1. In the first brilliant instalment
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2. of this soon-to-be
award-winning series,
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3. I showed you - for the first time
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4. and better than anyone else -
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5. how humankind dragged itself
out of caveman times,
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6. invented farming, thinking
and sand triangles,
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7. and eventually founded
the brand-new city of Ancient Rome.
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8. But that wasn't the end of
the story, obviously,
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9. because it was only Episode One.
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10. There was no denying man had come
an incredible distance,
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11. but could he come even further,
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12. or was he spent
and in need of a lie-down?
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13. To reach the next level,
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14. humanoid kind would need
to believe in something
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15. bigger than man himself.
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16. Bigger even than elephant itself.
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17. In this episode, I'll see how
humankind found religion,
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18. and we'll settle an argument
that has raged for centuries.
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19. Which is better,
the Bible or the Korun?
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20. The Koran.
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21. So, that one?
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22. It all happened right here,
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23. on the only planet
still worth fighting for.
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24. This is Cunk on Earth.
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25. The time is half past
Rome o'clock BC.
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26. The Romanite Empire
is at its most biggest.
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27. But despite the fancy
columns and mosaics,
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28. there was an emptiness
at the heart of Roman culture.
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29. Holding endless wine-fuelled orgies
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30. in cramped vomitoriums
is all very well
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31. but, eventually,
you need something more.
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32. And also, a mop.
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33. Humans craved enlighten-ingment.
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34. To find it, they'd need a spiritual
role model, an icon,
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35. an almost Christ-like figure.
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36. And as luck would have it,
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37. someone fitting that bill
was about to arrive.
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38. None other than Mr Jesus Christ.
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39. He was born in a humble stable
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40. which, ironically, isn't
a stable environment for a baby,
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41. unless it's a baby donkey which,
if records are to be believed,
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42. Jesus wasn't. In fact, as this
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43. actual painting makes clear,
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44. when Christ was born, he had a
magic flaming circle on his head,
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45. which would have set fire to all
the hay and pubes as he came out.
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46. Don't worry, I'm doing Islam later.
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47. Jesus was born Jewish,
but soon converted to carpentry,
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48. as he followed his dad into the
primitive chair and table industry.
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49. What's ironic about Jesus Christ
becoming a carpenter
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50. was he was actually named after
the two words you're most likely
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51. to shout after hitting your thumb
with a hammer.
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52. Scholars believe he was
a real historical figure,
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53. like Justin Timberlake or Garfield.
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54. Whether or not they think he was
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55. the actual son of God
who performed miracles,
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56. like walking on wine
or helping a deaf man see...
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57. .. they all agree he preached
tolerance and forgiveness -
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58. a message so important, his most
ardent followers would eventually
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59. start killing anyone
who didn't want to hear it.
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60. Little wonder
this radicalised woodsmith
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61. scared the Roman authorities.
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62. They considered Jesus so dangerous,
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63. they had him crucified.
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64. And not just a little,
but all the way,
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65. to death.
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66. Just imagine Christ's
conflicted emotions.
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67. He'd been sent to Earth to save
mankind and, yet, here he was,
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68. enduring the physical agony
of being nailed to a cross,
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69. while also knowing what a
great logo it would make
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70. for his long-term campaign.
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71. Jesus was killed because people
didn't like what he was saying,
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72. so could you call him the first
celebrity victim of cancel culture?
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73. I think cancel culture
would sort of require
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74. the idea that people...
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75. .. really saw Jesus
as standing for something,
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76. and they were sure they knew
what it was. Oh, no, sorry.
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77. Yeah? That wasn't a question.
I'm literally asking if
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78. you could call him the first
celebrity victim of cancel culture
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79. for our show. Down that lens, there.
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80. Just, you know,
it's for a credit sequence
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81. with punchy sound bites in it.
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82. Off you go.
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83. Down that lens.
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84. OK, down this lens? Yeah.
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85. You might even say Jesus was
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86. the first celebrity victim of
cancel culture.
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87. Brilliant, thank you.
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88. But incredibly, just when it seemed
the life of Christ was over,
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89. he respawned, danced up a hill and
leapt all the way up into heaven,
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90. breaking all world records for
a standing jump in the process.
