The Great Famine and the Black Death

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Episode 3 of 6

Duration: 1 hour

Groundbreaking series in which Michael Wood tells the story of one place throughout the whole of English history. The village is Kibworth in Leicestershire in the heart of England - a place that lived through the Black Death, the Civil War and the Industrial Revolution and was even bombed in World War Two.

Wood's fascinating tale reaches the catastrophic 14th century. Kibworth goes through the worst famine in European history, and then, as revealed in the astonishing village archive in Merton College Oxford, two thirds of the people die in the Black Death.

Helped by today's villagers - field walking and reading the historical texts - and by the local schoolchildren digging archaeological test pits, Wood follows stories of individual lives through these times, out of which the English idea of community and the English character begin to emerge.

  • Episode 3: 1327 Poll Tax

    Episode 3: 1327 Poll Tax

    Though battered by the Great Famine and its aftermath though the 1310s and the early 1320s, life in Kibworth picked up again in the 1330s. The government’s poll taxes of the period give us an image of a community beginning to thrive again. Kibworth’s returns in the tax of 1327, listed under the name Kybbeworth, survive in the National Archive and illustrate divisions of wealth and class divisions that existed even in a peasant society.

    Watch the clip showing an extract from the 1327 Poll Tax

Credits

Presenter
Michael Wood
Writer
Michael Wood

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