Appealing to history buffs and dedicated ramblers alike, in this new three-part series Tony Robinson embarks on spectacular walks through some of Britainís most historic landscapes in search of the richest stories from Britainís past.
Walking from the stone circles of Avebury to Stonehenge, Tony explores the origins, the latest theories, and the connections between Europeís finest collection of Neolithic monuments.
The Lake District is one of the countryís most popular tourist destinations. But few see just how much the conquering Roman army made their mark on the stunning landscape.
Tony walks a stretch of the fabulous Cornish coast, discovering why and how smuggling was the biggest industry in the area for decades, back in the eighteenth century.
The Liverpool-Leeds canal is the longest single man-made waterway in the country; Tony travels the first 50 miles from Liverpool to the iconic Pier at Wigan, uncovering the extraordinary stories from its Georgian and Victorian origins.
From just north of the Scottish border, Tony Robinson sets off across the ancient kingdom of Northumbria which in the 7th century stretched from Edinburgh to York, on the trail of the truth about St. Cuthbert, the greatest saint of his time.
Tony takes in the wonderful seascapes of the North Norfolk coast, determined to discover how the area remained so blissfully unchanged when the Victorian age of industry and railways transformed lives and landscapes across the country.