From October 1970 until March 1988, Anglia Television opened each transmission day by pointing a camera at a silver-gilt model of a knight on horseback, sat on a turntable, rotating slowly under even studio lighting while an arrangement of Handel's Water Music played. The arrangement was by Malcolm Sargent. The model was a real trophy, originally commissioned by a Dutch firm, then bought by Anglia's chairman Lord Townshend. It had been based on a planned statue of Edward the Black Prince that was never built. So the ident was a piece of unbuilt fourteenth-century commemoration, repurposed as the herald of Sale of the Century and the regional news from Norwich. Nothing about that arrangement is rational, and that is the interesting part, because ITV in 1959 was a federation. A spread of regional companies, each holding a franchise, each running its own studios, each expected to make and broadcast its own programmes alongside a shared spine of national content. The BBC had pretended for a generation that Britain spoke with one voice; ITV was the admission that it did not. Granada had Manchester and the north, ATV had the Midlands, Tyne Tees had Newcastle, and Anglia had Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Cambridgeshire, and a clutch of counties beyond. The model was deliberately devolved. The idents were the visible face of that devolution.
What I find strange, looking back at it, is how seriously each region took the symbolic stakes. Tyne Tees stacked the letters of its name into a three-bar logo that read like a council crest. Granada gave itself a sober, modernist arrow. Anglia went further: a silver knight, in plate armour, holding a pennon, turning silently in front of you for the entire length of a Handel arrangement before any human face appeared. It was not a logo. It was a heraldic claim. The region had decided that the appropriate way to introduce itself, every weeknight at five-fifty, was to assert that it had a past worth riding through.
And the past it was claiming had nothing to do with East Anglia. The Black Prince was the heir of Edward III, his campaigns conducted mostly in Aquitaine and Castile. The trophy was Dutch in manufacture. Norwich was reaching for any medieval signifier it could find, because what mattered was the gesture, not the provenance. The knight said: we are not a suburb of London, we are a place with weight. The fact that the weight was borrowed was not the point.
This is, I think, what people miss about the regional ITV era when they get nostalgic for it. It was not authentic in any deep folkloric sense. It was a federation of mid-century boards of directors who had decided that television needed to feel rooted, and who reached for whatever heraldry, mottos, or county-council aesthetics they could borrow to perform that rootedness on screen. The performance worked because everyone participated. You watched the knight turn, and you accepted that you were in the East of England now, and that whatever followed had been chosen by people who lived nearer to you than to Television Centre.
That contract collapsed in March 1988. Lambie-Nairn redesigned Anglia's on-screen identity around a CG flag, kept the heraldic pendant but lost the knight, and over the following fifteen years the regions were merged, rebranded, and eventually subsumed into ITV plc. The trophy itself was displayed at Anglia House in Norwich, then loaned to the Museum of Norwich, then returned. There is no longer a five-fifty moment when the camera lingers on a rotating statue. There is barely a regional moment at all. The public information film grammar that surrounded the knight, the threat letters, the detector van adverts, the licence fee voiceovers, has thinned out into something more centralised and less strange.
What survives is the recording. You can watch the 1971 ident on YouTube, in colour, for the full length, and the thing that strikes me is how unhurried it is. Nearly forty seconds before the announcer speaks. A federation could afford that pace because it had nothing else to prove that night. The knight was the proof.
Sources:
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Anglia knight — Wikipedia
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Anglia — Transdiffusion Broadcasting System
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1989: Anglia TV and the ITV National Identity — Starlogged