years of practical experience.

0:34:380:34:42

It's the silk that really has amazed me.

0:34:430:34:47

It's so fine.

0:34:470:34:48

And this particular piece is finer than the rest of it.

0:34:480:34:52

It's almost like a silk tissue.

0:34:520:34:55

I'm hoping that this will really make a good hat.

0:34:550:34:58

This is very similar to the one that would have been worn by Henry VIII.

0:34:580:35:02

This is a beautiful velour.

0:35:020:35:04

It's...as you can see, this particular piece here,

0:35:040:35:06

I just cleaned it slightly to see what it was like.

0:35:060:35:10

This jerkin, again... Now, this is the only thing

0:35:100:35:13

so far that has got a definite colour in it.

0:35:130:35:16

It's been identified as madder dye.

0:35:160:35:19

A lot of this is the actual dirt from the owner.

0:35:190:35:23

And it's almost a greasy substance, where it's been worn such a long

0:35:230:35:27

time without being cleaned.

0:35:270:35:30

This is our... one of our prize pieces.

0:35:300:35:33

It is a hand-knitted stocking,

0:35:330:35:36

part of a hand-knitted stocking,

0:35:360:35:38

possibly one that would have only come to the ankle,

0:35:380:35:41

just over the foot.

0:35:410:35:43

It's a wonderful feeling to think that no-one's ever touched this

0:35:430:35:46

and it's so old.

0:35:460:35:47

And you're touching it for the first time for over 400 years.

0:35:470:35:51

It really gives you... It does, it gives me a great feeling.

0:35:510:35:54

One of the reasons some of the clothes survived

0:35:540:35:58

was because they were preserved within sealed wooden chests.

0:35:580:36:02

I think the chests we found, and we found over 50 of them,

0:36:030:36:06

are really important because they give us insights

0:36:060:36:08

into the lives of individual people.

0:36:080:36:11

You know, one of them might have nice shoes,

0:36:110:36:13

or might be learned and have books.

0:36:130:36:15

We found the book covers.

0:36:150:36:17

They might be well-off and would have pewter items.

0:36:170:36:19

But they then also might have aspects of

0:36:190:36:22

their profession in those chests.

0:36:220:36:24

One chest uncovered in 1980 revealed the identity of one

0:36:240:36:27

of the most important men on board.

0:36:270:36:29

-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-The box contained medicinal materials,

0:36:310:36:34

like these peppercorns in their wooden jar.

0:36:340:36:36

It was the complete kit of a barber surgeon,

0:36:360:36:39

specialising in naval medicine.

0:36:390:36:41

Packed with mixing bowls, bleeding bowls,

0:36:410:36:44

a chafing dish, ceramic pots

0:36:440:36:46

and even jars half-full of ointment,

0:36:460:36:48

in which the man's finger marks can still be seen.

0:36:480:36:51

Nothing like this has ever been found before.

0:36:510:36:54

-DAN SNOW:

-After years of research and study,

0:36:540:36:56

Timewatch revisited the barber surgeon's chest

0:36:560:36:58

to reveal what secrets it had given up,

0:36:580:37:00

and what it could tell us about this crucial member

0:37:000:37:03

of the ship's company.

0:37:030:37:05

The ordinary soldiers and sailors on the Mary Rose,

0:37:050:37:08

who were people in the prime of life

0:37:080:37:10

and were the strongest and fittest

0:37:100:37:13

soldiers and sailors in the nation, by and large,

0:37:130:37:17

erm...they would not, in day-to-day life,

0:37:170:37:20

have the services of a barber surgeon.

0:37:200:37:22

So, it was seen as a reassurance to the crew

0:37:220:37:26

that they had a surgeon on board to tend to their wounds

0:37:260:37:30

and their general health.

0:37:300:37:32

The barber surgeon's role varied hugely,

0:37:330:37:36

from amputations and the extraction of bullets

0:37:360:37:39

and arrows in warfare,

0:37:390:37:41

to the more obscure,

0:37:410:37:42

like the letting of blood,

0:37:420:37:44

a common practice in the 16th century

0:37:440:37:47

for over-energetic young men.