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91. During his lifetime,
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92. Jesus only had 12 followers,
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93. fewer even than my Uncle Steve's
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94. uninspiring Instagram account.
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95. But that all changed once his
teachings began to spread,
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96. in the form of the written word.
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97. After he died,
Jesus came back to Earth
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98. in the form of a book, didn't he?
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99. Why do Christians call that
special book The Bib-le?
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100. The Bible.
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101. Is that how it's pronounced?
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102. I've literally never heard anyone
say it before. How do you say it?
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103. Bible. So, why is it spelt Bib-le?
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104. Cos I've seen it written down -
B-I-B-L-E. BIBle. Yeah, Bible.
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105. Christ's message was spread
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106. far and wide by the apostles,
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107. almost 2,000 years before
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108. the release of Belgian techno anthem
Pump Up the Jam.
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109. Pump Up the Jam
by Technotronic
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110. But not everyone appreciated
the swinging sound of Christianity.
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111. Especially in Rome,
where Christians were persecuted,
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112. which is Latin for shat on.
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113. And if you were a Christian
back then,
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114. perhaps the worst place to find
yourself was the Colosseum,
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115. an area of misery
on a par with Birmingham.
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116. It was here the Romans first threw
Christians to the lions,
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117. possibly to see if their pacifist
message would rub off on the beasts
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118. and make them less angry and bitey.
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119. If a Christian won, right,
and ate a lion,
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120. would they then go forward
to the next round?
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121. You know, and would they have to eat
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122. something else,
like a whole horse or something?
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123. Do you know, there's not
a lot of evidence
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124. that they threw very many
Christians to the lions.
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125. Just for this, can you pretend that
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126. loads of Christians were thrown
to the lions? Really?
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127. But that's wrong. Do you think the
Christians would forgive the lions
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128. for eating them, while it was
happening? They probably didn't
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129. blame the lions.
I mean, a lion was only doing
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130. what lions naturally do and...
Do we know how the lions felt
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131. about only ever being given
one thing to eat?
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132. It can't have been fun,
can it, you know?
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133. Imagine if every day, your lunch was
just screaming and wouldn't stop.
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134. That's going to have an impact on
your mental health.
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135. The mental health of lions?
Yeah. Mm.
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136. Incredibly, within
a few hundred years,
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137. the Romans had become
Christians themselves.
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138. But why?
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139. Tragically, none of
the people involved
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140. in Ancient Rome
are still alive today.
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141. So, to find out why that happened,
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142. we have to sift through
ancient texts,
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143. like you do at the end of
a relationship.
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144. Thanks to the modern science
of reading, we now know
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145. the Roman Emperor Constantine -
whose name means constant,
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146. or unchanging - one day unexpectedly
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147. changed to Christianity.
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148. Soon, all the Romans had converted
to Christianity.
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149. And shortly after that,
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150. they stopped throwing Christians
to the lions altogether.
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151. No-one knows why.
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152. The Romans had found God
almost overnight.
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153. What is it about religion that can
win us over so unexpectedly?
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154. Why do humans need to believe in
something bigger than ourselves?
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155. Is it so we don't feel quite so fat?
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156. Well, I think the sense of purpose
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157. and value constitutes a very
important element of a happy life.
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158. But it must help, if you think
how big the world is,
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159. suddenly, you feel a lot slimmer.
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160. Quite possibly.
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161. Some people have a sudden
religious conversion, don't they?
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162. My mate Paul was driving
to Winchester
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163. when a lorry jack-knifed
in front of him,
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164. and he was hurtling towards it
and everything went slow-mo.
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165. And Paul, who's never been
religious, spoke to Jesus and said,
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166. "I promise if I survive this,
I'll believe in you."
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167. And he did survive, but he fractured
his skull and broke both his legs.
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168. Why did Jesus do that to him?
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169. Well, you've raised
a very significant question
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170. about the nature of providence.
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171. Have I? You have, indeed.
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172. If we believe in a good God,
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173. why is there so much evil
in the world?
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174. Now, your friend... Paul.
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175. .. Paul, his accident,
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176. you know, to what extent
can one blame God for that?
