
About this season
Time Team is a British television series which has been aired on British Channel 4 from 1994. Created by television producer Tim Taylor and presented by actor Tony Robinson, each episode featured a team of specialists carrying out an archaeological dig over a period of three days, with Robinson explaining the process in layman's terms. This team of specialists changed throughout the series' run, although has consistently included professional archaeologists such as Mick Aston, Carenza Lewis, Francis Pryor and Phil Harding. The sites excavated over the show's run have ranged in date from the Palaeolithic right through to the Second World War.
Episodes (15)

1. The Forgotten Gunners of WWI - Grantham, Lincolnshire
Aired 11 November 2012 • 50 min
Golfers at a popular East Midlands golf club now know that a huge wooded bank beside their fairway is a rather special area of 'rough', an old machine gun firing range.

2. Brancaster - Brancaster, Norfolk
Aired 6 January 2014 • 50 min
Featuring the Team's largest ever range and number of items from Roman Britain and their most ambitious geophysics project to date.

3. A Capital Hill - Ely, Cardiff
Aired 13 January 2014 • 50 min
Time Team investigate a huge hill near Cardiff that may be immensely significant; was it the Iron Age capital of South Wales? Tony and the Team have just three days to answer some very big questions.

4. Henham's Lost Mansions - Henham Park, Suffolk
Aired 20 January 2014 • 50 min
Tony and the team attempt to help Hektor Rous, the son of 'Aussie Earl' Keith Rous, work out the mysterious history of the family's Tudor country home in Suffolk.

5. Warriors - Figheldean, Wiltshire
Aired 27 January 2013 • 50 min
Tony and the team work with veterans of the war in Afghanistan, investigating the ancient Barrow Clump on Salisbury Plain, where they discover burials from 2000BC and rare Saxon finds.

6. Lost Mines of Lakeland - Coniston, Cumbria
Aired 3 February 2013 • 50 min
Tony and the team make their way to the Lake District on an expedition that takes them both higher and deeper than they've ever been before. They are looking for a forgotten piece of the nation's industrial heritage.

7. Horseshoe Hall - Oakham Castle, Rutland
Aired 10 February 2013 • 50 min
Oakham Castle is the best preserved 12th-century building in Britain, but there's much more to it than meets the eye.

8. Mystery of the Thames-side Villa - Dropshort, Oxfordshire
Aired 17 February 2013 • 50 min
Roman remains have been turning up in an Oxfordshire field for decades, where a student in the 1960s believed he had uncovered a Roman mosaic.

9. The Lost Castle of Dundrum - Dundrum Castle, County Down
Aired 24 February 2013 • 50 min
Tony and the Team search for the remains of a renegade knight's Norman castle in one of Northern Ireland's most picturesque spots.

10. Wolsey's Lost Palace - The More, Moor Park, Hertfordshire
Aired 3 March 2013 • 50 min
In the 1950s a group of schoolboys found the remains of Britain's most opulent palace under their playing field. Now Tony and the Team try to piece together this massive Tudor puzzle.

11. An Englishman's Castle - Upton Castle, Cosheston, Pembrokeshire
Aired 10 March 2013 • 50 min
When Steve and Pru bought pretty Upton Castle in Pembrokeshire they weren't sure if it was a Victorian folly or an Anglo-Norman castle, built to defend 'Little England beyond Wales' from the locals.

12. The Time Team Guide to Experimental Archaeology
Aired 17 March 2013 • 50 min
Tony Robinson celebrates the 150 experiments and re-creations Time Team has conducted over 20 years, from Stone Age swords like Excalibur, to building an entire Iron Age house.

13. Twenty Years of Time Team
Aired 24 March 2013 • 50 min
Tony takes a look back at the best bits from two decades and over 250 episodes.

14. Britain's Stone Age Tsunami
Aired 30 May 2013 • 50 min
Tony Robinson reveals astonishing new evidence that shows how, 8000 years ago, a huge tsunami swamped the east coast of Britain.

15. The Secret of Lincoln Jail
Aired 30 July 2013 • 50 min
Lincoln has been dominated by its castle for over 1000 years. Its high stone walls and gatehouses were built to impress the locals with Norman power, and it has housed medieval dungeons and Victorian and Georgian jails. Extraordinarily, today the castle is still a centre for justice and punishment, containing an active court. As part of a £19million refurbishment programme, a preparatory archaeological dig at the castle is revealing new secrets about the horrors of its early jails. Sir Tony Robinson and the Time Team cameras have had exclusive access to the dig. With help from Phil Harding and Alex Langlands, Tony traces the story of punishment over the course of a millennium. He discovers that, behind the walls of Lincoln Castle, the Victorians launched an experiment in prison justice that pushed human beings to their limits. Some went mad, many died, and the prison regime broke down in shocking circumstances. In this grim jail in the heart of the city, something went badly wrong.