0:37:470:37:49

He was even responsible

0:37:500:37:52

for the pulling of teeth.

0:37:520:37:54

HE GROANS AND SCREAMS

0:37:550:37:58

Some of the instruments in the surgeon's chest

0:37:580:38:00

were quite horrendous.

0:38:000:38:02

Erm...included amongst these were an array of syringes.

0:38:020:38:06

There was a urethral syringe for the administration of mercury

0:38:060:38:10

for the French pox.

0:38:100:38:12

We always called our nasty diseases after our enemies.

0:38:120:38:15

It took a bit of detective work to make sense

0:38:180:38:20

of some of the items in the barber surgeon's kit.

0:38:200:38:23

An innocuous-looking bench turned out to be used to set broken limbs.

0:38:240:38:28

And although the metal had all corroded away,

0:38:280:38:30

enough of the handles were left of the surgeon's grisly

0:38:300:38:34

array of tools to give you a real sense of what he got up to.

0:38:340:38:37

There were bone saws,

0:38:370:38:38

cautering irons and needles.

0:38:380:38:41

And as for those three large urethral syringes,

0:38:410:38:44

they don't bear thinking about.

0:38:440:38:46

The items found in the chests gave the archaeologists

0:38:480:38:51

a glimpse into the lives of specific individuals.

0:38:510:38:55

But the wealth of the finds, when looked at together,

0:38:550:38:58

revealed much more about life on board,

0:38:580:39:01

as Collections Manager Andy Elkerton explained for Timewatch.

0:39:010:39:05

The ship would have been quite crowded.

0:39:090:39:11

You're talking about a crew of over 415 men.

0:39:110:39:15

If you put the officers retinue on top of that,

0:39:150:39:18

you're probably approximating 500.

0:39:180:39:20

Life on board would have been pretty grim.

0:39:220:39:25

The ship would have been dark, gloomy,

0:39:260:39:28

pretty airless, for the most part.

0:39:280:39:31

We're not talking about a society where showers and baths

0:39:310:39:34

are the norm, and we're certainly not talking

0:39:340:39:36

about a vessel where facilities for having a wash are the norm.

0:39:360:39:41

Within the dark, cramped hull,

0:39:410:39:43

the crew worked and played.

0:39:430:39:45

CREW CHAT AND SING

0:39:450:39:47

We've got a lot of evidence for what the crew did in their spare time.

0:39:510:39:55

We found a lot of dice on board.

0:39:550:39:56

The Tudors were inveterate gamblers.

0:39:560:39:59

On top of a barrel, we've got a game, Nine Men's Morris.

0:39:590:40:02

We also found a backgammon set -

0:40:020:40:04

beautiful work of art it is, too.

0:40:040:40:07

And for those who could afford it,

0:40:080:40:10

the coins to gamble with.

0:40:100:40:13

Recent analysis of the gold coins by the Royal Mint

0:40:130:40:16

shows that of the 28 coins,

0:40:160:40:18

five - and, interestingly, it's the five newest coins,

0:40:180:40:22

minted just before the Mary Rose sank -

0:40:220:40:24

show signs of debasement.

0:40:240:40:26

And that means the level of gold in those coins

0:40:260:40:28

has been significantly reduced.

0:40:280:40:30

Henry VIII had taken England to the brink of bankruptcy,

0:40:300:40:33

so debasing his currency was one of the only ways he had

0:40:330:40:36

of paying his debts.

0:40:360:40:37

It's fascinating to hear an echo of that story

0:40:370:40:40

here in the coins at the Mary Rose.

0:40:400:40:43

Gold coins are almost synonymous with the idea of a shipwreck.

0:40:440:40:48

But one thing no-one expected to find on board

0:40:480:40:51

was a pile of simple bricks.

0:40:510:40:53

I remember when I found the first brick on the Mary Rose

0:40:530:40:57

and my colleagues thought I was being silly, that this

0:40:570:41:00

wasn't of interest. They thought it must be a modern brick.

0:41:000:41:02

But the advantage of doing things archaeologically

0:41:020:41:05

is, because of the layer you find it in, I knew this was a Tudor brick.

0:41:050:41:08

So, I insisted that they took it seriously.

