Every single hamlet, village, town and city in the British Isles has a story of secret passages running beneath the landscape. The tales speak of hidden tunnels connecting the castle and the monastery, or the hermitage and the pub, or the church and the manor house. Often these are supposed to be escape tunnels, sometimes they are connected with smuggling or treasure, on other occasions the given reasons for their existence are somewhat salacious and scandalous.
The folklore of Britain’s subterranean landscape is ubiquitous, but is there ever any archaeological evidence for these yarns? What are the underlying truths? Can the stories ever tell us something about how people think about their communities and heritage? Dr James Wright (Triskele Heritage), is an award winning buildings archaeologist with two decades professional experience of ferreting around in people’s cellars, hunting through their attics and digging up their gardens. In this talk he hopes to find meaningful truths about how ordinary and extraordinary folk lived their lives in the mediaeval period.
This event is part of Heritage Open Days and has been funded by Leeds Civic Trust.
Leeds Central Library
Municipal Buildings
Calverley Street
Leeds
LS1 3AB
United Kingdom