:00:07. > :00:14.Gone in 60 minutes, why land Rovers are being stolen to order in Kent
:00:15. > :00:17.and Sussex. It is not just a car that people drive, it is a car that
:00:18. > :00:21.they love and cherish and the impact from these people, when they have
:00:22. > :00:29.had it stolen, it is like losing your dog. The Brighton teenager who
:00:30. > :00:32.fought had cancer on YouTube. It was something that she needed to do,
:00:33. > :00:38.something that she wanted to do. I think she wanted to share with the
:00:39. > :00:42.world. And we go looking for medieval graffiti in the castles of
:00:43. > :00:49.the south-east. To find something like this in a castle is rare and it
:00:50. > :00:53.makes this very special. I'm Natalie Graham with untold stories closer to
:00:54. > :01:11.home, from all around the south-east, this is Inside Out.
:01:12. > :01:19.Hello, and welcome to the programme. This week we come to you from Brodie
:01:20. > :01:23.Castle in East Sussex. No rural scene in the south-east would be
:01:24. > :01:27.complete without a mud splattered land Rover but it is surprisingly
:01:28. > :01:34.one of the most stolen cars in England. We found out why.
:01:35. > :01:38.Sunday morning in a Sussex wood, for these Land Rover
:01:39. > :01:51.It s a dirty homage to a cherished off-road car.
:01:52. > :01:56.They are an iconic British vehicle, a work horse for the army,
:01:57. > :02:00.farmers and also a whole generation of families and hobbyists.
:02:01. > :02:16.Some of these Land Rovers are worth north of ?50,000.
:02:17. > :02:19.Lovingly built and tinkered with over decades, to their owners
:02:20. > :02:24.these vehicles are much more than just a car.
:02:25. > :02:26.Problem is, to organised gangs of car thieves,
:02:27. > :02:35.the Land Rover has become a top target.
:02:36. > :02:40.But Land Rover owners are fighting back, some using social media
:02:41. > :02:52.to get their cars back some using a host of new security devices
:02:53. > :02:55.others using social media to try and track cars down
:02:56. > :02:59.We have a couple of Facebook pages and always someone's
:03:00. > :03:02.coming up there, saying, "Please help, my Land
:03:03. > :03:09.So who is stealing the Land Rovers here in Sussex and Kent,
:03:10. > :03:12.why are they doing it and where are they going to?
:03:13. > :03:24.18 months or two years ago it was off the drive in the middle of the
:03:25. > :03:26.night and someone broke into a tad I never saw it again.
:03:27. > :03:29.This one now lives my garage, under lock and key.
:03:30. > :03:32.Everything else I have got is very well secured.
:03:33. > :03:34.They are unfortunately very stealable.
:03:35. > :03:37.Stealable because the last Land Rover Defender rolled off
:03:38. > :03:41.And since then this car has been one of the most stolen
:03:42. > :03:45.The NFU Mutual insurance company saw a surge in theft claims
:03:46. > :03:56.When you buy a Land Rover you are not buying a car, it is a hobby.
:03:57. > :04:02.It's the heart and soul people put into these vehicles.