0:41:080:41:10

And then, later, we found another 4,000 pieces of brick.

0:41:100:41:15

In fact, what Christopher Dobbs had found

0:41:150:41:17

was the remains of the ship's kitchens.

0:41:170:41:20

And this seemingly useless jumble of bricks

0:41:200:41:23

would transform our understanding of Tudor cooking.

0:41:230:41:26

If you look at the historical records for the Mary Rose,

0:41:260:41:29

it has these obscure references to "a cauldron in furnace",

0:41:290:41:34

set in lime and brick.

0:41:340:41:36

And nobody really knew what that was.

0:41:360:41:38

But what we actually found underwater

0:41:380:41:40

was that it was exactly that.

0:41:400:41:43

-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-From the location of the bricks

0:41:430:41:45

and brass cauldrons found deep in the hold of the ship,

0:41:450:41:47

the archaeologists have been able

0:41:470:41:49

to construct a picture of what the Mary Rose's galley might have

0:41:490:41:52

looked like and, from this,

0:41:520:41:54

work out how they would have cooked.

0:41:540:41:57

What looks at first sight

0:42:000:42:01

like a fairly crude cooking arrangement -

0:42:010:42:04

it's basically just a cauldron set above a brick oven -

0:42:040:42:08

can actually be used to cook in a variety of different ways.

0:42:080:42:11

You could cook just a basic broth,

0:42:110:42:14

perhaps for the crew,

0:42:140:42:15

but in that you could cook different things.

0:42:150:42:18

They could have bags, like muslin bags,

0:42:180:42:21

that would hold enough meat and peas

0:42:210:42:24

for one whole mess of people -

0:42:240:42:26

that is 8, 10 or 12 people.

0:42:260:42:29

And then, in front of the oven,

0:42:290:42:31

using the radiant heat from the fire,

0:42:310:42:33

we could cook on normal pottery or

0:42:330:42:36

iron cooking pots, that we actually found. And it's actually shown

0:42:360:42:40

that this was really a very sophisticated cooker,

0:42:400:42:42

like a modern-day Aga but with a great big cauldron,

0:42:420:42:45

and it wasn't just a crude cooking range.

0:42:450:42:48

It seems pretty remarkable that from an unpromising pile of bricks

0:42:480:42:53

historians were able to unlock such a wealth of information

0:42:530:42:56

about Tudor kitchens and cooking.

0:42:560:42:58

This replica brick oven shows how those breakthroughs were made,

0:43:020:43:05

by building working examples to test out historical theories.

0:43:050:43:09

It must have been a terrifying jigsaw puzzle with no plans,

0:43:090:43:12

no existing examples.

0:43:120:43:14

They just had to sound it out as they went along.

0:43:140:43:16

A big case of trial and error.

0:43:160:43:19

As the discovery of the bricks proved,

0:43:190:43:21

even the most unlikely objects

0:43:210:43:23

and most mundane finds could be crucial.

0:43:230:43:26

As the archaeologists continued to work down through

0:43:280:43:30

the layers of mud and silt,

0:43:300:43:32

they knew there could be clues

0:43:320:43:34

all around them that were being missed.

0:43:340:43:36

Invisible to the naked eye were countless tiny fragments

0:43:380:43:41

of evidence that would only emerge later, back in the lab.

0:43:410:43:44

So, to unlock the secrets hidden in the mud,

0:43:460:43:49

a painstaking operation was begun.

0:43:490:43:51

-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-These racks in the basement

0:43:530:43:55

of the Mary Rose Trust building hold

0:43:550:43:57

the thousands of environmental samples taken during the dig.

0:43:570:44:00

Ian Oxley and his various volunteer assistants

0:44:000:44:03

are attempting to assess the range of this material.

0:44:030:44:06

No underwater site has ever been so thoroughly sampled.

0:44:070:44:11

Through the microscope, Ian can see a fragment of some textile...

0:44:110:44:14

..a seed...

0:44:170:44:18

..and the corpses of two Tudor fleas,

0:44:210:44:23

which confirm the need for all the flea combs found on board.

0:44:230:44:27

The raw materials of one of these samples looks like this.