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177. See, Paul never forgave him.
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178. He said, "If I ever see Christ
again, he's a dead man."
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179. Right.
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180. Rome had become a beacon
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181. of Christian faith, but disaster
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182. was just around the corner
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183. because the Romans had converted
to a religion of peace,
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184. just in time to have their arse
handed to them
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185. by some people who mainly believed
in hammers and smashing.
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186. They were the Vandals,
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187. an ancient group notorious for their
appetite for destruction,
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188. like Guns N' Roses.
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189. Right now, I'm standing on -
and also in - modern Rome
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190. which, by an incredible coincidence,
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191. is on the same site
as the ancient one.
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192. And it's here the Vandals'
terrifying assault
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193. on the city took place.
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194. The Vandal hordes would have
swept through there,
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195. past the coffee shop
with the rude staff,
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196. all the way down here, killing,
looting and burning as they went.
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197. We also know that
traffic intersection
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198. wouldn't have been
there at that time,
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199. so they could have safely ignored
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200. any associated road signals
during their invasion.
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201. Also, that pizza place
wouldn't have been open
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202. because they think the rampage
happened on a Sunday.
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203. And according to TripAdvisor,
it closes over the weekend
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204. and isn't suitable for
large groups, anyway.
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205. But everything else
you see around here
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206. would have been
completely destroyed.
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207. By the time the Vandals rolled out
of this part of the city
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208. and into the next one, they'd
left nothing but destruction
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209. and horseshit in their wake.
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210. Rome had been sacked, destroyed,
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211. properly fucked to bits.
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212. And once Rome fell, the entire
Roman Empire went kaput.
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213. The grim period that followed
became known as the Dark-ages.
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214. Ow, shit!
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215. Dark-ages sort of sounds like
a symptom, doesn't it?
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216. You know, maybe like a plague thing.
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217. Do you mean the Dark Ages?
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218. Oh, right. Is that what it is?
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219. If you... if you mean
an old-fashioned term
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220. for the early Middle Ages. Right.
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221. Except we don't really use that term
any more. Oh, do we not?
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222. Well, it has very negative
connotations of being a dark
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223. and ignorant and benighted time
and, um... Which it was.
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224. Not really.
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225. It had fantastic thinkers
and historians
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226. and artists and authors.
But it was a bit...
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227. .. shit.
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228. The Dark Ages was a depressing era,
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229. during which the whole of Europe
fumbled about in the dark,
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230. banging its shins on stuff and
getting all diseases up its bum.
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231. It must have properly
done people's heads in.
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232. Whenever you see medieval times,
there's this sort of annoying,
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233. Heigh-nonny-no music
playing constantly.
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234. Yeah, pretty much.
You know that... that music?
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235. You know, that sort of...
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236. Yeah.
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237. Yep. Yeah, there's a lot of that.
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238. Where's that sound coming from?
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239. Couldn't they switch it off?
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240. The Dark Ages were a tragedy
for human progress
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241. that put back the roll-out of 5G
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242. by hundreds of years.
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243. So, we've had the Dark Ages.
Has there been a Light Ages?
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244. Well, the claim was made by people
in the early modern period,
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245. the so-called Renaissance,
that theirs was the age of light.
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246. And then, of course, we
have a whole era later
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247. that people called
the Enlightenment.
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248. Is that in this episode,
or will that come up later?
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249. Well, I'm guessing
it will come up later.
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250. Which episode are we in now?
Erm... I...
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251. Probably something about
the Middle Ages.
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252. Yeah, but is it, like,
Episode Three or Episode Four?
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253. I'm afraid I'm not sure. We're
both just lost here, aren't we?
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254. This is fucking awful.
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255. But luckily, Europe wasn't the only
country having a history back then.
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256. Boffins now believe other countries
such as South America and Asia
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257. were having their own histories too,
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258. and they were keeping civilisation
going in their own funny, exotic,
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259. foreign little ways.
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260. This is the city of Chichen Itza,
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261. built by the Mayan people
in what is now Mexico.
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262. And this is its centrepiece,
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263. the Temple of Kukulkan.