:04:03. > :04:07.Sometimes the car is passed down through the family and the impact
:04:08. > :04:09.when they have it stolen in cities like losing their dog. It is not
:04:10. > :04:11.nice. This Land Rover was the pride
:04:12. > :04:14.and joy of Leicestershire police until the thieves took
:04:15. > :04:16.it apart overnight. It was parked outside
:04:17. > :04:17.a local Police Station. But all these stolen
:04:18. > :04:19.Land Rovers have got to be going somewhere,
:04:20. > :04:21.so what exactly Police say high-end vehicles,
:04:22. > :04:29.like these Range Rovers, are being stolen to order
:04:30. > :04:31.and shipped abroad, Older, more vintage models,
:04:32. > :04:34.are equally as desirable to the thieves that s
:04:35. > :04:40.because Land Rovers were designed to the thieves because Land
:04:41. > :04:42.Rovers were designed to be simple to fix out
:04:43. > :04:45.in the field, they can easily be stripped down into parts,
:04:46. > :04:48.parts which are now more valuable because they are no
:04:49. > :04:52.longer being made. Because they have stopped making
:04:53. > :04:57.them the spare parts are few and far between but with a box of spammers
:04:58. > :05:00.and an hour you can add one Mbits completely. There are no codes
:05:01. > :05:03.stamped on most of the parts so they appear on eBay and there is a market
:05:04. > :05:06.unfortunately for stolen bits. Jon Rush is a Land Rover mechanic
:05:07. > :05:08.from Sussex who was hit As someone who knows
:05:09. > :05:11.Land Rovers inside-out, So just how easy is it for
:05:12. > :05:16.the criminals to strip a Land Rover? Well, we came up with
:05:17. > :05:18.a little experiment. We are calling it
:05:19. > :05:32.Gone In 60 Minutes. plan is to unbolt parts of the Land
:05:33. > :05:39.Rover until we end up with as big a pile of bits and as little Land
:05:40. > :05:41.Rover as we can finish with. OK, that is 23 minutes, 23 minutes gone.
:05:42. > :05:44.Jon firmly believes that his beloved Land Rover was stolen to order
:05:45. > :05:54.Now he's going to show us just how easily a Land Rover comes apart.
:05:55. > :05:56.With the clock ticking, and multiple cameras running,
:05:57. > :06:05.we'll check back in with Jon in a while.
:06:06. > :06:07.Henry Mowforth is a mechanic on slightly larger vehicles.
:06:08. > :06:11.His Land Rover was special, it was his wedding car.
:06:12. > :06:17.We used it to get from the church to the reception.
:06:18. > :06:22.Me, my wife and son have used it ever since, used it all the time.
:06:23. > :06:27.It was my first vehicle. It is soul destroying because you spend all of
:06:28. > :06:29.that time with it and that it is just gone.
:06:30. > :06:35.Our next victim thinks thieves may have planted a tracking device
:06:36. > :06:38.on his Land Rover when it was parked at his local railway station
:06:39. > :06:42.When he drove home they electronically followed him,
:06:43. > :06:45.then nicked his Land Rover off the drive.
:06:46. > :06:50.It's in the middle of nowhere so there may have been a tracker put on
:06:51. > :06:54.the car and they came back whenever they wanted to come and get it.
:06:55. > :06:56.Nathan Ricketts is a detective on the national car squad
:06:57. > :06:59.and he knows all the latest tricks and tactics car crime
:07:00. > :07:02.Have you ever come across cases where organised crime gangs
:07:03. > :07:05.are putting trackers on commuters' cars at railway stations,
:07:06. > :07:10.where they follow them home to steal the vehicle?
:07:11. > :07:17.Is that what is happening? In my spirits I have come across an
:07:18. > :07:25.organised crime group and they were particularly selective of cars and
:07:26. > :07:28.they would see them in supermarkets and drive into them and pretend it
:07:29. > :07:33.was an accident and leave a note saying they were really sorry about
:07:34. > :07:36.it and they would offer a paint job with their friends so they didn't
:07:37. > :07:41.have to to do it on the insurance. You would take it there and they
:07:42. > :07:45.would do a great job of it -- not repairing the bumper or the Dent and
:07:46. > :07:47.they would put a tracking device into the vehicle.
:07:48. > :07:51.This garage in Kent is full of top-end Range Rovers.
:07:52. > :07:54.The manufacturers fit all of these cars with at least one tracker
:07:55. > :07:57.for the benefit of the owners, but the car gangs have
:07:58. > :08:02.They are now using one of these, a magic wand to sniff
:08:03. > :08:16.I will just turn that up. They will know that there is something in the
:08:17. > :08:19.vehicle. A tracker. Now when people steal the car they will block the
:08:20. > :08:22.signal and they will block any signal coming out of the car and
:08:23. > :08:24.take it somewhere safe and take it to a side road or in the unit
:08:25. > :08:28.somewhere and when they feel safe somewhere and when they feel safe
:08:29. > :08:31.they will switch the unit on and try and find the tracking unit and as
:08:32. > :08:32.soon as they find it will be disconnected.
