Antiques Roadshow Episode Guide
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- Episode Guide 529 episodes
Episode Guide
Antiques Roadshow: Season 32
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Season 32 Episode 8: Bowes Museum
Fiona Bruce and the team value decorative objects and rarities at the Bowes Museum in County Durham. Items under scrutiny include a bust that is reputed to be cursed, some of the most valuable chairs ever seen on the programme, and a silver box given as a token of thanks for the liberation of the Netherlands during World War Two
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Season 32 Episode 7: Lincoln 2
The team visits Lincoln Cathedral, where items include a Georgian dining table, a Chinese picture bought for very little and a collection of early TV implements used to screen the Queen's coronation
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Season 32 Episode 6: Lincoln 1
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Lincoln Cathedral, where objects brought to be valued include a set of surgeon's tools from the 1860s and a plate that has spent years hidden in a cupboard. Plus, a man who is trying to recover his grandfather's paintings explains his quest
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Season 32 Episode 5: Morwellham
Fiona Bruce and the team value objects in the Tamar Valley, Devon, where they are given the opportunity to drop anchor at Morwellham Quay. Items examined by the experts include an ugly brown jug with a surprising valuation, a rare silver salver, and a long case clock that arrives at the location in an unexpected manner
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Season 32 Episode 4: Oxford 2
Fiona Bruce and the team present the show from Hertford College, Oxford, where items valued include a bracelet once worn by a princess, expensive ceramics and a rare document recording the end of hostilities in World War One
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Season 32 Episode 3: Blackpool 2
Fiona Bruce and the team return to the Tower Ballroom in Blackpool, where items valued include one of the oldest prayer books examined on the programme, a valuable pair of duelling pistols and the original teddy from Watch with Mother
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Season 32 Episode 2: Blackpool 1
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Lancashire where they examine items in the Blackpool Tower Ballroom. The antiques include a Bible containing handwritten extracts by Charlotte Bronte, images drawn under fire by a war artist and a valuable brooch
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Season 32 Episode 1: Jersey
Fiona Bruce and the team begin another tour of the UK at Jersey's Samares Manor, where the experts discover a variety of items with international origins. Artefacts examined include one of the most expensive watches to be featured in the series, and a lemon squeezer alleged to have been owned by Marilyn Monroe. Plus, a forensics test is carried out to determine the value of a gold bangle
Antiques Roadshow:
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Aberdeen Music Hall
Michael Aspel and the team head to Aberdeen Music Hall, where they cast their eyes over a rare Scottish broadsword bought with money saved from a youngster's paper round. Other items under scrutiny are a valuable pair of bronzes and a piece of church silver made by a leading arts and crafts designer
- Aberdeen Music Hall
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Abergavenny
Michael Aspel and the team of experts visit Abergavenny in Wales to offer their professional opinion on treasured items, including an intricately carved whalebone originally designed to be worn inside a corset. They also value a grisly pottery model of an infamous Victorian murder scene, and two collectors of Beatles memorabilia are united through an uncanny coincidence
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Aberystwyth
Aberystwyth.
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Accrington
Armada chest; games compendium; cloisonne incense burner; Tiffany glass.
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Alexandra Palace
Seeking antiques in Alexandra Palace, England.
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All Hallow School
Red cup; Delft portrait plate; John Waterhouse painting.
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Alnwick Castle
Michael Aspel and the team visit the Wills Memorial Building in Bristol, where they value a primitive painting of the city's harbour linked to an amazing story of survival, cider mugs, and a disliked, but valuable, wall clock
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Althorp
The team travel to Althorp, Northamptonshire, childhood home and burial place of Diana, Princess of Wales, and residence of the Spencer family for more than 500 years. Fiona Bruce talks to Charles Spencer about living among reminders of the estate's history, and he seizes on the opportunity to ask for advice about one of his treasures. Other pieces valued include a walnut desk and a collection of paintings
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Altrincham
Hugh Scully and the team visit Altrincham
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Amsterdam
Silver pot; puppets.
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Apsley House, Home of the Duke of Wellington
Dutch painting; toy steam engine.
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Arras, Northern France
Arras, France.
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ARS East Kirkby
Michael Aspel and the team pay a second visit to East Kirkby Airfield in Lincolnshire, where a squadron of classic Morris Minors join them on the runway. There's also a shock in store for the experts when a ring which was found in the roots of a tree is brought in for valuation
- Arundel
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Arundel Castle 1
Michael Aspel and the team take the roadshow to Arundel Castle, West Sussex. Items brought into the splendid Barons Hall for inspection include a Roman artefact and a set of first edition James Bond stories signed by Ian Fleming. Plus, the most expensive valuation ever seen on the show
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Arundel Castle 2
Michael Aspel and the team take the roadshow to Arundel Castle, West Sussex. Items brought into the splendid Barons Hall for inspection include a medieval pot washed up on a beach, an unusual clock that plays God Save The King, a haunted portrait and a piece of the original culture from which penicillin was first made by Alexander Fleming
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Ascot
In the Pavilion at Ascot Racecourse, a small coin dug up by a young visitor yields a surprise valuation, and a model of a champion racehorse brings the house down. The first document copying machine, dating back more than 200 years, is also brought in for inspection by the experts. Fiona Bruce presents
- Ashford
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Athelhampton House
The team visit Athelhampton House in Dorset, where discoveries include a rare Scottish drinking cup and a valuable painting
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Australia 2
Unscreened gems from the team's visit to Australia last year, where finds in Sydney and Melbourne included a squatter's tool chest used by early migrants and bizarre mementos from the Beatles' only visit Down Under. There's also a staggering valuation for a rare portrait of a participant in the Boston Tea Party
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Australia Compilation
The roving team value more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public
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Australia Special
Another chance to see the team's trip to Melbourne and Sydney, shown as Michael Aspel prepares to depart from the series. Items discovered included part of the keel of Captain Cook's ship Endeavour, and a collection of opera star Maria Callas's belongings
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Aylesbury
Elephant-shaped musical automaton; Sevres dinner service; Marie Antoinette writing table.
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Ayr
Seeking antiques in Ayrshire, Scotland.
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Bala
Michael Aspel and his team of experts visit Lake Bala in North Wales where they find an unusual collection of tiepins, a portrait by Charles Spencelayh, a highly valuable piece of Welsh pottery, and a two-volume set books that were personally inscribed to a local resident by Queen Victoria. Plus, expert David Battie reveals why a single item may have four different valuations, with each one being correct
- Banqueting House
- Banqueting House
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Banqueting House, London - Part Two
On their second visit to London's Banqueting House, Michael Aspel and the team value a set of old pots that prove to be a substantial inheritance, and they hear the grisly tale behind an axe that arrives from the Tower of London
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Barnsley
Gramophone; scrimshaw; porcelain cow.
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Barnstaple
The team discovers rarities in Barnstaple, north Devon, including a World War One pilot's watch worn by TE Lawrence, an enamel miniature by Henry Bone and a walking stick which once belonged to the Duke of Windsor. Presented by Michael Aspel
- Barrow-in-Furness
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Basingstoke
Walter Scott's letters; ivory banana; marble table; Victorian paintings.
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Bath
Seeking antiques in Bath, England.
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Beamish
Michael Aspel presents as the experts set out their stalls at the Beamish Open Air Museum in Co Durham. Among the items presented for their scrutiny are a music box valued at £20,000 and a rare rapier - believed to have been smuggled out of Russia in the props box of the Bolshoi Ballet. Plus, a collector of battlefield objects discusses his hobby
- Beaulieu
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Bebington
Toy tiger; dry-point etching.
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Belfast
The team values items in the first of two programmes from the former drawing offices of Harland and Wolff in Belfast, where the Titanic was first conceived, to commemorate 100 years since construction on the ill-fated ship began. Rarities under scrutiny include a nude dancer with a high price tag and a dressing table originally made for the Titanic. Fiona Bruce presents
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Belfast 2
Fiona Bruce presents the second of two programmes from the former drawing offices of Harland and Wolff in Belfast as the team examines items brought in by the public. Finds include an early Victorian medicine chest, a historic document marking the end of World War Two, and a rare pair of Irish plate buckets, which turn out to be worth the price of a new car
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Berwick-upon-Tweed
Seeking antiques in Berwick-upon-Tweed, England.