0:44:270:44:31

After much patient sorting and sieving,

0:44:310:44:33

one four-litre container can yield

0:44:330:44:35

a variety of materials,

0:44:350:44:37

including samples of textile,

0:44:370:44:39

perhaps from a garment or a stocking,

0:44:390:44:40

profuse quantities of plant remains of various sorts,

0:44:400:44:44

and many other curious items.

0:44:440:44:47

Frank Green deals with the plant materials.

0:44:470:44:50

This work on the Mary Rose is really starting from scratch.

0:44:500:44:54

And compared with normal, land-based archaeology,

0:44:540:44:57

it is a completely different world.

0:44:570:44:59

We have materials that are surviving here

0:44:590:45:01

which we've never seen perhaps previously.

0:45:010:45:03

These are, in fact, actually pods of broom, or cytisus,

0:45:030:45:06

and these come from several locations on the wreck.

0:45:060:45:09

It may well just simply have been to pack round objects.

0:45:090:45:12

It may be that some of the stems were used

0:45:120:45:14

for actually scrubbing down the decks.

0:45:140:45:16

This, in fact, is a sample of peppercorns, black pepper.

0:45:160:45:21

These have been found in several locations on the wreck.

0:45:210:45:23

These particular ones come from a container

0:45:230:45:25

in the barber surgeon's chest,

0:45:250:45:27

and are really very well preserved.

0:45:270:45:30

Pepper was used for a variety of purposes.

0:45:310:45:34

Medicinal, herbal and, of course, it was used as a food flavouring.

0:45:340:45:39

And it may well be that the average seaman even

0:45:390:45:42

had a small quantity of pepper to flavour his rather boring food.

0:45:420:45:46

Many of the plant remains actually still contain

0:45:460:45:49

something of their original smell.

0:45:490:45:51

It does appear that the essential

0:45:510:45:53

oils contained in pepper and other plant materials has survived.

0:45:530:45:56

And so, in fact, actually it's quite remarkable that you can pick up

0:45:560:45:59

material that even has a scent about it,

0:45:590:46:01

of the period we're dealing with.

0:46:010:46:03

The environmental sampling on the Mary Rose was a first

0:46:050:46:09

for British underwater archaeology.

0:46:090:46:11

That hard work and dedication by the scientists

0:46:110:46:13

shed new light on a whole weird and wonderful range of subjects.

0:46:130:46:17

From what fleas were on board the ship

0:46:170:46:20

to what crops were grown in Tudor England.

0:46:200:46:22

But it was a colossal task.

0:46:220:46:24

In fact, so many samples were taken

0:46:240:46:26

and stored carefully in plastic ice-cream tubs,

0:46:260:46:29

that the team couldn't hope to analyse them all.

0:46:290:46:31

But that's the dilemma on a site like the Mary Rose.

0:46:310:46:34

There's just too much to be saved.

0:46:340:46:37

And so the archaeologists face difficult decisions

0:46:370:46:39

about where to focus the limited time and money.

0:46:390:46:42

In the four years of excavations,

0:46:450:46:47

over 19,000 individual objects were recovered.

0:46:470:46:50

Each had to be meticulously preserved and catalogued,

0:46:520:46:55

and that took decades.

0:46:550:46:56

While they were waiting, archaeologists and historians

0:46:580:47:01

could look at the finds as a whole unified collection,

0:47:010:47:04

not just in isolation.

0:47:040:47:06

By joining the dots between often random objects,

0:47:060:47:10

new insights emerged about one subject that's come to define

0:47:100:47:14

Henry VIII's reign - religion.

0:47:140:47:16

-TIMEWATCH PRESENTER:

-This is a tankard with an inscription on it,

0:47:180:47:20

beside the bones of a small pet dog.

0:47:200:47:23

The inscription begins, "Sit deus nobis."

0:47:230:47:26

On deck, the remainder of the Latin tag was revealed.

0:47:260:47:29

"Sit deus nobiscum, quid contra nos."

0:47:290:47:33

Which is a quote from Romans 8, and it means,

0:47:330:47:36

"If God is with us, who can be against us?"

0:47:360:47:39

And we've got quite a few of these illustrations of religion

0:47:390:47:43

and people's beliefs on board the wreck.