:08:33. > :08:36.Being one step ahead of the thieves is the only way to catch them,
:08:37. > :08:39.and the latest gadget does just that.
:08:40. > :08:41.A tiny, highly intelligent tracker that can't be sniffed
:08:42. > :08:53.What is the product you have come up with? What is the secret tracker? I
:08:54. > :08:58.would love to be able to show you but we don't do that. It could be
:08:59. > :09:02.anything on the car. It is not one particular unit, it is well it now
:09:03. > :09:05.we don't talk about it. It could be in the headlights or anywhere and I
:09:06. > :09:07.will not show you any specification for it. We don't want the thieves to
:09:08. > :09:13.get the upper hand on us. And Neil's intelligent
:09:14. > :09:15.tracker is getting results. It can runs for months and send
:09:16. > :09:18.a signal from inside Here police are recovering
:09:19. > :09:21.Land Rovers at Southampton Docks, just about to be shipped abroad,
:09:22. > :09:35.and then here are dozens more They don't just steal the whole car,
:09:36. > :09:38.they take just bits of a car. There are shots on the Internet of a
:09:39. > :09:43.police Land Rover taken to bits. Why did they take to bits? It reduces
:09:44. > :09:47.the risk. If you take a whole car and steal it and try and move it
:09:48. > :09:52.then it is easier to identify but is parts can look like scrap or a few
:09:53. > :09:53.car parts and it reduces what it is, and it is a stolen vehicle.
:09:54. > :09:55.With stolen Land Rover parts vanishing so quickly,
:09:56. > :09:58.police need to catch the criminals in the act.
:09:59. > :10:01.And that's exactly what happened to these three Land Rover thieves.
:10:02. > :10:04.A call from a neighbour led to a quick police reaction,
:10:05. > :10:06.and last October this trio were handed a prison
:10:07. > :10:08.sentences totalling six and a half years in all.
:10:09. > :10:14.I believe it was quite a slick operation.
:10:15. > :10:20.These vehicles, in my mind, were going to be taken either to another
:10:21. > :10:21.country or stripped down for parts and sent out to another country for
:10:22. > :10:25.money. Back in Jon's barn, how
:10:26. > :10:40.was his attempt at stripping Now you see it, now you don't. Time!
:10:41. > :10:51.That is a Land Rover stripped in 60 minutes. We are done. Are you a
:10:52. > :10:56.pricey did it so quickly? I am surprised but I don't think I would
:10:57. > :11:01.like to do it as a business. Thank you for letting us film you work
:11:02. > :11:13.very hard, now put it back together! Thank you. That will take longer.
:11:14. > :11:19.As far as we are aware, they are still rebuilding that car! Coming
:11:20. > :11:21.up: we get medieval on the graffiti on the walls of our castles. As far
:11:22. > :11:24.as we are aware, they are still as we are aware, they are still
:11:25. > :11:26.rebuilding that car! Coming up: we get medieval on the graffiti on the
:11:27. > :11:29.walls of our castles. We have been told there weren't any medieval
:11:30. > :11:31.inscriptions to be found here so to uncover we have been told there
:11:32. > :11:33.weren't any medieval inscriptions to be found here so to uncover
:11:34. > :11:36.inscriptions that date back inscriptions that date back to when
:11:37. > :11:45.this was occupied then that was a very special moment indeed. When a
:11:46. > :11:48.teenager from Brighton found that she had cancer it was devastating
:11:49. > :11:51.news but she decided to fight the disease in her own way, very
:11:52. > :11:57.publicly. Mark Norman reports. I'm just like any other typical
:11:58. > :12:03.teenage girl, but I have a twist. 16-year-old Charlotte
:12:04. > :12:07.had been diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumour,
:12:08. > :12:10.but rather than hide away, she decided she was going to use
:12:11. > :12:13.the power of social media to tell the world
:12:14. > :12:16.what was happening and how she felt. But I found when I had cancer
:12:17. > :12:18.and wanted some advice videos, In June she said, "I think I m
:12:19. > :12:28.going to start a YouTube "channel," and I said,
:12:29. > :12:30."What are you going to talk about?" And she said "my cancer",
:12:31. > :12:35.and it developed from there. I've had purple hair, no hair, long,
:12:36. > :12:37.dark and shiny hair. Black lips, red lips,
:12:38. > :12:43.dry cracked from chemo lips. I'd finished my exams, I had these
:12:44. > :12:55.three months when I was free, It was actually on the day of
:12:56. > :12:58.problem that I was diagnosed which is kind of depressing.
