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Description
The state of British agriculture at the time of the British invasion is a subject of dispute among archaeologists. Classical writers speak of Britain as an expporter of grain in the Iron Age, but a...griculture at the time has generally been assumed to have been small scale and unsophisticated. This programme explores the implications of this contradiction through the study of two sites: The Lunt Roman Fort, near Coventry, where there are traces of three enormous granaries, and Butser Ancient farm in Hampshire. At Butser, research on Iron Age grain production has suggested that Britain could indeed have produced enough grain to support a population of 4 million, and to export to the continent. The director of Butser Ancient Farm, Dr. Peter Reynolds, concludes that the British grain supply may have been the pricipal reasn for the Roman invasion.
Metadata describing this Open University video programme
Module code and title: A293, Rome: the Augustan age
Item code: A293; 07
First transmission date: 16-08-1982
Published: 1982
Rights Statement:
Restrictions on use:
Duration: 00:23:00
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Producer: Robert Philip
Contributors: Peter Reynolds; Peter Salway
Publisher: BBC Open University
Keyword(s): Agriculture; Archaeology; Butser ancient farm; Iron age; Lunt Roman fort
Master spool number: HOU3978
Production number: FOUA112N
Videofinder number: 2566
Available to public: no