0:47:430:47:45

So, we've got that on the tankard.

0:47:450:47:47

But then we've also got book covers.

0:47:470:47:50

Again, quite amazing to find something like book covers

0:47:500:47:53

on a shipwreck, and they're all drawn here.

0:47:530:47:56

But some of them actually have, erm...sayings, again, like this,

0:47:560:48:01

"Verbum domini, manet in Aeternum,"

0:48:010:48:03

"The word of the Lord lasts forever."

0:48:030:48:07

This was a time of intense religious turmoil.

0:48:070:48:10

Henry VIII had broken with Rome over his divorce of Catherine of Aragon.

0:48:100:48:16

Catholicism was being suppressed.

0:48:160:48:19

And yet, on the Mary Rose

0:48:210:48:24

it seems to be Catholic faith

0:48:240:48:26

that was very much in evidence.

0:48:260:48:28

Eight complete sets of rosary beads were found,

0:48:310:48:34

some perfectly preserved.

0:48:340:48:37

It's fascinating to get this sort of insight into

0:48:400:48:44

the religious upheaval at the time, because in 1547

0:48:440:48:47

the whole practice of using rosaries was frowned upon in an injunction,

0:48:470:48:52

and if lay people were caught using them,

0:48:520:48:55

they had to be warned by the clergy.

0:48:550:48:57

So, to get glimpses into this very, very great upheaval

0:48:570:49:01

in religion in Europe at one time is quite stunning.

0:49:010:49:03

When the archaeologists set out to excavate the ship in 1979,

0:49:030:49:07

I bet few of them dreamt that over 30 years later we'd still be

0:49:070:49:10

learning new information from the artefacts

0:49:100:49:12

they were digging out of the mud. And that's one of the key reasons

0:49:120:49:15

why the Mary Rose has been so important.

0:49:150:49:17

The research has continued uninterrupted for decades.

0:49:170:49:20

And when all those individual finds are looked at together,

0:49:200:49:23

new information and new links emerge.

0:49:230:49:26

In 1982,

0:49:380:49:40

after nearly four years of intensive digging,

0:49:400:49:44

and with tens of thousands of objects safely on shore,

0:49:440:49:47

there was just one artefact left to recover -

0:49:470:49:50

the ship itself.

0:49:500:49:52

Raising the Mary Rose was an epic task,

0:49:540:49:56

unlike anything attempted in Britain before or since.

0:49:560:50:00

The team would have to put their faith in new technologies,

0:50:000:50:02

some of which were untested at the time.

0:50:020:50:05

The preparation took months

0:50:050:50:08

and everything was planned with military precision,

0:50:080:50:11

quite literally,

0:50:110:50:12

as the Royal Engineers played a key role in the salvage operation.

0:50:120:50:16

A giant steel frame had been built to support the hull during the lift,

0:50:180:50:23

and the first stage was to tow and manoeuvre this into position.

0:50:230:50:27

Once the frame was securely on the seabed, then the archaeologists

0:50:280:50:32

tunnelled underneath the hull and drilled holes in the ship's

0:50:320:50:35

structure for support wires to be attached to the huge steel frame.

0:50:350:50:39

The final stage before the actual lift, was to manoeuvre

0:50:430:50:46

a giant steel cradle into position above the hull and the steel frame

0:50:460:50:50

it was now attached to.

0:50:500:50:51

All this was done underwater and almost blind.

0:50:510:50:55

To help guide the Mary Rose into this cradle,

0:50:580:51:01

a pioneering acoustic rangefinder was used for the first time.

0:51:010:51:05

Once safely in position, a giant crane then lifted the whole

0:51:060:51:10

thing slowly towards the surface.

0:51:100:51:12

If anything wasn't exactly in place, the ship could be torn apart

0:51:140:51:18

before a global television audience.

0:51:180:51:20

Hello and welcome to Southsea Castle for what promises to

0:51:230:51:27

be the most remarkable archaeological

0:51:270:51:29

event that we in this country are ever likely to see.

0:51:290:51:32

During the last few days before the lifting, the world's attention

0:51:320:51:35

started to be turned on us.