- Bexhill-on-Sea
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Bickling Hall
Hugh Scully and the team visit Bickling Hall in Norfolk
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Biddulph
The experts travel to Biddulph, where they value a rare 18th-century Wedgwood egg scrambler, a genuine sketch by Constable, a remarkable collection of shipping documents detailing the auctioning of slaves, and a handkerchief that Queen Victoria gave to the lady who strung her pearls. Presented by Michael Aspel
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Birmingham
The roving team value more antiques and rarities
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Birmingham Symphony Hall
Michael Aspel and the team visit Birmingham's Symphony Hall, where objects under scrutiny include a skull-handled walking cane, cricketing memorabilia and an Edwardian dressing case. The specialists also value a collection of signed portraits featuring Hollywood stars of the 1950s and 1960s
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Bishop Auckland
Michael Aspel and the team visit Bishop Auckland in Co. Durham, where they cast their eyes over a set of skeleton keys used for a daring PoW escape during World War Two and a simple jug found on a rubbish tip. They also meet a hoarder of cat collectibles who lives with more than 10,000 feline-related objects
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Bishop Auckland 2
Michael Aspel and the team pay a second visit to the home of the Bishop of Durham at Auckland Castle, where they inspect rare documents plotting a German invasion of Britain in World War Two. They also cast their eyes over a flask used for smuggling whisky and a collection of some of the first glass eyes
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Bishop's Palace, Wells
Toy garden; Norwegian violin case; posters.
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Blackburn
Seeking antiques in Blackburn, Scotland.
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Blackpool
Michael Aspel takes the programme to Blackpool, where seaside treasures await him. Discovering the predecessor of This is Your Life's big red book, he also comes across a signed programme from the 1936 cup tie between Bolton and Blackpool, an unusual medal awarded for selling vacuum cleaners in the 1930s, and a rose-patterned Staffordshire mug which provides a clue to its famous former owner
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Blenheim Palace
Lewis Carroll first editions; satsuma dish; miniature globes.
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Blenheim Palace 2
London painting; brooch; tea-and-coffee service.
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Bletchley
Bracelet; painting; tea maker.
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Bletchley 1
The team values rarities at Bletchley Park, near Milton Keynes, home of the Enigma code breakers of World War Two. Objects under scrutiny include a pair of valuable candlesticks, items rescued from British cruise liners and evidence of an early encounter with the Beatles. Plus, a surprise appearance from an airborne visitor
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Bletchley 2
The team values more rarities at Bletchley Park near Milton Keynes, home of the Enigma code-breakers of World War Two. Objects under scrutiny include an ornate vase that nearly ended up in the dishwasher, a teddy bear with a secret story and an art deco brooch that leaves the evaluators in awe. Presented by Fiona Bruce
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Bodnant Garden
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Bodnant Garden in North Wales, where the treasures coming under scrutiny include an elaborate tea service made for a maharaja, and designs for the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Plus, a rare bronze depicting the defeat of Native Americans receives a surprising valuation
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Bolton
Photos of Scott's Antarctic expedition.
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Bolton Abbey
Fiona Bruce steps away from the news desk to take on presenting duties in a new series of the heirloom-hunting programme. In this first edition, she heads for Bolton Abbey near Skipton in North Yorkshire, where finds include a farmer's lambing chair, a small Faberge trinket, and a spent World War One bullet transformed into a key-ring
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Boston, Lincolnshire
Michael Aspel and team visit Boston, Lincolnshire, to unearth more treasures from the region's attics, including a dining table valued at £25,000, a Chinese fertility figure rescued from a shipwreck, and a 1936 Olympics baseball
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Bournemouth
Seeking antiques in Bournesmouth, England.
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Bowes Museum
Hugh Scully and the team visit Bowes Museum in Co Durham and discover an array of interesting artefacts including a manuscript commemorating the life of Lord Kitchener, a collection of celebrity photographs and a gold badge from an old Irish order of chivalry, which was found at a car boot sale
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Bradford
Seeking antiques in Bradford, U.K.
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Brecon
Hugh Scully and the team visit Brecon to value more antiques
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Bridgend
Michael Aspel and the team of experts offer their professional opinion on treasured items at Bridgend in Wales, including a Victorian hat and some locally made plates. Plus, a whale's tooth, a bow-fronted barometer and a bargain-priced pot with a surprising history
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Bridlington
Fiona Bruce and the team visit the Spa Royal Hall in Bridlington, where items of interest include a valuable ceramic bathing beauty which once lived in a fairground caravan and a rare Nativity painting. Plus, the experts nominate their ideal age of elegance, and meet a woman with a passion for collecting vintage prams
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Bridlington 2
Fiona Bruce presents the second programme of the series from the Spa Royal Hall in Bridlington, East Yorkshire. Items of interest include a set of rare buttons commemorating the Battle of Quebec in 1759 and artefacts excavated from the wreck of HMS Falcon. Plus, a there is first-hand account of life as a Japanese prisoner of war
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Brighton
Seeking antiques in Brighton, England.
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Bristol
Michael Aspel presents from The Wills Memorial Building in Bristol. The team are shown a pair of cider mugs from a local garden shed and a primitive painting of the city's harbour that has an amazing story of its own. Meanwhile, the owner of a hall clock is in for a surprise as the experts reveal it's worth
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Bristol University
Hugh Scully and the team celebrate their 21st series in the city where it all began : Bristol
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Britannia Compilation
The experts visit Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth. Presented by Michael Aspel
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Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth
The experts visit Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth
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Broxbourne
Clock; suitcase of clothes; safe; painting.
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Brussels, Belgium
Russian jewelry; American paintings; porcelain; book.
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Buckinghamshire
Three-barreled pistols; Chinese vases; Noah's Ark.
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Burghley
Hugh Scully and the team value antiques in Burghley
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Burghley House
Stamford.
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Burley House, England
Seeking antiques.
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Burton upon Trent
Michael Aspel and his team of experts travel to Burton upon Trent where they unearth more treasures, including a Victorian suit of armour used for jousting, a valuable jewelled elephant, a patch box made in memory of Lord Nelson, an inlaid table from Goa, and a Crimea medal awarded to a man who took part in the Charge of the Light Brigade
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Buxton
Michael Aspel presents from Buxton in Derbyshire, where unearthed treasures include a portrait of a girl which seems to have all the men mesmerised, a pair of pistols, a Steiff teddy bear and a valuable yellow diamond
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Caernarfon
Michael Aspel and the team have a few surprises in store for the residents of Caernarfon in North Wales. Geoffrey Munn values an attractive Chinese-style art deco jade necklace and Alan Middleton discovers a stunning lantern clock. Meanwhile, the owner of a 200-year-old bleeding bowl bought for 25p from a junk shop is dumbfounded to learn its true value
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Camborne
Seeking antiques in Camborne, England.
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Cambridge
Seeking antiques in Cambridge, England.
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Cambridge
Paintings; 17th-century furniture; silver.
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Cannock
Bronze tiger; portrait; match striker; cricket bat.
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Canterbury
Cinema posters; diamond ring; paintings; toy.
