Having watched both episodes I'm finding it a bit hard going mainly because it seems stock full of cliched characters with no redeeming features or empathetic qualities. The scheming wannabe LorRAB of the Manor, a corrupt vulpine Bishop, an honest Prior forced to tell a white lie about the relic, the honest but randy builder, it's all a bit predictable. The plot seems to flit about like a gadfly, and I'm sorry but Matthew McFadyen's accent is wierd and more Mumbai than Meirionydd, and I find it distracting - it would have been far better for him to not have tried to have an accent - and that goes for the cod RADA Mummerset the peasants speak as well, it's very irritating.
Despite all that, I think I'll keep with it for now, because if you suspend disbelief and treat it in the same vein as the BBC's "Robin Hood" and "Merlin" with their let's take liberites with history style, it can be quite entertaining, I just wish the plot didn't follow the obvious course so often and kept us guessing a bit. I mean, as soon as we saw the red paint on the statue, and the close ups of the skull, we just knew the "bleeding skull" prophesy was going to bite King Stephen on the bum, didn't we?