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264. If you were brought here
1,000 years ago,
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265. chances are you were
about to be sacrificed
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266. to appease Chaac, the Mayan god
of rain. Today, you're perhaps
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267. more likely to be dropping by
as part of a pleasant day trip out
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268. from the nearby holiday resort
of Tulum.
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269. That's where I'm staying,
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270. at the five-star
Casa de Lujo Hotel and Spa.
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271. This all-inclusive resort,
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272. nestling on the picture-perfect
Tulum coastline, really is
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273. the last word in luxury.
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274. All the rooms are en-suite,
and with this stunning ocean view,
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275. it's hard to think of a reason
to get out of bed.
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276. Apart, of course, from the beautiful
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277. beach and constant sunshine
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278. right here on your doorstep.
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279. If the sunny skies get too much,
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280. there are three pools
to cool off in,
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281. including one for adults only.
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282. There's plenty for
the little ones too,
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283. with the Turtle Club giving them
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284. the holiday of their allegedly
important little lives so far.
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285. And with five on-site restaurants
to choose from,
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286. you'll never get bored of the food.
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287. If all that wasn't enough,
the stunning Inspiration Spa
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288. offers world-class wellness options,
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289. from toenail filing
to vigorous rubbing.
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290. And when the sun goes down,
the nightlife begins.
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291. With local spirits, wines and beers
all included,
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292. there's no reason to hold back.
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293. With sunshine all day
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294. and partying all night,
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295. you won't want to go home.
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296. Philomena stayed five nights at
the Casa de Lujo Hotel and Spa.
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297. All-inclusive prices start at
£200 per person per night,
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298. based on two sharing,
VAT not included.
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299. Terms and conditions apply.
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300. While the Mayans worshipped
their gods,
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301. thousands of miles away in Arabia,
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302. a prophet named Muhammad was
founding another religion, Islam.
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303. Apparently, Islam can
be a sensitive topic,
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304. and the producers say if I don't
follow this script to the letter,
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305. there's a chance I'll cause
a serious international incident.
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306. That's quite a blow, to be honest.
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307. It's all right, I'll busk it.
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308. So, what can we say about Islam?
Well, for one thing...
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309. I, for one, don't think any of that
is controversial at all.
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310. Islam represented a radical break
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311. from previous religions
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312. because the buildings
it happened inside
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313. were a slightly different shape.
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314. It expanded across the globe
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315. almost as quickly as Fox News
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316. thinks it still does today.
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317. It was an apparently irresistible
spread, like Nutella.
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318. The Koran said, accumulating
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319. knowledge is a worthy act.
So, Islamic mega-nerds created
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320. the first universities
and libraries,
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321. containing all the world's knowledge
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322. which, at that point, could probably
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323. fit into one pamphlet, to be fair.
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324. Mm.
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325. Because they needed more knowledge
to fill their libraries,
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326. Muslim boffins got into maths,
calculus, geometry
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327. and, of course, the most
Islamic sounding one - al-gebra.
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328. Not to be outdone, Christianity
was also expanding,
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329. thanks to missionaries.
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330. The missionaries were known for
their position,
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331. which was that the big man,
God, was on top
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332. and the rest of us had to lie back
and take it.
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333. Sent by the Pope, missionaries
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334. took the Bible and the cross
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335. and set out from here,
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336. painstakingly making their way
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337. right across the map,
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338. and eventually ending up
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339. all the way over here, in Ireland,
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340. where they spread the word
by reading aloud from the...
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341. Hold on, I forgot the book.
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342. Travel in those days
was exceptionally perilous
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343. and gruelling, so the early
missionaries wouldn't have wanted
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344. to undertake their journey twice,
any more than I do.
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345. But once they arrived
at their destination,
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346. what they brought would change the
world forever. The Bible and the...
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347. Who moved the cross?
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348. Christianity was the fidget spinner
of medieval times,
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349. a huge craze that would
last forever.
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350. It led to a boom in
religious iconography.
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351. Images of Jesus were
everywhere you looked.
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352. In medieval times, there were
lots of paintings of Jesus.
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353. How did he find the time
to pose for the artists?
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354. What was his availability like?
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355. Well, he was everywhere,
always... Mm.
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356. .. figuratively speaking.