:12:59. > :13:01.Obviously that was all taken away from me after being
:13:02. > :13:04.Charlotte posted more than 100 videos in the two
:13:05. > :13:07.The early ones were watched a few hundred times.
:13:08. > :13:09.By the time Charlotte lost her battle with cancer, people
:13:10. > :13:12.all over the country, indeed from around the world,
:13:13. > :13:18.So, yeah, sorry for these random snippets.
:13:19. > :13:22.Maybe this is the way I vlog, literally picking up the camera.
:13:23. > :13:34.After she passed away her videos were nominated
:13:35. > :13:37.video award and then, remarkably, Charlotte s family
:13:38. > :13:40.found dozens of unedited, unseen video files on her camera.
:13:41. > :13:44.I inherited her DSLR which was very special to her.
:13:45. > :13:48.It was her window onto the world, and I went through her stuff,
:13:49. > :13:51.and I've had this memory card for months, and I found a new folder
:13:52. > :14:06.I think most poignant for me is how frank they are, how honest.
:14:07. > :14:11.When it came to wearing them is, this one is the most comfortable,
:14:12. > :14:20.so, yes. This is how I look,
:14:21. > :14:22.and there is nothing I just wanted to me myself? bald,
:14:23. > :14:27.with hair, whatever. But with the type of tumour
:14:28. > :14:30.Charlotte had, her condition Charlotte s videos became more
:14:31. > :14:37.reflective, sometimes difficult to watch, and bringing back
:14:38. > :14:43.difficult memories for her family. It's grown from a few millimetres
:14:44. > :15:02.to a few centimetres, Her right hand side was paralysed
:15:03. > :15:03.and she couldn't move her leg or her arm and then very slowly took every
:15:04. > :15:07.part of our. Unfortunately things have taken
:15:08. > :15:11.a turn for the worse. The medication I was on isn't
:15:12. > :15:16.working very well, so, yeah, I'm looking a bit
:15:17. > :15:20.the worse for wear. We went to see her consultant
:15:21. > :15:28.and he more or less had his head in his hands, and he said it's very,
:15:29. > :15:30.very bad news, the tumour And we cried and I think
:15:31. > :15:39.it was disbelief. And she just looked at me and said,
:15:40. > :15:42."Does that mean I ll never get And I said, "I think it
:15:43. > :15:55.does," and she went back to see her consultant and said,
:15:56. > :15:58."Am I going to die?" He said it seems the
:15:59. > :16:02.most likely outcome. This is where Charlotte
:16:03. > :16:07.was diagnosed with a brain tumour. This is where she spent a huge
:16:08. > :16:10.amount of time being treated. And this is where, despite seeing
:16:11. > :16:13.a huge number of patients every day, One of the things about Charlotte
:16:14. > :16:18.is that Charlotte was a phenomenal individual who, despite being faced
:16:19. > :16:22.with certain death from her tumour, did not say, "Oh, well,"
:16:23. > :16:25.but she went out there. She raised funds, raised awareness,
:16:26. > :16:30.she pushed and pushed right to the end, and what an amazing
:16:31. > :16:35.and humbling experience it is for me, an adult
:16:36. > :16:41.and a neurosurgeon to see someone so young grasp the enormity
:16:42. > :16:44.of their diagnosis and just not accept there was nothing
:16:45. > :16:54.she could do. I have mixed feelings
:16:55. > :16:59.talking about Charlotte. The only negative thing that comes
:17:00. > :17:02.to mind is her loss. All the rest is in my mind
:17:03. > :17:05.a celebration of beauty, life, positivity, bravery,
:17:06. > :17:06.generosity, that is what She was blogging, making
:17:07. > :17:16.videos on YouTube. Describing her experience
:17:17. > :17:19.in an attempt to help others who were going
:17:20. > :17:25.through the same thing. She was doing it in a very stylish
:17:26. > :17:30.way, in a way I am certain that would be very helpful for many