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Cardiff
Michael Aspel and the team travel to Cardiff to value curios and antiques belonging to members of the public. Among the items they unearth are a valuable painting purchased at a car boot sale, a clock which had been banished to the attic to gather dust, and a rare Prince of Wales tea caddy
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Cardiff Castle - 2
A special edition in which Michael Aspel takes the team to Cardiff Castle, where they value antiques and curios including a ceremonial stick belonging to an African witch doctor, a historic exercise book, and an extremely rare Scandinavian drinking vessel
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Carlisle
Michael Aspel leads the roving team of experts to Carlisle, where they uncover 19th-century tobacco pipes, including one in the shape of a monkey. Plus, a mysterious stoneware mug, an unloved vase and a painting bought for less than £1 that turns out to be worth significantly more
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Carnoustie
The team travel to Carnoustie where they inspect a valuable coastal painting, a massive bronze of Robert the Bruce, and first editions of the Beano and Dandy
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Carters Steam Fair
Michael Aspel and the team travel to Carters Steam Fair, north London. Items under scrutiny include a car-boot sale buy with a surprising valuation, an original comedy script written by Ronnie Barker, and a highly valued painting donated to a charity
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Castle Ashby
Hugh Scully and the team visit Castle Ashby where they find a letter written by Captain Hardy from HMS Victory, and a Doulton ewer bought from a car boot sale for £1
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Castle Ashby - Two
Hugh Scully returns to Castle Ashby to look at some of the treasures to be found in the house, including a valuable diamond star brooch and a rare marble table
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Castle Howard
An alabaster carving of Mary and Jesus is discovered on a visit to Castle Howard in North Yorkshire
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Castle Howard 2
The experts visit Castle Howard, in North Yorkshire, where they value a garden statue, an enamelled box and a rare 'dummy board'
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Castle of Mey
Michael Aspel and the team brave the Scottish weather in a visit to the Queen Mother's former residence, the Castle of Mey. They value a host of local curiosities including a buoy made using dog skin from the Orkney Islands and a collection of regency clothing fit for a Jane Austen period drama
- Chairs
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Chartwell
Michael Aspel and the team visit the gardens of Chartwell, Winston Churchill's former home in Kent, where treasures include a Gainsborough portrait and the signatures of Battle of Britain pilots. Plus, a Graham Sutherland painting found behind a water tank and a Russian sub-machine gun are valued
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Chatsworth
Brooch; tapestry frame.
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Chatsworth House Special
Duchess's treasures.
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Chelmsford
Seeking antiques in Chelmsford, U.K.
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Chelsea
The roving team value more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public
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Cheltenham Town Hall
Japanese porcelain; letter; 17th-century embroidery box.
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Chepstow
Chepstow.
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Chester
Seeking antiques in Chester, U.K.
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Chester 1
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Chester Cathedral, where they meet 2,000 eager visitors in the nave. Among the treasures coming under scrutiny are some of the smallest pieces of furniture ever seen on the show, an Elvis 'hound dog' which almost got the King in hot water with the police, and jewels smuggled out of pre-revolution Russia sewn into the hem of a dress
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Chester 2
A second visit to Chester Cathedral sees Fiona Bruce and the team meeting the owner of a valuable painting that has spent the past few decades gathering dust under a bed. Also featured are dozens of pairs of miniature carved shoes, and a collection of rare books worth the price of a house
- Chesterfield
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Chichester Cathedral
Michael Aspel presents from Chichester Cathedral, where book specialist Clive Farahar examines an impressive autograph album and silver expert Alastair Dickenson finds a fine cow creamer and a rare freedom box. A pair of inlaid pistols also cause a stir of excitement, but an Oriental chest proves to be a disappointment
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Chichester Cathedral 2
Michael Aspel presents a second visit to Chichester Cathedral, where the items brought in include a 17th-century puzzle book, a rare mustard spoon, a silver picnic set and an original manuscript by 19th-century author RM Ballantyne
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Children's Roadshow : Imperial War Museum
The roving team value more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public
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Chippenham
Seeking antiques in Chippenham, England.
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Christchurch
Members of the public in Christchurch are invited to bring along their antiques for examination
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Christ's Hospital School: Horsham
Watercolor; royal letters.
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Clacton-on-Sea
From Clacton-on-Sea, where discoveries include an oil painting uncovered behind layers of wallpaper, and a watering can full of holes
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Claverton
Claverton.
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Cleethorpes
Seeking antiques in Cleethorpes, England.
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Clitheroe
Michael Aspel presides as the team visits Clitheroe in Lancashire, where they value treasures including an early vacuum cleaner, a collection of porcelain pugs and a 17th-century gate-leg table. Plus, a painted plant pot that turns out to be worth thousands of pounds
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Cliveden
Part one of two. The team visits Cliveden in Buckinghamshire, where they value a collection of jewellery found on a rubbish tip, a Stanley Spencer sketch and a brooch presented by the Prince of Wales to his tiger-hunting host. Michael Aspel also gets a surprise concerning a champion's boxing belt
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Cliveden - Part Two
The concluding part from Cliveden in Buckinghamshire, where the team discover a delicate satinwood bureau brought in by a descendant of artist Joshua Reynolds, a silver cruet set, and a collection of illustrated letters from India described as the pop art of the 1850s. Presented by Michael Aspel
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Clydebank
Hugh Scully and the team of experts visit Clydebank, Glasgow, where the finds include a pen-and-ink drawing by an acclaimed Scottish artist, a marine painting that caused a family row and a marble bust that narrowly escaped being thrown in a skip
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Coalville
Mining-disaster memorabilia; vase; bronze.
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Colchester
Tiffany pocket watch; carved table.
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Coleraine
Hugh Scully and the team visit Coleraine in Northern Ireland, where they turn up a valuable Walter Osborne portrait of an Archbishop's daughter belonging to the local cathedral, a sundial found in a hedge and some unusual 18th-century calligraphy by a man born without hands or feet
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Colwyn Bay
The team value antiques and rarities at Colwyn Bay, including a 90-year-old doll's house and a collection of brochures depicting transatlantic liners
- Compilation
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Compilation 1
Michael Aspel introduces previously unscreened finds from recent visits to Kedleston Hall, Derby, and Swansea's Brangwyn Hall, including a life-size model of King Kong used to promote the original film in the 1930s. Other items of interest include a pair of third-century Indian carvings and a handful of valuable jewels
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Compilation 1
Unscreened finds from recent visits to Althorp and Ascot. Items include rare documents related to the rescue of the Russian royal family by a British battleship during the revolution, modern paintings found in a skip, and an early English tapestry of unexpected value. Presented by Fiona Bruce
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Compilation 1: Grosvenor House
Fair.
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Compilation 2
Michael Aspel presents a compilation of items presented for the experts' scrutiny around the country. Objects include an Edward VIII coronation souvenir that was hastily converted into an abdication memento, as well as Art Deco ware and one of Elton John's earliest fan letters
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Compilation 2
Fiona Bruce introduces previously unscreened finds from two recently visited locations - Lanhydrock in Cornwall and Bodnant Garden in North Wales. The treasures coming under scrutiny include a collection of jewellery made for the suffragettes, a rare painting rescued from a skip at Sissinghurst, and a group of photographs recording the Queen's first Christmas broadcast
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Compilation 3
Michael Aspel presents a compilation of previously unseen finds from recent venues. Items include a pair of figurines that escaped damage during a World War Two bombing raid, an early recipe book containing peculiar potions and a painting by one of Queen Victoria's children
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Compilation Program: Burghley House
Sewing machine; silver owls; Wedgwood bowl; Dinky toys.
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Compilation Program: Harewood
Seeking antiques.
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Compilation Program: West Dean College
West Dean College.
- Cork
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Coughton Court
Michael Aspel and the team look at more rarities, this time from Coughton Court in Warwickshire. Among the finds are a Japanese depiction of dancing skeletons, a design from a leading British graphic artist and a lost masterpiece valued at £60,000
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Coughton Court
Michael Aspel and the team pay a return visit to Coughton Court in Warwickshire. Among the finds brought in by the public are a letter from Agatha Christie, a medal awarded to those who came to the aid of the Titanic survivors and a rare china figure of the Queen on horseback
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County Claire
Hugh Scully and the team value more antiques
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Coventry
Michael Aspel visits Coventry Cathedral, where items brought along by members of the public for valuation by the experts include three precious pots, some surprising World War Two relics and a sketch of a famous artist
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Crawley
Stirrup cup; snuff boxes; thistle cup from Glasgow.
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Cressing Temple Barns
Michael Aspel and the team visit Cressing Temple Barns in Essex, where they view and value items including a collection of ventriloquist's dummies, an Italian chair by Bugatti, a watercolour by Russell Flint and a table by Chippendale. They also discover an ancient book of genealogy, which includes former US president Bill Clinton's ancestors
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Crewe
Seeking antiques in Crewe, U.K.
