

Will this horrible snob sideline our working class hero? And what will happen to Peggy, (James), the archeologist who finds the first piece of gold? The latter wants to keep Brown away from the burial chamber.

Instead, the focus shifts to tensions between Brown and the pompous Charles Phillips (Ken Stott), brought in by the Office of Public Works to oversee the dig. It seems for a moment as if the connection between Pretty and Brown will lead to romance. Brown unearths a ship, full of a sixth-century chieftain’s prized possessions, which delights Pretty’s precocious son, Robert (Archie Barnes uncannily sweet). New West End Company BRANDPOST | PAID CONTENTĮdith’s hunch proves correct.If you want to be the first to receive the latest news from Malta, download the Newsbook APP here. This eventually became the still to-go-to reference book on Maltese prehistoric monuments, ‘The Prehistoric Antiquities of the Maltese Islands’ by J.D Evans (1971). Some of the books by Stuart Piggott found-at the NMA reference-library | Photo credit: National Museum of Archaeology, MaltaĪccording to the NMA, Piggott was to leave a more significant mark on Maltese archaeology as one of the external experts on the commission supervising the defining study, Malta Ancient Monuments Survey which recorded Malta’s prehistoric monuments, excavations and objects found there. One of the characters in the film The Dig (which is based on the true story of the Sutton Hoo excavation) currently streaming on Netflix, is archaeologist Stuart Piggott, played by actor Ben Chaplin.īut what connection did the real-life Piggott have with Malta?Ī very interesting post on the National Museum of Archaeology (NMA), Malta’s Facebook Page speaks of a short stop by Piggott and scientist and archaeologist Glyn Daniel in Malta in 1943, en route from Cairo to Algiers, where the two “spent two ‘blissful’ days inspecting megalithic monuments and rock-cut tombs on the island, several spattered with bits of German and Italian aircraft” (Source: Roger Mercer, British Academy 1998).