:17:31. > :17:39.people, thousands across the globe. And support was one of the reasons
:17:40. > :17:42.Charlotte was online. Many of her friends before
:17:43. > :17:44.her diagnosis couldn't cope with her illness,
:17:45. > :17:46.something she reflected I've had 60s eyes, red eyes,
:17:47. > :17:51.dancing-until-dawn eyes. Boyfriends, me friends,
:17:52. > :17:55.never seen again friends. But Charlotte made new friends
:17:56. > :17:57.online, friends like Emily, I went over to her channel
:17:58. > :18:04.and I looked at some of her videos and I loved what she had created
:18:05. > :18:08.and I loved her personality We arranged to meet up
:18:09. > :18:22.and we met in the June. I will get back to you guys when I
:18:23. > :18:24.see Emily. I am meeting at Brighton station and she will be getting in
:18:25. > :18:29.at them. I've still got all her texts,
:18:30. > :18:39.I've not deleted one single one. She said she was so grateful to be
:18:40. > :18:40.here for me and that was the last text I got from her.
:18:41. > :18:44.She has left her legacy, her videos and she has left
:18:45. > :18:48.an impact on me that I will carry into my later life.
:18:49. > :18:51.That legacy and that impact now extend to the charity Charlotte's
:18:52. > :18:54.They are raising money to raise awareness and fund
:18:55. > :18:56.research into glioplastomas, the type of brain
:18:57. > :19:09.I know that she is up there and she will be looking down
:19:10. > :19:19.and I have promised her that I will make it work.
:19:20. > :19:22.So obviously hopefully she is proud of us and the charity and it
:19:23. > :19:31.Towards the end of Charlotte's life her mum had to voice up her videos,
:19:32. > :19:35.including this final one in February last year.
:19:36. > :19:38.It is with regret that this will be the last YouTube
:19:39. > :19:46.Charlotte passed away peacefully at 1.03pm in our local
:19:47. > :19:58.My family have been with me 110% and I love the more than anything. We
:19:59. > :20:03.will always come together as a sort of team, if you like. I have just
:20:04. > :20:08.been incredibly blessed to have that around me.
:20:09. > :20:12.I don't really know what else I had to say. If anything else exciting
:20:13. > :20:25.happens I will grab the camera again, so let's wait and see.
:20:26. > :20:32.Mark Norman reporting. If I were to scratch my initials onto the stones
:20:33. > :20:35.of this beautiful castle I would be improbable -- trouble, but for
:20:36. > :20:38.hundreds of years people have been leaving their marks on our much
:20:39. > :20:42.loved historic buildings. And thanks to a new study
:20:43. > :20:44.across the South East, we re finding out more
:20:45. > :20:46.about who wrote them and why. For some, graffiti is vandalism
:20:47. > :20:57.and for others it s an art form, but maybe there's another
:20:58. > :21:16.way of looking at it. More and more archaeologists
:21:17. > :21:17.are studying the scratchings and scribblings of people who've
:21:18. > :21:20.wanted to, for one reason Matt Champion is an archaeologist
:21:21. > :21:23.specialising in historical graffiti. As an archaeologist my interest
:21:24. > :21:25.has always been people of the past, it's always been
:21:26. > :21:28.about telling their story. He's carrying out a survey on behalf
:21:29. > :21:30.of the National Trust at many of their famous historical
:21:31. > :21:33.properties, like here What the graffiti can do is kind
:21:34. > :21:40.of give you an insight into their hopes and dreams,
:21:41. > :21:45.their fears and I think that really gives it an edge that you just
:21:46. > :21:47.don't get elsewhere. This historic graffiti can be
:21:48. > :21:59.an absolutely fantastic He has been studying the graffiti at
:22:00. > :22:10.Bodiam Castle stone by stone and has found thousands of inscriptions.