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Dartington Hall 1
Michael Aspel presents the first of two editions from Dartington Hall in Devon, where the treasures on display include a set of royal cufflinks and a letter from Lord Nelson. Plus, the story of a valuable collection of silver, which astonished parishioners when it was discovered at the back of a safe in a village church
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Dartington Hall - 2
Michael Aspel and the team pay a second visit to Dartington Hall in Devon. Finds under scrutiny include a French cabinet with a royal heritage, a collection of personal letters and artwork by Quentin Crisp and a rare, extremely valuable, toy rabbit
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Dartmouth
Dartmouth.
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De La Warr
The roving team visit iconic modernist building the De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill-on-Sea, to value modern decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public
- De La Warr
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De La Warr Pavilion
The team pay a visit to the modernist building The De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill-on-Sea, where they cast their eye over a host of colourful modern collectibles, and reveal the value of a variety of cherished items
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De Montfort Hall
Michael Aspel and the team visit De Montfort Hall in Leicester for a theatrical themed edition of the popular vintage collector's series. Items featured include a collection of memorabilia from a production staged by PoWs, a set of timeworn television recordings, and a poster that is revealed to be a painting worth thousands of pounds
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Denmark
Antiques at Elsinore Castle in Denmark.
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Derby
Jewelry collection; silver plaque of the Nativity.
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Dorking
Claret jug; regency table; portrait.
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Douglas, Isle of Man
Hugh Scully and the team travel across to Douglas on the Isle of Man and discover a rare bowl used as an ashtray, a biscuit tin shaped like an aeroplane and a battered motorcycle which won the Isle of Man TT in 1923
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Dover
Walter Sickert's art; German books.
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Dromoland Castle
Examining antiques; information.
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Dublin
Seeking antiques in Dublin, Ireland.
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Dulwich 1
Fiona Bruce and the team set up their stalls at Dulwich Art Gallery for the first of two programmes from south London. Items brought for valuation include one of the most valuable paintings to be appraised on the programme in recent years, a little-known photograph of Winston Churchill and a costume dating from the earliest days of pantomime
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Dulwich 2
Fiona Bruce presents the second of two programmes from Dulwich Art Gallery. Items brought for appraisal by the experts include an early illustration by Heath Robinson, a rare and mysterious set of miniatures found on a bus, and a book which has been on loan for half a century, which turns out to be worth a small fortune
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Dumfries
Michael Aspel and the team visits Dumfries, where they cast their expert eyes over items including a set of musical drinking glasses, Harry Lauder's piano and rare local silver. They also discover a valuable doll and a collection of drawings by Beatrix Potter which are revealed to be worth a small fortune
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Dumfries House
Fiona Bruce presents a special edition from Dumfries House in Ayrshire, where she talks to Prince Charles about his involvement in the campaign to prevent the country house's unique collection of furniture being sold at auction. Treasures coming under scrutiny include an early toy train in remarkable condition, a piece of Chippendale furniture, and a glass vase purchased from a car-boot sale
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Dundee
Fiona Bruce takes the team to Dundee, where items brought in for valuation include a precious miniature clock smuggled out of Germany during World War Two and a copying machine thought to be the world's first, invented by a Scot in 1780. The experts also view an extraordinary letter sent to a conscientious objector
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Dunfermline
Seeking antiques in Dunfermline, Scotland.
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Dunrobin Castle 1
Michael Aspel and the experts visit the grounds of Dunrobin Castle in the Scottish Highlands in search of more antique treasures. Among the items that come under scrutiny are a grandfather clock, a French automaton doll and an unusual violin
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Dunrobin Castle 2
Michael Aspel and Lars Tharp return to Dunrobin Castle in the Scottish Highlands, where they view a selection of unseen treasures from previous Roadshows, including jewellery, silver, porcelain and a collection of Star Wars memorabilia
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Dunrobin Compilation
The roving team value more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public
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Durham
The experts value antiques in Durham
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Dyrham Park
Michael Aspel and the team visit Dyrham Park near Bath to view and value items including a huge blunderbuss fit for a giant and a striking mustard pot. They also discover Russian jewellery given by the crowned heads of Europe to Queen Victoria's chef, while Tim Wonnacott suggests how viewers can commission heirlooms for their descendants
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Dyrham Park Special
In the second programme from Dyrham Park in Wiltshire, Michael Aspel joins Lars Tharp on a tour of the house to examine its contents. There's also a chance to view some of the unseen items from previous editions, including a set of Georgian candlesticks found in a loft, a valuable Lowestoft bowl and a lipstick that once travelled the world in the possession of Lady Cunard
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East Kirkby
The team visit East Kirkby Airfield, Lincolnshire where they examine more decorative objects and rarities. Plus, they share wartime memories with the visiting public in the shadow of a World War Two Lancaster bomber. Michael Aspel presents
- East Kirkby
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Eastbourne
Seeking antiques in Eastbourne, U.K.
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Eastnor Castle
The experts visit Eastnor Castle in Herefordshire, where they value a wooden bicycle, an embroidered egg and the first All Blacks rugby shirt. Also among the treasures are a large pocket knife with 96 implements and a World War One pack with a bullet still lodged in it. Presented by Michael Aspel
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Edinburgh
Michael Aspel and the team set up shop in Edinburgh to examine more objects brought in by the public for valuing. Items offered up for consideration include an early Mickey Mouse mascot, a rare Art Deco figurine and documents that were once the property of Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's bodyguard - now worth £15,000
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Elgin
Seeking antiques in Elgin, Scotland.
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Ely Cathedral
Royal notes; watercolors.
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Enniskillen
Seeking antiques in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland.
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Eston
Michael Aspel presents the show from Eston in Cleveland. Among the treasures unearthed are a cubist elephant by Eduardo Paolozzi, used to promote floor covering, a Victorian painting bought for five shillings and the first commercially produced toy robot, made in the 1930s
- Exeter
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Exmouth
Michael Aspel and the team visit Exmouth on the Devon coast and uncover some valuable finds. They hear the heart-breaking story behind a collection of native Canadian embroidery and appraise a toy that once belonged to Pride and Prejudice author Jane Austen
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Farnham
Seeking antiques in Farnham, England.
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Favourite Clips
In the final programme of the series, Michael Aspel presents a selection of highlights from the Geffrye Museum in London, including the teapot that raised enough cash to buy a house, unused model trains shipped from Germany during World War Two, a valuable owl and a collection of silver found hidden under a bed
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Favourite Finds
The season's favourite finds.
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Fife
A 19th-century embroidered chair.
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Floral Hall, Southport
Michael Aspel and the team visit Southport's Floral Hall, where they cast their eyes over a rare medal awarded to suffragettes and a pair of barber's chairs in which the Beatles were given their mop-top haircuts. Also under scrutiny are a number of pieces brought back by early missionaries visiting Africa
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Floral Hall, Southport 2
Michael Aspel and the team pay another visit to Southport's Floral Hall, where they cast their eyes over a rare perfume bottle valued at more than £2,000 and a Victorian telephone. Also coming under the experts' scrutiny is a collection of pop stars' autographs
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Forde Abbey 1
Michael Aspel presents from the grounds of Forde Abbey in the West Country, where the treasures include a second-century cameo ring, an unused dagger, and two valuable ebony busts dating back to 1650, which were kept outside for quite some time because they were considered ugly
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Forde Abbey 2
Michael Aspel and the team return to Forde Abbey in Somerset, where the treasures include a Delftware tobacco jar, a painting of a herd of cows by renowned Victorian artist Thomas Sydney Cooper, and a very early American toy nearly thrown away as rubbish
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Fort William
Fort William.
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Fountain's Abbey
Robert Burns figurine; music box; Chippendale cabinet; picture; wine cellar.
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Gainsborough
Wartime relic of famous names; skittles; Renoir painting.
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Gateshead
Fiona Bruce and the team visit The Sage, Gateshead, where the treasures coming under scrutiny include a phonograph once owned by Scottish entertainer Harry Lauder, and a table cloth that was reputedly hand-illustrated by artist Francis Bacon. Plus, it takes five men to lift an item that is awarded the highest valuation ever seen in the series
- Geffrye Museum in East London
- Gibraltar
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Gillingham
Seeking antiques in Gillingham, England.