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357. So, they're painting him
from memory,
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358. like someone describing an intruder
to a police sketch artist,
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359. but an intruder who's
the son of God?
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360. In all paintings of Jesus, he comes
in two modes, doesn't he?
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361. He's either a baby
or he's being crucified.
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362. Are there any paintings where
he is being crucified as a baby?
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363. No. No. Right, they missed an
opportunity there, didn't they,
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364. to play the sympathy card?
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365. Did Jesus ever paint himself?
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366. Uh... It...
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367. I don't believe so. Certainly,
there's no record of that happening.
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368. Well, can we be sure? You know,
he might not have signed it.
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369. He was quite modest, wasn't he?
Well, he was modest in parts.
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370. He did also say he was
the son of God.
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371. Yeah, he could have kept that quiet.
Then he wouldn't have been killed.
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372. Yeah! What an idiot.
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373. Of course, Jesus wasn't the only
deity to inspire art.
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374. There are lots of paintings of
Muhammad, too,
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375. but our producer had to sign a form
promising not to show them.
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376. By the 11th century,
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377. most European countries had
converted to Christianity,
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378. but it didn't stop them constantly
going to war with each other.
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379. Then, in 1095, Pope Urban Two
persuaded them to stop fighting,
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380. come together in harmony and
attack the Muslims instead.
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381. The European Kings agreed
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382. and launched a sort of
armed charity drive
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383. to forcibly provide
the Islamic world with crucifixes.
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384. They called it Crus-Aid.
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385. Soon, armies from Europe
headed east,
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386. hoping to dish out a righteous
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387. international kicking.
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388. So, during the Crusades,
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389. the Crusaders went all the way
to Jerusalem in armour.
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390. That sounds really uncomfortable.
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391. Was it sponsored?
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392. It was sponsored by the church,
you could say... Yeah.
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393. .. because these expeditions
had to be funded. Yeah.
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394. My mate Paul did a 30-mile
sponsored walk to Harrogate,
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395. dressed as Spider-Man
for Help For Heroes.
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396. And on the day, he had terrible
diarrhoea, but he soldiered on.
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397. And it was one of the most noble,
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398. but disgusting things
I've ever seen.
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399. Eventually, the organisers had
to intervene, but he raised £368.
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400. You know, the Crusaders
never did that, did they?
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401. No.
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402. In 1099, the Christians captured
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403. Jerusalem. But then, they made
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404. a tactical mistake -
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405. they went home without it.
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406. So, the Muslims, under their leader,
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407. Saladin, crusaded right back,
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408. retaking Jerusalem in the process.
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409. By now, everyone was really into
the Crusades,
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410. so they started
holding them regularly,
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411. fighting back and forth to see which
side would win Jerusalem this year.
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412. The Crusades sound very violent.
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413. Why can't the religions all learn
to live together in peace,
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414. like they do in Ireland?
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415. I think if you find someone who
knows the answer to that question,
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416. then you should definitely
publicise it as soon as possible.
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417. Right, yeah, OK.
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418. But while Christians and Muslims
came to blows,
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419. one man miles away
decided he'd show them what
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420. proper warmongering looked like.
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421. That man was the leader of
the Mongols, Genghis Khan.
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422. In Mongol, Khan means king, and
Genghis means... something else.
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423. These days, Genghis Khan
comes up in conversation
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424. less often than Dennis Quaid,
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425. but back then, he was the
most feared man on Earth.
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426. Genghis and his Mongols
went mongoling free
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427. across much of Europe and Asia.
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428. Millions of thousands of people
were mercilessly slaughtered.
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429. Many of them got their heads
chopped off.
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430. Others had their legs hacked off
first, then an arm or something,
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431. and then maybe their face,
which was probably still screaming
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432. as it flew across the hut,
or wherever they lived.
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433. Then the invaders might have taken
the carcasses and hacked them up
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434. and boiled them into soup and carved
all the discarded pelvis bones
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435. into big ladles to drink it with,
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436. and then sat around the fireplace
slurping their gory soup
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437. and laughing and blowing off.
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438. Honestly, it was seriously
out of order.
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439. How much blood, in terms of pints...