:22:11. > :22:13.As soon as you get here to the gatehouse and just start
:22:14. > :22:16.looking at these walls you realise they are absolutely covered
:22:17. > :22:17.in graffiti inscriptions, so we've got James Bryant,
:22:18. > :22:20.who is in the 35th regiment, and he was here in 1818.
:22:21. > :22:22.Now, the traditional story was that James
:22:23. > :22:24.was here as a Napoleonic Solider guarding French prisoners of war,
:22:25. > :22:27.however the research we've done indicates that actually by this time
:22:28. > :22:29.all the French prisoners of war had been repatriated
:22:30. > :22:32.and he was here as a visitor, a day tripper.
:22:33. > :22:37.We're heading up into the upper section of the gatehouse.
:22:38. > :22:51.But the bit I really want to show you is over here.
:22:52. > :22:59.If I turn the light off, it will completely disappear.
:23:00. > :23:03.So if I turn the light on here and suddenly you can see
:23:04. > :23:06.all these markings all over the wall, but this one
:23:07. > :23:10.This is what we call a ritual protection mark,
:23:11. > :23:13.or more commonly referred to these days as a witch mark,
:23:14. > :23:16.and essentially this is one of a whole series of symbols that
:23:17. > :23:18.were applied to the castle by the people who built it,
:23:19. > :23:21.but also by the people who were later living here,
:23:22. > :23:26.Well, this and the other marks we've recorded here,
:23:27. > :23:31.these ones date back to the period when the castle, just
:23:32. > :23:35.So we are looking really back into the late 14th
:23:36. > :23:38.and early 15th century, and so even in a place like Bodiam,
:23:39. > :23:40.which is designed as a castle, you know with battlements,
:23:41. > :23:43.with gun-loops with drawbridges, they really wanted to add another
:23:44. > :23:45.layer of spiritual protection on top of those defences.
:23:46. > :23:50.They've found over 40 of these marks around every window and door,
:23:51. > :23:53.just on this side of the castle, but Matt wants to show me something
:23:54. > :24:06.Now, if you look across here, we have a name and it
:24:07. > :24:13.This is unusual in the fact that it's a text inscription,
:24:14. > :24:17.so it's clearly done by someone who is both used to the writing
:24:18. > :24:22.So actually it's quite unusual to find medieval name,
:24:23. > :24:25.because most people didn't know how to write.
:24:26. > :24:32.Literacy levels in the middle ages were certainly a lot less
:24:33. > :24:36.What did you think then when you saw it?
:24:37. > :24:38.Well, we'd been told that there weren't any medieval
:24:39. > :24:41.inscriptions to be found at Bodiam Castle, so to actually
:24:42. > :24:43.come and start looking stone by stone and to uncover inscriptions
:24:44. > :24:47.which clearly date back to the period when this
:24:48. > :24:49.was being occupied that was a very special moment indeed.
:24:50. > :25:04.Nathalie Cohen is the National Trust's Archaeologist
:25:05. > :25:07.She is equally enthusiastic about this area of study.
:25:08. > :25:09.So why carry out this graffiti survey?
:25:10. > :25:13.We want to present it as a part of the fabric of the building,
:25:14. > :25:15.we are obviously not encouraging people to leave their own mark now
:25:16. > :25:18.because we don't want to obliterate the earlier marks that are part
:25:19. > :25:22.So is there graffiti on every National Trust
:25:23. > :25:25.So far pretty much wherever we've gone we've been finding it.
:25:26. > :25:28.And at Bodiam they've been sharing these findings with the public,
:25:29. > :25:33.The response has been fantastic and people really love getting that
:25:34. > :25:37.further insight into the stories of the places.
:25:38. > :25:43.Or did you know, is that why you initiated it?