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Glamis Castle
The experts return to Glamis Castle, where they value a pair of Chinese Imperial bowls, a collection of more than 800 handbag mirrors, and a necklace sporting 2,000-year-old gems. Michael Aspel introduces highlights of other recent shows and explores the Queen Mother's childhood at this historic Scottish retreat
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Glamis Castle
The popular series visits Glamis Castle, childhood home of the Queen Mother and the place where Macbeth is said to have killed Duncan. The experts value a posy ring with a macabre history, a dining table originally intended for supporting a coffin, jewellery which survived not only a fire but a torpedo attack and the fascinating scrapbook of a World War One pilot. Presented by Michael Aspel
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Glasgow
Pocket chronometer; painting; silver coffeepot; cuckoo clock.
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Glenrothes
Seashells; primitive painting; ivory figures.
- Gloucester
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Gloucester Cathedral
Michael Aspel presents the show from Gloucester Cathedral, where experts are asked to offer their opinion on the worth of objects including an early Doctor Who script, rare examples of Lalique glass and a valuable watch
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Gloucester Cathedral 2
The team return to Gloucester Cathedral, where their finds include the microphone used by Churchill to announce the end of World War Two. A church coffer from 1400 is opened for the first time in living memory, and a rare bronze from the studio of Frederick Leighton produces a stunning valuation
- Gloucester II
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Grantham
The team travel to Grantham, Lincolnshire, where they value two handwritten letters from author CS Lewis and a selection of Edwardian silk stockings
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Grantham
C.S. Lewis letters; opal necklace; silk stockings.
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Great Yarmouth
Seeking antiques in Yarmouth, England.
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Greenwich
Painting; kitchen implement; golf ball.
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Greenwich Compilation
Marine chronometer; highlights of previous episodes.
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Guernsey
American bronze; Charlie Chaplin clockwork toy.
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Guildford
Seeking antiques in Guildford, England.
- Hadrian's Wall
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Halifax
Hugh Scully and the experts visit Halifax to value a piece of Georgian furniture salvaged from a bonfire, and a set of lithographs of the town
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Haltwhistle
Michael Aspel and experts visit the town of Haltwhistle in Northumberland. Among the treasures brought to light are a letter written by JRR Tolkien in which he discusses The Lord of the Rings, original fittings from the Titanic's sister ship the Olympic, and a Roman coin found near Hadrian's Wall
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Hampton Court
Michael Aspel and the team visit Hampton Court to value more of the public's antiques, and cast their eyes over a rare long-case clock, an early sketch by the abstract artist Mondrian and a bronze produced by Rodin
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Hampton Court - Two
Part two of two. Michael Aspel and the team return to Hampton Court to uncover more treasures from the hoards of curios brought in by members of the public. Among the items valued are a rare coral bracelet, a dress by Vivienne Westwood, a unique doll and a well-travelled pendant shaped like a pig
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Harrogate 2
Michael Aspel presents the last programme of the series from Harrogate in North Yorkshire, where the experts examine several Navy log books belonging to a captain who had connections with Napoleon. Plus, a silk bedcover and a carriage clock made for the daughter of a great Victorian philanthropist
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Harrow
Emu egg; Maltese clock; silver candlesticks; cuff.
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Hartlepool
The experts gather in Hartlepool, where they evaluate a Steiff teddy bear bought for a dog to play with, and a large Chinese paper passport which helped to save lives. Other items include a piece of shrapnel from the 1914 bombardment of the town and a 17th-century jar which Oliver Cromwell could have seen
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Hastings
Michael Aspel and the team visit Hastings, where treasures including a Meissen pot and a sketch by Augustus John are presented to the experts for valuation. David Battie is given the honour of opening a chest containing a wedding gift that has not seen the light of day since the 1920s
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Haywards Heath
Michael Aspel presents from Hayward's Heath in West Sussex, where a ventriloquist's dummy makes an appearance after 30 years in a box, and an innocent-looking, silver-topped walking stick proves to contain two feet of deadly Toledo steel. Expert Christopher Payne also reveals a table that could have been worth more if it had been made on the right side of the Atlantic
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Hemel Hempstead
Seeking antiques in Hemel Hempstead, England.
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Henley-on-Thames
Oriental jade and porcelain; Venetian old master; rare book; colored plates; French candlesticks.
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Hereford
To celebrate 30 years of the programme, Michael Aspel and the team return to Hereford, the city where it all began, and find the objects brought in by the public still have the potential to surprise. Collectibles include a 16th-century chair, a broken dish worth much more than was paid for it and the most expensive painting seen in the show's history
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Heritage Motor Centre
The Heritage Motor Centre in Warwickshire plays host to youngsters bringing decorative objects for inspection. With special guests Trude Mostue and Quentin Wilson
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Hexam
Seeking antiques in Hexam, England.
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Highclere Compilation
Lord Caernarvon talks about his grandfather.
- Highcliffe Castle
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Highcliffe Castle, Dorset
The team visit Highcliffe Castle in Dorset, where they value a vast array of theatrical antiques and memorabilia including letters written by actor and playwright Noel Coward. A bust of 18th-century actress Sarah Siddons is also brought for them to assess, and Lady Penelope pays them a flying visit
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Historic Dockyard, Portsmouth
Portsmouth.
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HMS Victory
Another chance to see the 2005 special from HMS Victory in Portsmouth, in which Michael Aspel marked the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar. Among the finds on display are ornately decorated ostrich eggs carved by a member of the ship's crew and a box made out of debris taken from the vessel in the aftermath of the battle
- Holkham Hall
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Holkham Hall - Part One
First of two programmes from Holkham Hall in Norfolk, where Michael Aspel and the team discover a three-leaf clover brooch worth as much as a small car, a pair of Buffalo Bill's gloves and a cannon used on the North West Frontier in India
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Holkham Hall - Part Two
Part two of two. Michael Aspel and the team pay a return visit to Holkham Hall in north Norfolk, where they cast their eyes over relics used during the Charge of the Light Brigade, a valuable glass bottle and an art deco dressing table. Also under scrutiny is a curious collection charting a remarkable life story
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Hornchurch
Seeking antiques in Hornchurch, England.
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Hornsea
Michael Aspel and the team travel to Hornsea in East Yorkshire. The experts unearth items to value including a rare chastity belt, a working sewing machine made in 1875 and a huge collection of Beatles memorabilia, while Michael meets a man with a passion for Humber cars
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Hotel de Ville
Hotel de Ville, Arras, France.
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Houghton Hall
Michael Aspel and the experts value items of interest from Houghton Hall in Norfolk, including a costume worn by actor Yul Brynner, a poacher's gun in the guise of a walking stick and a collection of Oxo memorabilia. Among the more precious artefacts are a collection of 100 silver teething rattles, a small pottery cat and a rare Anglo-Saxon ring found in a garden
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Houghton Hall Exterior
Michael Aspel visits Houghton Hall in Norfolk
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Houghton Hall Special
The team revisit Houghton Hall in Norfolk, where Michael Aspel discusses the history of the estate with Christopher Payne and finds out about its first owner, Robert Walpole. There's also a look at previously unseen items from the series, including a barber's chair designed for children, a nude by an artist who used local girls instead of professional models and an extremely large wassail bowl
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Huddersfield
Bronze firedogs; Dutch painting.
- Hughcliffe Castle
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Hughenden Manor
Michael Aspel and the team visit Hughenden Manor in Buckinghamshire, the former home of Disraeli. Rare pictures of AA Milne's son 'Christopher Robin' of Winnie the Pooh fame and a previously unknown portrait of Nelson's daughter, and some jewels thought to be paste are amongst the items under scrutiny
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Hughenden Manor 2
Michael Aspel and the team return to Hughenden Manor, High Wycombe, where they uncover the previously untold story of Bomber Command's vital role at the estate in World War Two. Among the objects brought in by the public are a set of rare Victorian fairground figures and a valuable painting of an Irish landscape
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Hull, England
The team value antiques and rarities from Hull
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Ickworth House
The team discover unusual objects at Ickworth House, Suffolk, including a toilet bowl with an intriguing story and the sole survivor from a set of two Oriental porcelain vases
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Ickworth House Compilation (Suffolk)
Portrait collection; finds from previous episodes; sedan chair.
