Twenty years ago Alan Ereira’s influential television film From The Heart of the World: The Elder Brothers’ Warning brought global attention to the Kogi people of Colombia a remote and ancient South American civilization determined to caution us about environmental damage to the earth. A true ‘lost civilisation’ who regard themselves as the guardians of the earth the Kogi once traded with the Mayans and Aztecs but survived the Spanish conquests by retreating into their isolated mountain massif the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta. Having remained hidden for centuries the Kogi surfaced in Ereira’s original 1990 film with an environmental message that was ahead of its time a warning that we their ‘younger brother’ were destroying the ecosystem by plundering the earth. Now two decades later glacial melt ferocious storms landslides floods droughts and deforestation show that their message has gone unheeded. The Kogi elders or 'Mamas' receive training to connect with “Aluna” the mind inside nature and set out to show us that we do not understand nature as a connected whole. Profoundly frightened the next generation of Kogi take Ereira on a journey to demonstrate to him and our scientists that the world is a single organism tracing the invisible connections with 400 kilometres of gold thread. Filmed over three years this ambitious feature length documentary initiated by the Kogi with footage filmed by them is the authentic voice of an indigenous people trying to help us. Bonus Feature: Interview With The Director
The Normans & Angevins Our journey begins at one of the most important and probably best known events in English history; the Norman invasion of Britain and the Battle of Hastings in 1066 it takes us through the reigning monarchs of the next 150 years to 1216 and to the death of King John; the last of the Angevins. Along the way we are introduced to the four Norman kings; William I William II Henry I and finally Stephen the Angevins follow in 1154 with Henry II Richard I and the aforementioned King John. Learn about their lives deaths and the circumstances in which they inherited the throne. The Middle Ages We begin the Middle Ages programme with a monarch much ignored by history; King Louis. Short-lived though his reign may be Louis ruled England in the months between the death of King John and the coronation of Henry III in 1216. The next 183 years were to become known as the Plantagenet period. In 1399 Henry IV came to the throne he was the first of the Lancastrians; the remaining two being Henry V and Henry VI who between them ruled until 1461. Although historically the Yorkists ruled from 1461 to 1485 Henry VI was temporarily restored to the throne in 1470 only to be deposed again in 1471. The Tudors Although the Tudors reigned from 1485 - 1603 our story begins much earlier in the year of 1461 with a character called Owen Tudor. Owen was the source from which the Tudor dynasty would eventually spring. 1461 - 1485 saw the Yorkists Edward IV Edward V and Richard III on the throne until in 1485 the Tudor reign began with Henry VII. Henry VII was followed in the year 1509 by Henry VIII who with his six wives takes a very colourful place in history. Then came Edward VI Mary I and Elizabeth I along with Lady Jane Grey (the nine day queen) who historically gets very little mention. The Stuarts With the death of Elizabeth I 1603 heralded the beginning of the Stuarts; a royal house that was to last for over one hundred years. Here was a period that would see amongst other events; civil war a great plague the fire of London the abolition and re-introduction of the monarchy and the gunpowder plot. James I and Charles I ruled until 1649 when Parliament took over during an eleven year period which came to be known as the Commonwealth and Protectorate. The monarchy was finally restored in 1660 with the crowning of Charles II. The Hanoverians From George I to the accession of Queen Victoria in 1837; the Hanoverians span a period of 123 years. A fairly stable period with five kings one of whom (George III) was to be the longest reigning king in British history. We start our visit in 1714 with a German who is 52nd in line to the throne and who became monarch without being able to speak a single word of English! 1727 sees George II come to the thrown; his reign was to last until 1760 when George III's 60 year rule began. George IV was crowned in 1820 followed ten years later by the last of the Hanoverians William IV. Modern Monarchy From her accession to the throne in 1837 to her death in 1901 Queen Victoria was to reign for 64 years. In contrast Edward VII her successor was to be king for only 10 years. The first of the Windsor's; George V despite being a German prince was to be monarch throughout the First World War and up to his eventual death in 1936 at the age of 70. 1936 was to see his son and successor Edward VIII abdicated as a result of his love for divorcee Wallace Simpson in his place his brother Albert was crowned George VI. Albert was the first royal to marry a commoner since Henry VIII.
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