:25:44. > :25:47.I just thought, well, yeah, this is amazing.
:25:48. > :25:48.This is really interesting; surely people will find
:25:49. > :25:57.Over the border in Kent, I'm at Sissinghurst
:25:58. > :26:00.Most people come here for the world famous gardens,
:26:01. > :26:02.but head inside the tower and there's another
:26:03. > :26:10.If I turn on the light, you can see dates back to the 18th
:26:11. > :26:16.century and we've got a name in there and our date 1761 down
:26:17. > :26:22.This was created by a French, a captured French sailor.
:26:23. > :26:26.And what many people don't realise is that Sissinghurst,
:26:27. > :26:28.prior to being the home of Vita Sackville West,
:26:29. > :26:30.and after being a great Tudor mansion, was leased out
:26:31. > :26:32.to the government, and during the Seven Years War,
:26:33. > :26:37.there were as many as 3,000 French prisoners of war located here.
:26:38. > :26:46.But their names weren't all they left behind.
:26:47. > :26:49.If I turn the light on here, you can see that what we've got
:26:50. > :26:51.across this whole surface is a series of images of ships.
:26:52. > :26:58.And these are quite probably the ships that these French
:26:59. > :27:03.This represents freedom, the freedom of the seas,
:27:04. > :27:05.here they are incarcerated, over-crowded, in very squalid
:27:06. > :27:06.conditions, and actually what they are thinking
:27:07. > :27:14.I mean, what, would it simply be that they were really bored
:27:15. > :27:18.Well, I think boredom partly has something to do with it,
:27:19. > :27:21.but what we have noticed, looking at graffiti not just
:27:22. > :27:23.here, but elsewhere, is that there are certain times
:27:24. > :27:26.in history when people are much more likely to create than in others,
:27:27. > :27:29.and we call them chronological hotspots, those periods tends to be
:27:30. > :27:31.times when society is under stress, so things like war, things
:27:32. > :27:46.this is right in the middle of the Seven Years War,
:27:47. > :27:49.so frankly when things go bad, people start writing on the walls.
:27:50. > :27:51.We're used to learning about history through dates and documents,
:27:52. > :27:54.but graffiti gives us a direct line to the past, it tells us
:27:55. > :27:57.about the hopes, the dreams and the fears of the people
:27:58. > :28:00.who lived in, who worked in, and like us who visited
:28:01. > :28:15.Now, if you would like to know more about the programme go to our live
:28:16. > :28:22.pages on the BBC News website. You can also watch the show again on
:28:23. > :28:29.iPlayer. Make sure you tune in next week because we have a lot to tell
:28:30. > :28:32.you about, in particular, this. We've discovered an island in Kent
:28:33. > :28:42.littered with historical human remains. It looks like it could be a
:28:43. > :28:51.leg bone, couldn't it? It is a thigh bone. Are there other groups there?
:28:52. > :28:56.Football for females in their 50s? It is an absolutely fantastic
:28:57. > :28:57.feeling. That is it from us for tonight from bodhi Castle, thank you
:28:58. > :29:06.for watching. -- from Bodiam Castle. Hello, I'm Riz Lateef
:29:07. > :29:08.with your 90 second update. The Government says national
:29:09. > :29:11.security means it won't confirm if an unarmed nuclear missile
:29:12. > :29:15.veered off course during testing. Theresa May now admits
:29:16. > :29:18.she knew about the test. She refused to answer
:29:19. > :29:22.the question yesterday. In his first day
:29:23. > :29:25.in the job as US President, Donald Trump met
:29:26. > :29:26.businesses and said he'll cut taxes
:29:27. > :29:28.and slash red tape, as long as they don't
:29:29. > :29:30.move jobs abroad. That's the message after nearly
:29:31. > :29:34.8,000 drivers were caught in just one week
:29:35. > :29:39.during a police crackdown. Brothers Erwin and Krystian
:29:40. > :29:41.Markowski illegally recruited Poles to work
:29:42. > :29:44.at Sports Direct. But they threatened them,
:29:45. > :29:47.and kept most of their wages.