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440. .. was spilt because of Genghis Khan?
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441. Well, you'd have to somehow know
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442. the number of people killed.
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443. Right. There were stories of
a few hundred Mongol soldiers
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444. dispatching perhaps
up to a million people.
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445. How many pints are in a person?
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446. I think eight. So, minimum,
eight million pints? Yes.
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447. And, of course, they didn't have
blood banks back then, did they?
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448. What a waste!
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449. With all that going on
on their doorstep,
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450. is it any wonder people in Europe
took to building fortified homes?
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451. The answer is no.
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452. Standing here now
in... whatever castle this is,
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453. I can't help but wonder what life
must've been like in medieval times,
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454. because medieval times
aren't happening any more,
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455. so wondering is my only option.
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456. But just imagine it.
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457. Here, in the central atrium,
the tables laid out for a feast.
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458. People are bashing tankards
together and laughing.
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459. The table is bedecked with haunches
of venison, blackbird pie,
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460. roast goose inside a pig.
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461. The full works.
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462. A little bowl of plums there.
I think that's a side dish.
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463. Over here, peasants are
toing and froing in their finery.
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464. Oh, a knight... clanking by
in his armour.
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465. In this corner, someone's playing
medieval flute music.
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466. And in front of that, a jester,
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467. jumping up and down
in his little bells.
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468. There's a big sort of
ogre thing watching...
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469. .. enjoying the sight of that.
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470. Then, up at this end, the King's
sitting on his throne
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471. next to the Queen,
a bishop and a rook.
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472. They're watching Merlin
getting his head chopped off,
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473. which rolls all the way across
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474. the floor... to there,
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475. where some wild boar gobble it up.
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476. Ugh! Ugh, that is disgusting!
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477. You're lucky you can't see that.
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478. Suddenly, the gaiety's interrupted
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479. when the glass in a window shatters
and an arrow flies into the room.
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480. It thuds into this wall, right in
the middle of the Bayeux Tapestry.
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481. Gasps ring out
and give way to whispers,
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482. as Thomas A Becket - that's me -
pulls the arrow from the wall.
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483. Hold on.
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484. Oh, Christ.
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485. The arrow has a message on it.
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486. Thomas carefully takes the message
off, discards the arrow...
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487. Oh, fuck! Sorry.
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488. .. unfurls the message
and reads it aloud.
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489. It's from Robin Hood...
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490. .. threatening revenge on
the entire Round Table
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491. for what he did to Gandalf.
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492. Another gasp, the jester faints,
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493. worried murmurs fill the air and
get louder and turn to screams.
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494. It's chaos.
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495. The flute goes mental.
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496. A dancing bear howls in anguish.
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497. Someone starts loading pigs
into a catapult.
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498. A Space Invader
floats across the room,
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499. shitting a harpsichord made of
glass horses onto the floor.
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500. Finally, up at this end,
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501. the King stands up,
bashing his gavel.
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502. He shouts, "Order, order!"
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503. But in a deep man's voice,
with a medieval accent.
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504. The castle falls silent.
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505. You can hear a pin drop...
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506. .. but not literally.
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507. "Off with his head!"
shouts the King.
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508. And that breaks the ice.
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509. Everything's OK again.
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510. The jester's back up on his feet,
the music's up and running.
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511. Everyone's merrily
knocking back the mead.
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512. Life in the castle
is back to normal.
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513. Just in time for everyone to
suddenly drop dead from plague.
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514. Anyway, that's what life was like
in my castle.
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515. Have you ever really thought
about yours?
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516. But humans couldn't simply
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517. cower behind thick walls while
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518. holy wars waged outside forever.
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519. Religion was supposed to
unite humankind
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520. in harmony and bland smiling,
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521. but it had mainly succeeded in
tearing it apart,
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522. like a bear in a maternity ward.
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523. But little did this church,
and others like it,
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524. know that a challenger
was just around the corner.
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525. Next time, we'll see how
a new generation of artists
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526. and brainiacs arose
and challenged God to a fight
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527. during what historians are already
calling the Renaissance.
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528. So, is this painting actually good,
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529. or is it one of those things that
we only think is good
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530. because we're told it's good,
like seafood?
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