Timewatch

Timewatch Season 10

TV Show

Season 10 Episodes

1. Savagery and the American Indian: 1: Wilderness

January 23rd, 199150 min

Historians and archaeologists have started to reassess some of the ingrained myths of American history. American Indians lived in sophisticated societies, and many more died as a result of the European settlement of North America than has so far been imagined. Andrew Sachs narrates the story of how Puritan prejudices helped to generate false views of Indians.

2. Savagery and the American Indian: 2: Civilisation

January 30th, 199150 min

Every year the Sioux nation of South Dakota pays homage to more than 300 unarmed Indians killed by US troops on 29 December 1890. For the survivors and their descendants, it was the beginning of a deliberate and systematic process to destroy their way of life. One hundred years after those events, witnesses recall the terrible emotional scars caused by the US government's disastrous attempts to Europeanise the American Indian.

3. The Man Who Made the Supergun

February 13th, 199150 min

The assassination a year ago of Dr Gerald Bull prevented Saddam Hussein from acquiring a 'supergun'. Bull designed the world's best howitzers, many bought by Iraq, but the supergun remained his lifelong ambition. David Taylor chronicles how the Canadian scientist who plundered the lost secrets of Nazi terror weapons became the victim of his own obsession.

4. Reluctant Comrade

February 27th, 199150 min

In 1934, Robert Robinson, a young black car worker from Detroit, was blacklisted by America after renewing a short-term contract from the Russians to work in the First State Ball Bearing Plant in Moscow. During his enforced 44 years inside the Soviet Union, Robinson was coerced to work alongside Stalin on the Moscow Soviet and ultimately to take citizenship. He finally succeeded in escaping while on a visit to Uganda. Now 84 and living in Washington, DC, Robert Robinson recounts his extraordinary life and observations of the Soviet Union during a crucial period in its history.

5. The Transmission of Roger Bacon

March 13th, 199150 min

A death ray to combat the Antichrist; the effectiveness of astrology; the bizarre sexual practices of the Brahmins; and the impossibility of a society whose sole aim is money and gain. These are some of the ideas which the eccentric medieval scholar Roger Bacon wanted to transmit to the Pope when he wrote to him in 1268. It is a work which gives us a glimpse of the strange and compelling mental landscape of the Middle Ages.

6. Palestine: The First Intifada

March 27th, 199150 min

For the last three years Palestinians have been involved in an Intifada against the Israeli occupation of their homeland; 50 years ago the British administration in Palestine was faced with an armed Arab rebellion which was suppressed with a brutality as severe as that employed by the Israelis today. The aftermath of the first Intifada is still seen by many Palestinians as contributing directly to the problems of the Middle East.

7. A Cold War

April 10th, 199150 min

In 1945 Britain, America and the USSR were allies against Hitler; less than a year later Winston Churchill condemned Soviet expansionism. With east-west relations once again at a crossroads, Dr Christopher Andrew examines the origins of mutual distrust which was at the heart of the Cold War.

8. Beside Franco in Spain

September 18th, 19911 hr

The story of how Britain abandoned Spain's democratically elected government during the Spanish Civil War of 1936 and gave clandestine support to the nationalists and General Franco. Remarkable new evidence discovered in Spanish archives shows that Britain used all its economic and diplomatic cunning to safeguard its political and commercial interests in Spain by ensuring victory for General Franco's forces. NEW SEASON.

9. Charles Darwin - Devil's Chaplain

October 2nd, 199150 min

Charles Darwin lived in fear of disgrace because of his views. He believed that humans were just a better sort of ape, that we evolved from worms. These were shattering ideas, especially from a man trained for the Church. Using new research, historians Adrian Desmond and James Moore see Darwin not as the far-sighted hero of the Beagle voyage, but as a privileged Victorian with everything to lose by publishing the heretical views he developed in survival-of-the-fittest London. Wracked with worry, Darwin was sick for most of the 20 years it took him to pluck up courage to tell the world his brutal theory of natural selection.

10. The Columbus Conspiracy

October 16th, 199150 min

Was Columbus really the first to discover America? Five hundred years ago three ships sailed from Spain on the most famous voyage in history - west, west and always west across the unknown ocean. But now a modern Spanish ship's officer and a journalist have re-created that momentous voyage to test their astonishing theory that Columbus not only knew where he was going but also what he would find in the not-so-New World.

11. Harvests of Iron: 1: The Watch on the Somme

October 30th, 199150 min

In the first of two programmes about the First World War, German writer Ludwig Harig makes a pilgrimage to the Somme, hoping to understand why his father was unable to speak about the war. Archive film and the moving testimony of witnesses evoke the realities of life behind the Front. And in France, he finds a generation still haunted by their memories.

12. Harvests of Iron: 2: The Theatre of Operations

November 6th, 199150 min

The letters between military surgeon Georges Duhamel and his wife Blanche lay forgotten in a family attic for 75 years. Recently rediscovered, they reveal a poignant love story set against the backdrop of the First World War. In 1914, Blanche Duhamel moved to the frontline capital at Amiens, from where the lights of the trenches were visible, in order to be closer to her husband. Previously unseen film footage shows how business and pleasure continued alongside scenes of suffering as British and colonial troops came and went from the city.

13. Suffer the Children

November 20th, 199150 min

In the 1830s a pioneering social investigation into child labour uncovered an appalling picture of deprivation, poverty and remorseless physical exploitation throughout Britain and sparked off a fierce debate between Victorian capitalists and reformers. Timewatch has drawn upon the testimonies of the children involved for this dramatised account.

14. The Spoils of War

December 18th, 199150 min

During the Second World War, the Nazis took many art treasures for "care and safe-keeping", including the priceless collection of French Impressionist paintings built up by the industrialist Friedrich Carl Siemens in 1930s Berlin - among them works by Manet, Monet, Degas and Cezanne. At the end of the war, when the Americans and the Russians reached Berlin, these treasures went missing and have not been seen since. Timewatch goes in search of the missing treasures and unravels an extraordinary story of official looting.

All Seasons

Season 30

Season 30

Oct 25, 2011
Season 29

Season 29

Jun 2, 2010
Season 28

Season 28

Feb 21, 2009
Season 27

Season 27

Jan 5, 2008
Season 26

Season 26

Jan 5, 2007
Season 25

Season 25

Jan 20, 2006
Season 24

Season 24

Jan 29, 2005
Season 23

Season 23

Jan 9, 2004
Season 22

Season 22

Jan 10, 2003
Season 21

Season 21

Jan 4, 2002
Season 20

Season 20

Jan 12, 2001
Season 19

Season 19

Jan 8, 2000
Season 18

Season 18

Apr 17, 1999
Season 17

Season 17

Apr 7, 1998
Season 16

Season 16

Feb 25, 1997
Season 15

Season 15

Jan 14, 1996
Season 14

Season 14

Jan 11, 1995
Season 13

Season 13

Jan 12, 1994
Season 12

Season 12

Jan 13, 1993
Season 11

Season 11

Jan 15, 1992
Season 10

Season 10

Jan 23, 1991
Season 9

Season 9

Jan 17, 1990
Season 8

Season 8

Jan 11, 1989
Season 7

Season 7

Jan 6, 1988
Season 6

Season 6

Jan 15, 1987
Season 5

Season 5

Jan 1, 1986
Season 4

Season 4

Jan 9, 1985
Season 3

Season 3

Jan 3, 1984
Season 2

Season 2

Jan 26, 1983
Season 1

Season 1

Sep 29, 1982
Specials

Specials

Aug 17, 1991