YORK.- The University of York has worked with Dragonshead Productions Limited to make a documentary series Medieval Dead that will premiere on UKTV Yesterday later this month.
The six part series, which starts on 21 October at 9pm, blends medieval history with archaeology and forensic research, focusing on the preserved remains of the people of medieval period - the medieval dead themselves.
The series was filmed on location in the Department of Archaeology in the Kings Manor in York city centre.
From excavations dating back to the early 20th century the bodies of many such individuals are now being studied in groundbreaking ways as archaeologists use new methods of scientific analysis such as DNA sequencing and digital remote sensing - alongside traditional excavations and in the research library.
The series follows stories which bring to life details of the lives of individuals of the medieval world - from soldiers who died in great battles to the lowliest of people who endured extraordinary hardship or disease during the course of their everyday lives. The series emphasises the human experience of the medieval period.
University of York staff who feature on screen include battlefield archaeologist Tim Sutherland and osteoarchaeologist Malin Holst. Tim Sutherland has an international reputation as an expert in conflict archaeology since his excavation of the mass grave at the battlefield of Towton near York. Malin Holst conducted osteological research into the skeletons from the Towton graves and has analysed many of the remaining individuals from medieval York.
Other University of York contributors include Dr Helen Goodchild (Project and Fieldwork Officer), Dr Michelle Mundy (Lecturer in Bioarchaeology) and Dr Anthony Masington (Computing Officer).
Also featured are Yorkshire based metal detector expert Simon Richardson - who works with Tim Sutherland and Malin Holst in helping to locate many of the regions archaeological treasures - as well as contributors from the Universities of Cambridge and Durham as well as the Royal Armouries, the Historical Museum of Stockholm and the Museum of Visby.
Alongside the Kings Manor, York Minster and other locations in the City of York the series also features locations across the UK, Northern France and Scandinavia.
The series was written and directed by Jeremy Freeston, one of the UKs most experienced history and specialist factual filmmakers, a veteran of C4s Secrets of the Dead (Gladiatrix, Murder at Stonehenge) and Granada TVs Battlefield Detectives (Massacre at Waterloo, Charge of the Light Brigade, Stalingrad) and Rescue Emergency (Iranian Embassy Siege, The Brighton Bombing).
Feature film director Jeremy Freeston staged large scale drama reconstruction sequences including the battles of Towton and Agincourt. The Yorkshire Museum of Farmings Murton Park Village stood in for the streets of medieval York - and many of the supporting artists and fight extras were from northern based Wars of the Roses re-enactors The Stanley Household.
The series was made by independent Sheffield based production company Dragonshead for UKTV Yesterday.