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Ickworth House - Two
The team revisit Ickworth House in Suffolk, where they discover the trumpet that was used to play the programme's theme tune, and a sedan chair with a family history
- Imperial War Museum
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Inverness
Poacher's gun; rare figurine.
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Ipswich
Michael Aspel and the team visit Ipswich, where the treasures unearthed include a collection of spearheads dating from the prehistoric era, an early American flag, a valuable silver tankard and a pair of spectacles once owned by Napoleon Bonaparte. The quest to find Britain's most avid collector also continues, with a man who has amassed 5,000 Dinky toys
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Ireland
Irish porcelain paintings; tapestry: furniture; French clockwork.
- Isle of Man
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Islington
Seeking antiques in Islington, England.
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Jamaica
Regimental silver is abundant in Jamaica.
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Jersey
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Samares Manor in Jersey, where they value an array of international items from Japan, South Africa, Egypt, America and France. Objects include a lemon squeezer once owned by Marilyn Monroe, one of the most expensive watches seen in 32 years of the series, and a gold bangle that has to be subjected to a forensic test to prove its worth
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Kedleston Hall
Michael Aspel and the team visit Kedleston Hall in Derbyshire, where they scrutinise a rare mill clock which measured both time and the workers' efficiency. Other items include a collection of 70 toasters and a pair of dusty vases whose estimated value surprises their owners
- Kelvingrove
- Kelvingrove
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Kelvingrove Art Gallery
Michael Aspel and the team travel to Kelvingrove Museum in Glasgow. They evaluate an early toy car with a surprisingly high value, artwork drawn in the trenches during World War One, a travelling medicine chest and a wallet made from human skin
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Kelvingrove Art Gallery 2
Michael Aspel and the team return to Kelvingrove Museum in Glasgow. They evaluate one of the earliest stoneware jugs ever seen on the show, a Chippendale chair worth the price of a small house, and original artwork by Scottish art nouveau proponent and watercolourist Charles Rennie Mackintosh
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Kendal
Michael Aspel and the team visit Kendal in the Lake District to view and value items including Russian silver, locally made furniture, a gilt table and a clock rescued from a skip. They also discover an inscribed first edition of Beatrix Potter's Pigling Bland
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Kendal in the Lake District
A gilt table; an inscribed first edition of a Beatrix Potter book.
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Kensington/Chelsea
Seeking antiques in London's Kensington-and-Chelsea area.
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Kentwell Hall
Michael Aspel and the team head to Kentwell Hall in Suffolk, where the antiquated heirlooms discovered include a riding crop lovingly made from romantic letters, and a set of toys once owned by a girl supposedly said to have inspired illustrations featured in early editions of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland
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Keswick
Hugh Scully and the team visit Keswick in Cumbria, where they cast their eyes over a 17th-century bleeding-bowl and a set of Merrymen Delftware plates. Plus, a locally made wartime pencil containing a tiny compass and detailed map of Germany
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Kettering
The team visits Kettering, Northamptonshire where the host of antique treasures include a guitar once owned by Frank Ifield, an assortment of gruesome surgical instruments, two Russian Imperial Easter eggs, paintings by native artist Alfred East and a large collection of brooches made from military collar badges
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Kidderminster
Pedlar dolls; bowie knife; writing desk; coffee pot vs. coffee jug.
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King's College
Michael Aspel and the team travels to King's College, Cambridge, to value more of the public's antiques. Among the featured items are a letter from Florence Nightingale, an item of clothing once worn by a famous jockey, a selection of aged wedding photographs and a diamond brooch which was discovered in wartime London
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King's College 2
Michael Aspel and the team returns to King's College, Cambridge, to value more of the public's curios and antiques, including a machine gun from World War One, a portrait with an unusual history and a set of rare maps charting the settlement of America
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Kings Lynn
Lady's rock crystal sweetmeat box; 18-karat-gold snuff box.
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Kingsbridge
Seeking antiques in Kingsbridge, England.
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Kingston-Upon-Hull
Hugh Scully and the team travel to Hull to value more antiques
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Knebworth House
Michael Aspel presents the show from the gardens of Knebworth House in Hertfordshire. Among this week's treasures are a Japanese-made satsuma pot, a marine chronometer, a diamond brooch that was almost sold for £1, and a bronze Rolls-Royce emblem which could be worth £10,000 - if it is the genuine article
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Knebworth House Special
At Knebworth House in Hertfordshire, Michael Aspel introduces unseen finds from previous shows, including a pair of revealing female figures originally displayed in a French brothel, and an unusual table clock with a turtle motif. Clive Farahar also describes the former owner of the house, Victorian novelist and philanderer Edward Bulwer Lytton
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Knightshayes Court
Michael Aspel and the team seek out more items of rarity, heading for the gardens of Knightshayes Court in Devon, where they find a copy of a blue-blooded play with royalty on the cast list, a collection of jewellery in a gold-tooled leather box probably worn at Napoleon's court, and a huge pair of rare Doulton vases decorated with kangaroos
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Knightshayes Court Exterior
Michael Aspel and the team head for the gardens of Knightshayes Court in Devon, where they find more valuable objects and decorative items
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Knightshayes Court Special
The team visit Knightshayes Court, Devon, where they value more household treasures, including a painting found in a damp attic, and a diamond brooch containing a rare green stone. Plus, a letter from one of Nelson's captains, who carried dispatches to him from Italy. The document details the great hero's meeting with Lord and Lady Hamilton, and a curious cure for a dying prince, who was placed in a sheep's carcass to preserve him
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Lacock Abbey
Michael Aspel and the team visit Lacock Abbey, where items under scrutiny include a collection of objects celebrating the French Revolution and a set of chairs designed by Chippendale. They also cast their eyes over a small pottery owl, which turns plenty of heads when the experts give their valuation
- Lacock Abbey
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Lacock Abbey 2
Michael Aspel and the team pay a return visit to Lacock Abbey in Wiltshire, where they value a cabinet crammed with six generations of treasures and a sword used at the Battle of Waterloo. They also cast their eyes over a Wedgwood teapot featured in an early photograph by Fox Talbot
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Lake Bala in North Wales
Pair of books inscribed by Queen Victoria are examined.
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Lake District
Shoes; swords; Beatrix Potter napkin; brooch.
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Lampeter
Michael Aspel and the team examine more of the public's treasures brought for their scrutiny to Lampeter in central Wales. Objects valued include a bust of celebrated Welsh writer Dylan Thomas, an early book of silhouettes and a plate bought by its owner for a mere £5 that turns out to be worth £10,000
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Lancaster
Michael Aspel and the team visit Lancaster to value more objects and rarities brought in by the public. Items include an expensive pair of clogs, an emotional series of letters written during the Crimean War, an anti-slavery ring and an intricately woven tapestry thought to be worth £10,000
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Lancing College (Sussex)
Autographed Beatles album; French automaton; Toby jugs.
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Lanhydrock
Fiona Bruce and the team unearth treasures in Lanhydrock, near Bodmin in Cornwall, where finds include a gold bangle inlaid with precious stones discovered at the bottom of a water tank, a silver cup, and an early Valentine that tells the story of an unrequited love affair
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Lanhydrock House
Lanhydrock House, Cornwall.
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Leeds
The roving team values decorative objects, rarities and oddities at Leeds Town Hall, including a picture by an Australian war artist, a silver claret jug and a painting with a hole through its middle
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Leeds Armouries Compilation
Michael Aspel visits Leeds Royal Armouries with arms expert Bill Harriman, and presents unseen footage from other programmes. Among the treasures on show is a toy train made for Queen Victoria's husband Prince Albert
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Leeds Castle 1
Ceramics expert Henry Sandon has a memorable day when Fiona Bruce and the team visit Leeds Castle near Maidstone, Kent. Among the treasures coming under scrutiny are a rare painting illustrating the first World War One air raids over London, a casket reputedly owned by Anne Boleyn and a collection of 1,000 tiepins
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Leeds Castle 2
Fiona Bruce and the team return to Leeds Castle near Maidstone, Kent, where among the treasures uncovered are a cannonball used at the Battle of Trafalgar and a collection of cigarette cards said to be worth a small fortune. There is also a treat in store for fans of Blue Peter
- Leicester
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Leighton
Vase; cup; Beatles memorabilia; bronze figure.
