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  • 2004-09-27T20:30:00Z on BBC Four
  • 1h
  • 9h 20m (10 episodes)
  • United Kingdom
  • English
  • Documentary
A gripping anatomy of some of the most important days in history, hour by hour as they unfolded. Recreated by using first-hand accounts, forensic detail, and personal records, the programmes included the moon landings, the assassination of the Romanovs, Hiroshima, the freeing of Nelson Mandela, the assassination of JFK and Chernobyl. Days That Shook The World is a British documentary television series that first aired on September 17, 2003, is currently in its third season, and airs on BBC, The History Channel and Viasat History. The series was also released on DVD by the Polish edition of Newsweek in 2007. It is currently being shown on Discovery Channel UK on weekdays at 4pm.

10 episodes

6 May 1937 And 27 January 1986

Two traumatic air disasters highlighting the human cost of aviation: the transatlantic crossing of the luxurious airship Hindenburg ends in disaster while tragic events accompany the launch of the Challenger space shuttle.

2004-10-04T20:30:00Z

2x02 The Christmas Truce

2x02 The Christmas Truce

  • 2004-10-04T20:30:00Z1h

25 December 1914

The first Christmas of World War 1 bore witness to an incredible phenomenon. A spontaneous truce broke out in the murderous trenches, led by the gun-fodder troops of each side and reluctantly followed by, for once, important officers and generals.

19 May 1536 and 10 December 1936

The Story of two English kings whose private affairs become national events - how the Queen of England gambled everything only to end her life on the scaffold and how the King put his love for a divorcee before his duty to the nation.

2004-10-18T20:30:00Z

2x04 Attack on Pearl Harbor

2x04 Attack on Pearl Harbor

  • 2004-10-18T20:30:00Z1h

7 December 1941

The devastating pre-emptive strike on the American fleet in Hawaii that caught the USA sleeping was a strategic triumph for the Japanese. With eye-witness accounts and reconstructions, we relive the events that propelled America into the second World War.

9 May and 28 August 1963

The intriguing stories behind two of Britain's most audacious robberies centres on the parts played by the central characters mastermind criminals, victims, a getaway driver and the King himself.

22 August 1962 and 20 July 1944

Two assassination attempts that, if successful, might have changed the course of history: the Algerian Secret Army's attempt to shoot President de Gaulle of France and Colonel von Stauffenberg's planting of a bomb under Hitler's desk.

12 April 1633 and 12 April 1961

Two days on which science challenged the conventional view of our place in the universe: April 12, 1633 when Galileo stands trial for heresy for claiming the sun and not the Earth is the centre of the known universe, and exactly 328 years to the day later (1961) when Soviet cosmonaut Major Yuri Gagarin steps from the Earth into space.

September 1824 and 20 November 1953

Two archaeological 'discoveries' which profoundly altered our understanding of the natural world: the first unearthing of the bones of an ancient giant reptile, and the astonishing discovery of the 'missing link' between ape and man - soon to be revealed as an elaborate hoax.

14 April 1865 and 19 April 1995

Eye-witness accounts, key figures and court transcripts are used to retell tow terrorist acts which shook America. The killing of the President and the bombing of a federal office over a century apart were both committed by Americans seemingly at war with their own country.

Season Finale

2004-12-13T21:30:00Z

2x10 Cold War Spies: Gary Powers/Rudolf Abel

Season Finale

2x10 Cold War Spies: Gary Powers/Rudolf Abel

  • 2004-12-13T21:30:00Z1h

1 May 1960 and 18 February 1962

These two stories from the height of the Cold War illustrate the mistrust and suspicion of an era. A spy plane shot down from the skies over Russia and the eventual dramatic exchange of the pilot for a Russian spy across a bridge in Berlin.

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