TV GUIDE : LISTINGS : ANCIENT HISTORY

We imagine our hi-tech jet age to be unimaginable event to those living two generations ago, but this series explores the amazing technology of the Classical World and asks why, with all these incredible devices, the Industrial Revolution did not happen 2000 years earlier. From computers to brain surgery, they were doing it all centuries ago.
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Ancient Discoveries: Machines III

Ancient Discoveries: Machines III

Mon October 20th at 5:00am

Mon October 20th at 3:00pm

Mon October 27th at 3:00pm

Tue October 28th at 5:00am

One thousand years ago, as Europe languished in the dark ages, China occupied a position at the very forefront of technology and innovation. While the European Renaissance occupies a firm place the historical understanding of most people, its Chinese counterpart has received comparatively little attention.

 

The innovations of Leonardo da Vinci, Columbus and Renoir have been explored in countless texts and films, yet most commentators have glossed over the achievements of Su Song, the legendary figure who had spearheaded the Chinese Renaissance five hundred years earlier.

 

This programme sets out to redress the historical imbalance. For the first time, we reveal the remarkable story of how China created a myriad of ingenious devices including cosmic machines able to collect data on the stars, hydraulic hammers, water-controlled clocks and even paper.

 

We discover that ancient China was an industrial superpower, armed with devices such as ‘heaven carts’ able to drill down deep underground, geared milling machines and mass production plants powered by water. Incredibly, unlike the ancient Egyptians, the Chinese developed their inventions with an eye for safety. Sophisticated mining props were designed to prevent cave-ins, while ancient ‘carburettors’ were employed to control volatile natural gas. Indeed, Chinese inventors are even credited with designing the world’s first earthquake detector.

 

We embark upon an epic journey across all of China, meeting the leading historians and model-makers who have kept tales of ancient China alive. We visit a reconstruction of an ancient Chinese iron furnace, where we unravel insights into how the Chinese created a forty-ton iron artefact five centuries before the West discovered cast-iron technology. Most impressively of all, we meet the leading clay expert Professor Ye Hongming, who has spent a lifetime seeking to discover the secrets of ancient China’s vast terracotta army.

 

This pioneering documentary seeks to lift the centuries-old veil on China’s greatest inventions, revealing how many of the West’s modern-day inventions owe an extraordinary debt to ancient China’s greatest minds.