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Leominster
Seeking antiques in Leominster, England.
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Lichfield & Normanby
The roving team values more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public
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Lichfield Cathedral
Michael Aspel and the team begin their tour of the country at Lichfield Cathedral in the Midlands. Among the objects brought in for their scrutiny are a statue thought to be from Tutankhamun's burial chamber, an early set of Punch and Judy puppets and a sword pistol once the property of Lord Nelson - valued at £20,000
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Lincoln
Seeking antiques in Lincoln, England.
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Liverpool
Postcards; Meissen plates; paintings; furniture; jewelry.
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Liverpool 2
Michael Aspel presents the show from St George's Hall, Liverpool, where the fascinating finds brought in by members of the public include a signed copy of the Beatles' first single. A valuable picture frame, a candelabrum from Hitler's final Berlin retreat, a tiepin commemorating the death of Admiral Nelson and an exceptionally rare teapot make it an exciting day for the experts
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Llanelli
Urns; brass microscope; comic collection.
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Llangollen
Platinum and diamond brooch; Victorian credenza; painting; table.
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Lochgilphead
Michael Aspel and his roving team of experts value more antiques and rarities in Lochgilphead, Argyll and Bute, including a pair of Staffordshire zebras, a painting by Scottish artist Hamilton McKenzie, a carved bone ship made by Napoleonic prisoners of war, and a painted asbestos tile by Kurt Schwitters produced in a World War Two internment camp
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Lochgilphead, in Argyll and Bute
A painting on an asbestos tile; Staffordshire zebras; a carved-bone ship.
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London to Brighton Special
Michael Aspel introduces a special edition to celebrate the London to Brighton veteran car race, taking viewers on a journey through the golden age of motoring. Featuring expert opinion from Eric Knowles and Hilary Kay
- London to Brighton Veteran Car Race
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Londonderry
Michael Aspel and the team make the show's first trip to Londonderry, where they value more objects brought in by the public. Among items displayed for their scrutiny are a set of intricate hand-cut pictures, a cushion woven from human hair and a collection of silver worth over £100,000
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Lord's
Expert opinions come thick and fast from the Indoor School at Lord's, where items include a cricket bat used to win the Ashes, a stirrup cup depicting an Irish wolfhound and a pair of bronze American Indians
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Lord's: Home of the Marylebone Cricket Club
Collection of cricket items; inkwell and pen disguised as bat and ball.
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Lowestoft
Hugh Scully and the team head for Lowestoft where they discover two rare porcelain bowls, a Sevres potty from Woburn Abbey and a traveller's calendar watch with seven dials telling the time around the world
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Ludlow
Ludlow.
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Luton Hoo Mansion
Mansion; early television.
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Luton Hoo Mansion 2
Mansion; Worcester porcelain.
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Lyme Park
The grounds of Lyme Park in Cheshire provide the setting for the discovery of more treasures, including a valuable objet d'art and an early edition of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
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Lyme Regis
Vodka cup; painting.
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Macclesfield
Seeking antiques in Macclesfield, England.
- Magna Centre in Rotherham
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Maidenhead
Seeking antiques in Maidenhead, England.
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Malta
Seeking antiques in Malta.
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Manchester
Seeking antiques in Manchester, England.
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Manchester - Victoria Baths
Michael Aspel and the team visit Victoria Baths in Manchester, which won the first series of Restoration in 2003. Among the finds on display are an art deco cigarette case bought at a car-boot sale, a machine which was designed to cure any illness through electrical impulses, and an ornate pedestal worth a small fortune
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Manderston
The team set out their stalls in Manderston, near Berwick-on-Tweed. Items presented for their interest include objects from Queen Victoria's household, a vicious-looking mantrap and Lord Palmer's collection of rare biscuit tins worth several thousand pounds
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Mansfield
Silver spoon; battered cello; Jesse James' gun; silver microscope.
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Mansion House
The experts visit Mansion House in London, and value items belonging to members of the public, including a rare plate dug up on a building site 15 years ago, a small desk dating back to 1785 and locks of hair from Lord Nelson and the Duke of Wellington. Michael Aspel presents
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Margate
Seeking antiques in Margate, England.
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Market Harborough
Augsburg clock; bronze lamp; silver salver.
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Marlborough
Hugh Scully and the team visit Marlborough College
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Melbourne
The team's first trip to Australia saw 20,000 fans apply for tickets. The lucky few bring their objects to the Royal Exhibition Building in Melbourne, as the experts value relics from gold strikes, a flag flown at the Battle of Trafalgar and a sad-looking bear with an astounding price tag
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Melksham
Another chance to see a visit to Melksham in Wiltshire, when some of the objects on view included a dagger worn by a Cossack, a drawing by Edmund Dulac, a dog collar made in 1784, a collection of bedpans and a gold box found in the mud in Wales. Presented by Michael Aspel
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Melksham, Wiltshire
A Cossack dagger; a drawing by Edmund Dulac; a dog collar made in 1784; a collection of bedpans; a gold box.
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Mellerstain House
The experts visit Mellerstain House on the Scottish Borders and come across some interesting finds, including a Lowry doodle, a dressing case and a valuable majolica dish. Michael Aspel presents
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Mellerstain House Special
The team visit Mellerstain House in Scotland where interesting finds include a colourful Minton figure and a Japanese dagger with an interesting history
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Melsham
Melsham.
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Merthyr Tydfil
Seeking antiques in Merthyr Tydfil, Wales.
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Michelham Priory
East Sussex.
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Middleport
Michael Aspel presents from a working Victorian pottery in Middleport, Staffordshire, where the experts view a portrait of William Gladstone that was thought to have been lost, a pendant worth considerably more than its 50p purchase price, and a valuable pair of small rice bowls
- Middleport Pottery
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Middlesbrough
Pottery; watch; Lowestoft plaques; train set.
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Milestones, Basingstoke : Children's
The roving team value more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public
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Minehead
Hugh Scully and the team visit Minehead to value more antiques
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Montacute
Michael Aspel and the team visit Montacute House in Somerset, where they value more objects brought in by the public. Among the items are chairs that were aboard one of Nelson's ships during the Battle of Trafalgar, and vintage underwear collected by a vicar's wife
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Montacute 2
The team visit Montacute House in Somerset for a second time to value more objects brought in by the public. Among the items shown is one of the rarest pieces seen on the show, a piece of silver dug up from a garden, as well as Winnie the Pooh illustrations and a steam-powered car
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Moreton-in-Marsh
Ceramic plate; oil painting; marble dog.
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Morpeth
The team find more treasures, including two paintings of Venice, an engraved crystal glass, and a love token found in an Oxfam shop
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Motherwell
Seeking antiques in Motherwell, Scotland; Glasgow School paintings; carved oak sideboard.
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Mount Stewart
The team travel to Mount Stewart, Co Down in Northern Ireland, where they cast their eyes over a badly damaged painting once thrown in a skip before giving it a staggering valuation. Other finds include a memento of Laurel and Hardy, while Henry Sandon is introduced to a mug bearing his spitting image
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Mount Stewart 2
Michael Aspel and the roving Roadshow experts return to Northern Ireland for a second visit and again set up camp at Mount Stewart in Co Down. This time they find a rare Wedgwood cup and saucer, and a teddy bear which has been kept in a box for 40 years
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National Archives
Michael Aspel presents a special edition from the National Archives at Kew, where he explores treasures including the Domesday Book and the SOS telegram sent by the Titanic. Among the items valued by the team are early documents chronicling the work of the suffragettes, a picture made entirely out of human hair and a mahogany coffer, presented as a gift by King James I
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National Maritime Museum Special
The team values more decorative objects and rarities during a special visit to Falmouth's National Maritime Museum, where they enjoy a tour of the building and view treasures including a Liberty belt-buckle, a collection of autographs from the 1960s and a 16th-century jar - which was purchased for the bargain price of £1. Presented by Michael Aspel
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Newark
Seeking antiques in Newark, England.
