A World Turned Upside Down
Dr Sam Willis takes the story of shipwrecks into the Georgian age when Britain began to rule the waves and disasters at sea imperilled its trading power.
Shipwrecks are the nightmare we have forgotten - the price Britain paid for ruling the waves from an island surrounded by treacherous rocks. The result is a coastline that is home to the world's highest concentration of sunken ships. But shipwrecks also changed the course of British history, helped shape our national character and drove innovations in seafaring technology, as well as gripping our imagination.
Mutiny, murder and mayhem on the high seas as Sam Willis takes the story of shipwrecks into the Georgian age when Britain first began to rule the waves. But with maritime trade driving the whole enterprise, disasters at sea imperilled all this. As key colonies were established and new territories conquered, the great sailing ships became symbols of the power of the Georgian state - and the shipwreck was to be its Achilles' heel. By literally turning this world upside down, mutinous sailors, rebellious slaves and murderous wreckers threatened to undermine Britain's ambitions and jeopardise its imperial venture.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Clips
![]()
The high drama of the shipwreck
Duration: 01:18
![]()
17th century slave ships
Duration: 04:19
![]()
The sinking of the 'Halsewell' in 1786
Duration: 01:17
![]()
The Raft of the Medusa
Duration: 01:54
Music Played
![]()
Nick Cave & Warren Ellis
Martha's Dream
![]()
Nick Cave & Warren Ellis
The Proposition #1
![]()
George Frideric Handel
Allegro From Water Music Suite No. 2
![]()
Jóhann Jóhannsson
The Rocket Builder (Io Pan!)
Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Sam Willis |
| Producer | Francis Welch |
| Director | Francis Welch |
Broadcasts
- Mon 9 Dec 201321:00
- Tue 10 Dec 201303:00
- Thu 12 Dec 201323:00
- Sat 14 Dec 201320:00
- Sun 15 Dec 201302:50
- Sat 22 Mar 201420:00
- Sun 23 Mar 201402:00
- Thu 27 Mar 201400:15
- Mon 11 Aug 201421:00
- Tue 12 Aug 201403:00
- Fri 15 Aug 201400:20
- Sat 30 Jan 201620:00
- Wed 3 Feb 201603:00
- Wed 3 Feb 201622:00
- Thu 27 Jul 201720:00
- Fri 28 Jul 201701:30
- Sat 13 Jan 201819:00
- Sun 14 Jan 201802:45
- Mon 6 May 201920:00
- Thu 9 May 201903:00
- Thu 19 Mar 202020:00
- Fri 20 Mar 202003:00
- Tue 11 Jan 202222:00
- Thu 13 Jan 202202:30
- Thu 20 Jul 202320:00
- Fri 21 Jul 202302:10
- Wed 14 May 202521:00
- Fri 16 May 202502:35





