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  • Wow, what's that? A roundhouse I think. I wonder who lived here?

  • I don't know, maybe we should go take a look inside?

  • Can I help? Are you lost?

  • We were just looking around and we thought we'd take a look inside?

  • Come and sit down and warm yourself by my fire.

  • Why have our clothes have changed to these dresses?

  • They aren't dresses, child, they're tunics. We make all our clothes you know,

  • out of wool and leather, and some animal skins.

  • Why is it so smoky in here?

  • Well, because we keep our fire burning all the time.

  • It keeps us warm and it stops the roof from getting too damp. We can cook on it and

  • we can put a pot over it, and that helps to keep our food warm all day.

  • Isn't it dangerous to have a fire in a house made of wood?

  • No because this roof allows enough air to keep the fire going but not get out of control.

  • We do have to keep a watch on it though and that's the responsibility of all the family.

  • Where are the rooms?

  • We don't have rooms in here, it's plenty warm enough. We don't have servants and

  • we don't have animals in here either. We all live together as a family.

  • Where do you, you know, go to the toilet?

  • In a pot of course! And we empty it in a ditch a fair way from our home, because it

  • can get a bit smelly.

  • How many of you live here? My husband and my sons live here with me.

  • All of us built this house.

  • So you built this whole house by yourselves?

  • The whole community helped to build this house, and all of the other houses.

  • How did you build so many houses? Did you just use your hands?

  • Of course not. We have tools we can use. We've got metal tools made of bronze.

  • Bronze is made of tin and copper. We get that from mines in nearby Wales and from Cornwall.

  • So what's this house made of then?

  • A mixture of things. Our roof is thatched which means it's made from reeds that we get from

  • the nearby river. We grow ash trees that form the poles that support the thatch.

  • We use hazel trees to build the walls.

  • I like your necklace, what's it made of?

  • Polished stones and precious things that we find. Would you like me to show you how to make one?

  • Yeah! Come on.

  • I'm going to teach you how to make a bow drill. You need to find a

  • really good stout branch. There's a hole through in that end and a hole through

  • in that end. You need to put a piece of leather thong through those holes and

  • You make a nice knot. This is what we use to wedge the stone into while we're

  • drilling. Put your drill bit in the middle of the stone. Wrap the bow drill

  • around the drill bit like that. You turn the drill bit using the bow drill and

  • you'll find that you quite quickly get a hole. It's not hard work at all.

  • Yep, you're getting it. You're getting there. Not quite through. Yeah, that's it.

  • Let's have a look.

  • Put the stone on to the leather thong, and there you have your necklace.

  • That looks beautiful, but I think it's time for you to go home now, don't you?

  • Thanks for showing us around your house. Thanks for the necklace.

Wow, what's that? A roundhouse I think. I wonder who lived here?

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