England completed their remarkable summer with a series-clinching nine-wicket victory over South Africa at the Kia Oval.
The home side took only 25 minutes to hit the 33 runs they needed for victory on the fifth morning of the third and deciding Test.
Zak Crawley ended 69 not out, with Ollie Pope unbeaten on 11 after Alex Lees was lbw on review to Kagiso Rabada for 39.
Victory was earned in little more than two days of play after day one was washed out and day two cancelled as a mark of respect following the death of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.
It gives captain Ben Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum a sixth win from seven Tests in their first summer in charge, a complete turnaround from England's previous run of one win in 17.
Only once before have England won more than five Tests in a home summer, when they took a clean sweep of seven victories in 2004.
South Africa miss out on the chance to return to the top of the table in the World Test Championship, where they are vying with Australia, India and Pakistan for a place in the final. The defeat ends the Proteas' run of four Test series unbeaten.
An almost entirely different England squad now turns its attention to preparations for the T20 World Cup in Australia in October, with a seven-match series in Pakistan beginning on 20 September.
England's winter Test assignments are in Pakistan in December and New Zealand in February.
Subdued end to stellar summer
Monday morning was a contrast to the buoyant atmosphere of Sunday evening, when England were romping the chase in front of a full house only to be stopped by bad light.
Still, those that took up the offer of free admission saw the frantic cricket continue. From 97-0, Crawley and Lees reached a century stand from the second ball of the day - 17.2 overs is the fastest hundred opening partnership in England's Test history.
Lees was dropped by wicketkeeper Kyle Verreynne off the bowling of Rabada from the next ball and in the following over the left-hander edged Marco Jansen over the slips.
Rabada finally pinned Lees with one that nipped back, bringing in Pope to try an audacious reverse scoop at Jansen that resulted in a helmet blow and a concussion test.
It was left to Crawley to strike the winning boundary in an innings that repaid the faith shown in him by Stokes and McCullum.
He recorded his highest home Test score since the 267 he made against Pakistan in 2020.
Crawley's punch to the cover boundary off Jansen ended a series that has been completed in less than nine days of action on the field.
In terms of balls bowled - 3,411 - it is the shortest three-match series not to contain a draw since the 1888 Ashes, 134 years ago.
England revolution gathers pace
Stokes, McCullum and director of cricket Rob Key have reversed England's fortunes through unflinching faith in the players, a commitment to aggressive cricket and making the environment around the national team as relaxed as possible.
Some key moments of fortune have fallen their way, but more than luck was needed to beat the calibre of opponents put in their path.
England defeated world Test champions New Zealand 3-0, won a rescheduled match against second-ranked India and have now beaten a Proteas side that arrived as leaders of the Test Championship.
A squad for the Pakistan series could be chosen by the end of the month, possibly overseen by a new national selector, a restored post which was advertised for last week.
England will certainly be without Jonny Bairstow, who had surgery on a broken leg sustained in a golfing accident on Monday and may even miss the tour to New Zealand.
Stuart Broad, whose first child is due in the autumn, may sit out the Pakistan tour, with fellow pacers Mark Wood, Chris Woakes, Jamie Overton and Saqib Mahmood vying to be fit.
Off-spinner Moeen Ali is likely to return to partner Jack Leach, Liam Livingstone could provide an all-round option, while Nottinghamshire left-armer Liam Patterson-White featured for England Lions against South Africa last month.
'The mentality shift has been quite amazing' - reaction
England captain Ben Stokes to Test Match Special: "It has been very pleasing to be able to captain this side. The lads' mindset and attitude towards the whole summer has been fantastic. The fact that different people have put their hand up at different times in the Test matches has been great.
"I'll never forget walking down the stairs on day three to complete silence from 30,000 people. The silence was deafening. I've never experienced anything like it before and it was seriously special to be part of it. To sing the anthem with the little change was special again. I will never forget that day."
England coach Brendon McCullum: "The guys have bought into the style the captain has asked for, a style that is authentic to him, and the way he leads, and, while the results have been fantastic, the mentality shift has been quite amazing. It has been something quite special to be a part of.
"I thought Ben [Stokes] would be good but I didn't realise he'd be this good."
Player of the Match, England bowler Ollie Robinson: "It is really pleasing to put in this performance and get the series win. It is my first series win in an England shirt and it has been a great week and a great few weeks to be back around the lads.
"It is a very enjoyable, free-flowing environment. I think Baz [McCullum] and Stokesy just oozed that confidence in the players and they give you that sort of extra lift when you need it."
South Africa captain Dean Elgar: "The series has been disappointing and there is a little bit of frustration. We came here with high hopes.
"It was a massive learning curve for a lot of us, there are a lot of young guys in our batting line-up and I'm sure they've been exposed to what Test cricket is really like and what the standard is about and the intensity of play. In a sense that is positive but it is still disappointing to not get the results in our favour."