Movies Logo
January 1, 2006

Season 4

01. Bread, Beer and Salt

With industrialisation, there were more mouths in towns and cities to feed and fewer men left to work the land. So how did food production keep up?

30min
January 1, 2006

02. Building Europe

How did the building trade keep up with the demand for materials during the expansion of the Industrial Revolution, and what do oranges have to do with it?

30min
January 1, 2006

03. The City

Cities were traditionally developed around water until the railway age expanded their boundaries. As the population grew, how did they cope?

30min
January 1, 2006

04. Cotton, Linen and Rope

For centuries craftsmen and women turned natural fibres into clothes. Ronald Topp explores what happened when machines began to replace manual labour.

30min
January 1, 2006

05. Eiffel's Tower

Eiffel was the world's greatest exponent of the use of iron in construction, creating the his famous Tower in 1889. How did engineering in iron reach such heights?

30min
January 1, 2006

06. Exploding Engines

Ronald Top examines the beginnings of motor cars. Benz and Daimler were early pioneers, but prior to that there were attempts at steam-powered road vehicles.

30min
January 1, 2006

07. High Fliers

Flight has always been humanity's dream. Ronald Top discovers that thanks to some paper thrown onto a fire, a duck, a cock and a sheep, it was made possible.

30min
January 1, 2006

08. Perfect Porcelain

Ronald Topp investigates the new techniques and ways of working that turned local potteries into an international industry.

30min
January 1, 2006

09. Steaming up the Alps

Ronald Top examines how railways conquered the mountains, with a little help from George Stevenson. He's in the Alps to see how funicular railways work.

30min
January 1, 2006

10. Swedish Waterways

Waterways are flourishing in Europe, but how is it that a system designed for 17th-century trade is still viable in the 21st? Ronald Topp finds out.

30min
January 1, 2006