0:51:350:51:37

There was press everywhere,

0:51:370:51:38

and, particularly, I remember

0:51:380:51:40

waking up on the morning before the lift

0:51:400:51:42

and we came out of our bunks on the salvage vessel,

0:51:420:51:46

and around us there was this complete ring of yachts,

0:51:460:51:50

who were just coming to get a place, to see the greatest

0:51:500:51:53

show on earth that was going to unfold over the next few days.

0:51:530:51:56

And I think that's when we realised that there really was

0:51:560:51:59

an enormous amount of public and press interest in the project.

0:51:590:52:04

We lived and breathed to raise the Mary Rose.

0:52:040:52:06

I wouldn't think that any member of that full-time team

0:52:060:52:10

would for a second have thought that we wouldn't have raised

0:52:100:52:13

the Mary Rose. And actually, that's quite interesting.

0:52:130:52:15

But the most amazing camaraderie. You can meet somebody after 20 years

0:52:150:52:19

and it's like... You know them better than

0:52:190:52:21

you know your family, really.

0:52:210:52:23

I think it's being... I mean, I've never been to war

0:52:230:52:25

and I'm very lucky I haven't, but it's the sort of camaraderie

0:52:250:52:28

I think you might feel when you're in a very intense situation

0:52:280:52:31

with a close group of people.

0:52:310:52:33

Brilliant!

0:52:330:52:34

With everything in place,

0:52:430:52:45

the crane began to carefully lift the hull from the water.

0:52:450:52:49

There is the wreck of the Mary Rose - it has come to the surface.

0:52:510:52:55

There is the first sight of this

0:52:550:52:58

flagship of Henry VIII.

0:52:580:53:00

It's the first time we have seen this in 437 years.

0:53:000:53:04

That moment when the Mary Rose broke through the water

0:53:040:53:07

was the culmination of ten years of hard work by archaeologists.

0:53:070:53:11

The lift was anything but straightforward.

0:53:110:53:13

There were delays for technical and engineering reasons,

0:53:130:53:16

strong tides and good old, unpredictable British weather.

0:53:160:53:20

While it was happening, the archaeologists were forced to

0:53:200:53:22

sit back and rely totally on the salvage experts and crane operators,

0:53:220:53:28

watching as a lifetime's work literally hung in the balance.

0:53:280:53:32

I was very young at the time of the lifting.

0:53:320:53:35

One of my earliest memories is watching the Mary Rose

0:53:350:53:38

slowly get lifted out of the water with a room full of grown-ups.

0:53:380:53:42

The excitement in the room was palpable and there was a moment

0:53:420:53:45

when...the boat shifted, I think one of the strops snapped

0:53:450:53:48

and it settled slightly. And everyone was completely terrified.

0:53:480:53:50

You know, I really remember that moment

0:53:550:53:57

when we had a problem lifting, because I was being interviewed

0:53:570:54:00

and then this enormous crash happened,

0:54:000:54:02

but it was quite tense.

0:54:020:54:04

But, luckily, there was no damage to the hull

0:54:040:54:06

and we were able, after a while, to carry on with the salvage.

0:54:060:54:09

The team could finally celebrate years of tireless work.

0:54:100:54:14

And in a last symbolic act, the Mary Rose was towed

0:54:160:54:19

back into Portsmouth Naval Dockyard.

0:54:190:54:21

Henry VIII's favourite warship had returned to almost the exact spot

0:54:210:54:25

where she had been built some 470 years before.

0:54:250:54:30

But the story of the hull was just beginning.

0:54:320:54:34

Sitting in a dry dock,

0:54:340:54:36

she was exposed to the air,

0:54:360:54:37

and in real danger of being destroyed.

0:54:370:54:40

So, almost immediately,

0:54:400:54:41

a long and complex operation to preserve the Mary Rose began.

0:54:410:54:45

In the shelter of a huge tent,

0:54:460:54:49

the archaeologists could also begin to record her in minute detail.

0:54:490:54:53

At last, we've just started our survey work of the ship.

0:54:530:54:57

Nobody knows anything about how these ships were built.

0:54:570:55:00

There are no plans, no drawings, no models.

