Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 282,229 playable programmes from the BBC

The British Empire: Echoes of Britannia's Rule: 13: The Setting of the Sun

on BBC One London

An Imperial Story in 13 parts.

After India was granted independence from British rule in 1947 a succession of other countries pressed towards the same goal.
The pace was fastest and most furious in Africa.
In 1957 the Colonial Empire in Africa was intact - ten years later it had disappeared - except for rebel-administrated Rhodesia, and Swaziland - soon to be independent. In those ten years, 12 African States had gained their independence and joined the Commonwealth.
Where there had been little or no white settlement the process was comparatively painless, but wherever the British presence had held the balance - as between European and African in Kenya - withdrawal was to prove more difficult. In these cases, British soldiers were called in to play as vital a role in the dissolution of Empire and its transformation into a new multi-racial Commonwealth, as they had in its creation.
A BBCtv/Time-Life co-production. Line Up discussion Friday BBC2
Commentary written by James Cameron
(Cartoon reproduced by permission of Punch)

Contributors

Narrator:
Robert Hardy
Series Editor:
Max Morgan-Witts
Script Editor:
Gordon Watkins
Series Research Consultant:
Dr. Cameron Hazlehurst
Assistant Series Editor:
Dominic Flessati
Series Unit Manager:
Barry Toovey
Film Cameraman:
Butch Calderwood
Film Editor:
Colin Moffat
Commentary Writer:
James Cameron
Producer:
Anthony Isaacs

BBC One London

About BBC One

BBC One is a TV channel that started broadcasting on the 20th April 1964. It replaced BBC Television.

Appears in

Suggest an Edit

We are trying to reflect the information printed in the Radio Times magazine.

  • Press the 'Suggest an Edit' button
  • Type in any changes to the title, synopsis or contributor information using the Radio Times Style Guide for reference.
  • Click the Submit Edits button.
    Your changes will be sent for verification and if accepted, will appear in due course More