0:55:000:55:02

She had a very long active service,

0:55:020:55:04

and in 1536 she was rebuilt.

0:55:040:55:07

Whether or not this was complete, or was only partial,

0:55:070:55:10

we hope the answers will come out of this very detailed survey work.

0:55:100:55:15

In 1986,

0:55:150:55:17

Timewatch was there to witness the exciting moment

0:55:170:55:20

when the first of the Mary Rose's deck planks was reinstated.

0:55:200:55:24

The cabins, the superstructures, are all to be replaced.

0:55:260:55:29

So, the first piece of timber is just about to be refitted.

0:55:290:55:33

It's a good fit.

0:55:330:55:34

-It's good.

-That's beautiful.

-Right, we're there, at this end.

0:55:360:55:39

It's nice and snug. First class.

0:55:390:55:41

That's excellent.

0:55:410:55:43

The preservation took rather longer than predicted.

0:55:430:55:47

In 2004, Timewatch returned to see how the work

0:55:470:55:50

had progressed in 20 years.

0:55:500:55:52

Right underneath the Mary Rose, under the starboard side of the stern

0:55:570:56:01

and towering above us, is the bulk of the Mary Rose.

0:56:010:56:04

And from this area, we can get an impression of the ship's lines,

0:56:040:56:08

the very fine lines of the ship.

0:56:080:56:10

But also, underneath the ship, here, we can get some of the

0:56:100:56:13

impression of the repairs that were done during the life of the ship.

0:56:130:56:17

So, up here we've got one repair piece, there.

0:56:170:56:20

It's actually a patch that's been let into the timbers of the ship,

0:56:200:56:24

at some time during the ship's life.

0:56:240:56:27

We've leant an enormous amount about the hull since it was raised,

0:56:270:56:31

partly because so little was known beforehand.

0:56:310:56:33

There were no ship's plans of the Mary Rose. It predates that period,

0:56:330:56:36

which is why it's so important.

0:56:360:56:38

But one of the programmes that we HAVE done is a programme of

0:56:380:56:41

dendrochronology, which is tree-ring dating,

0:56:410:56:43

and this has been fantastic,

0:56:430:56:45

because it's confirmed some of our theories about which

0:56:450:56:49

timbers date to the original build,

0:56:490:56:51

and which timbers date to a rebuild,

0:56:510:56:54

or a refit, or a repair period.

0:56:540:56:56

And that's been very important for just seeing the life of a ship.

0:56:560:56:59

You know, she was in service for 34 years.

0:56:590:57:02

It's hard to grasp just how big the remains of the Mary Rose are

0:57:020:57:07

until you see them up close.

0:57:070:57:08

And today, the ship is finally nearing the end

0:57:080:57:12

of her long journey to full preservation.

0:57:120:57:15

The timbers are now being carefully air-dried,

0:57:170:57:19

after being sprayed with water and wax

0:57:190:57:22

for over 30 years.

0:57:220:57:24

In 2012, a new museum was built around the hull,

0:57:300:57:34

costing some £27 million.

0:57:340:57:37

It was only possible after the decades of painstaking work

0:57:370:57:41

to uncover the story of the Mary Rose.

0:57:410:57:44

The story of the Mary Rose has been teased out over

0:57:490:57:52

the course of my lifetime, and it's not over yet.

0:57:520:57:54

The research continues and every new development

0:57:540:57:57

fills in gaps, presenting us with an ever-clearer picture

0:57:570:58:01

of this iconic ship and the crew who sailed on her.

0:58:010:58:05

So much has been learned during the 40 or so years

0:58:050:58:07

of the Mary Rose story,

0:58:070:58:09

from how to manage and undertake a vast underwater dig,

0:58:090:58:12

to the use of pioneering conservation techniques.

0:58:120:58:16

It really did revolutionise underwater archaeology.

0:58:160:58:20

But perhaps what makes the Mary Rose so special

0:58:200:58:23

are the finds, both big and small.

0:58:230:58:26

Each of them has opened a window into a lost Tudor world

0:58:260:58:30

that, without the Mary Rose,

0:58:300:58:32

historians would just have to guess at.

0:58:320:58:34

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