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Newcastle
Residents bring items for analysis.
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Newcastle Emlyn
Leather golf ball; Brazilian admiral's uniform.
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Newmarket
A day at Newmarket racecourse brings out equine-themed valuables, including a bronze of the racehorse Ibrahim, which has retained its worth despite a wonky ear caused by a fall. An inscribed loving cup also comes under scrutiny, along with a pearlware horse which holds a few surprises for the owner
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Newport
The team examines finds in Newport in Gwent, including a large teapot, a rare Hungarian vase and an enormous painting of Britannia. Plus, as a testimony to ingenuity, Michael Aspel gets a chance to try out a home-made bomb-clearing device from World War Two
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The Next Generation
Scottish museum; young people.
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Normanby Hall
Michael Aspel and the team visit Normanby Hall near Scunthorpe, where objects brought in by the public include a pair of candlesticks won in a newspaper competition and a marble bust valued at £15,000. The presenter also meets a man with a passion for vintage lawnmower racing
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Northallerton
Hugh Scully and the team find two rosewood boxes by the same maker, brought together after 150 years, a local mouse on a cheeseboard, a portrait of a family dog and a bronze pig with a missing piglet
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Northampton
Seeking antiques in Northampton, England.
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Norwich
Michael Aspel and the team value more decorative objects and rarities in the cloisters of Norwich Cathedral. Among the items presented for their scrutiny are a letter written by Lord Nelson, a series of portraits depicting the ancestors of Walt Disney, and correspondence from John Lennon's guardian Mary Smith
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Norwich
The team return for a second stint in the cloisters of Norwich Cathedral. Items presented for their scrutiny include original illustrations to children's novel Black Beauty, fragments of porcelain that recall the tragedy in Hiroshima, and a rare saucer used for years as an ashtray - valued at £1,000
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Nottingham
Michael Aspel presents from Nottingham, where the team discovers a pair of outsize boots whose owner could have weighed 52 stone. Other items include memorabilia from the Nuremberg Trials, a shirt worn by an Arsenal player in 1950 and a neo-classical ring found in the spout of a teapot
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Oban
The team values more decorative objects and rarities when they visit Oban on the west of Scotland. Among the finds is written evidence of a payment for secret services made by George I, as well as furniture from Portugal and a cigarette box from Russia
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Oldham
Hugh Scully and the team head for Oldham in Lancashire, where they value a huge collection of bookmarks, two Roman toga pins dating back to the first century and three original sketches by LS Lowry, including one drawn on the back of a cigarette packet
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Orkney
Seeking antiques in Orkney, Scotland.
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Ormskirk
Hugh Scully and the team unearth more valuables, including a terracotta bust, a Lowry painting and a collection of memorabilia from the 1950s and 1960s
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Ottawa
The roving team travels to Ottawa, Canada, to examine more decorative objects brought by the public, including a bronze figure obtained in exchange for a pound of coffee, a pair of 19th-century whirligigs and a 16th-century jewelled cross
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Oxburgh Hall
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Oxburgh Hall in Norfolk where they come across a 300-year-old treasure box filled with surprises, family heirlooms that honour the men of the Pathfinder squadron in World War Two and a set of discarded posters that are given a surprising valuation
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Oxburgh Hall
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Oxburgh Hall in Norfolk, where they assess finds including a 300-year-old treasure box packed with surprises, and family heirlooms which honour the men of the Pathfinder Squadron who fought in World War Two. Plus, a set of discarded postcards receives a high valuation
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Oxford 1
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Hertford College, Oxford, where the presenter studied French and Italian. Among the items brought in by the public are a unique recording of a Beatles studio session and a Maori carving with a macabre past. A Russian painting also receives a surprising valuation
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Oxford 2
Fiona Bruce and the team return to Hertford College, Oxford, where items of interest include two dishes purchased cheaply from a car boot sale and a rare document recording the end of hostilities in World War One. Plus, the tragic story of the owner of a beautiful bracelet
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Paignton
Seeking antiques in Paignton, England.
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Palace of Scone at Moot Hill
Porcelain; carved ivories.
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Peebles
Portuguese desk; Mickey Mouse watch; bangles; 17th-century illustrated notebook.
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Pembroke
Seeking antiques in Pembroke, Wales.
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Penarth
Letters; painting; desk; Delft vase; ormolu clock.
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Penshurst Place 1
Part one of two. Hugh Scully and the team travel to Penshurst Place in Sussex, where the experts uncover a noteworthy Scottish painting, an astonishingly valuable pair of candelabra and a 'friendship book' containing a possible portrait of Jane Austen
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Penshurst Place - Part Two
Part two of two. Hugh Scully and the team of experts continue their trawl through the treasures of Penshurst Place in Sussex, uncovering a well-preserved tin-plate toy boat, a rare 19th-century paper toy and a pair of unusual diamond and enamel cufflinks
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Penzance and the Scilly Isles
Scilly Isles; railway.
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Perth
Perth, Scotland.
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Perth's City Hall
Communion cups; life-size horse carved of wood.
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Peterborough
Seeking antiques in Peterborough, England.
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Pickering
'Gone With the Wind' screenplay; train set; cup; saucer.
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Plymouth
The team value a painting by Frederick Lord Leighton and a cast-iron machine for peeling apples
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Poole
The team take a trip to Poole in Dorset, valuing items including a gold medal relating to the Titanic and a painting rescued from a church jumble sale
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Porthmadog
Hugh Scully and the team value more antiques in Porthmadog
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Portmeirion
Michael Aspel and the team return for a new series, beginning in Portmeirion in North Wales, famous for being the location of Sixties series The Prisoner. Locals are out in force and among the treasures are a set of intricate mosaics, gifts made by former prisoners of war and a valuable pen-knife
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Powis Castle
Michael Aspel and the team travel to Powis Castle in Wales and value a host of treasures including an original Dr Who script. Plus, the owner of a broken piece of pottery is left to rue their luck as the experts reveal it could have been worth a fortune
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Preston
Seeking antiques in Preston, England.
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Prideaux Place 1
Michael Aspel and the team visit Prideaux Place in Cornwall, where they cast their eyes over original artwork for some of the earliest saucy seaside postcards. Other items include a rare Ming vase and a letter written by Lord Nelson on board HMS Victory, and there's the chance to hear the premiere of an Ivor Novello song
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Prideaux Place 2
Michael Aspel and the team pay a return visit to Prideaux Place in Cornwall, where they cast their eyes over an 18th-century Japanese device for listening to music created by crickets. Other items include original illustrations by Louis Wain and a dusty family picture by a Regency portrait painter
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Private Gardens of the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire
Brooch; cobra-shaped claret decanter.
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Queensferry
Seeking antiques in Queensferry, Scotland.
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RAF Museum, Hendon
The roving team value more antiques and rarities
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Ramsgate
The roving team visits Ramsgate in Kent where it finds a valuable collection of cat pictures and makes some interesting discoveries, including a handbag made from an armadillo shell and two teddy bears with their own X-ray plates
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Reading
Two well-preserved Elizabethan paintings, a study of a World War One nurse and a miniature butcher's shop are among the delights found by Hugh Scully and the experts when they visit Reading
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Redruth
Michael Aspel and his team of experts examine an international mix of items when they visit Redruth in Cornwall, including an Italian super-light dining chair, a large Buddha clad in gold leaf, a Chinese vase brought to the roadshow on a skateboard, and a French cabinet transported from the Caribbean on a banana boat
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Renishaw Hall
In a programme from Renishaw Hall in Derbyshire, Michael Aspel and the team examine a collection of bronzes, a portrait by Stanley Spencer, examples of 20th-century art pottery, a marble-top table and a bow allegedly used by Robin Hood
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Renishaw Hall 1
In the first of two programmes from Renishaw Hall in Derbyshire, home of the Sitwell family, Michael Aspel and the team find a collection of swords, a pigeon-racing clock, a patchwork quilt and a valuable painting of a lion
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Retrospective
Fiona Bruce and the team look back at the current series, choosing their favourite moments from the past six months. The programme features updates on items of high value, including footage from an auction in which a £1 boot-sale purchase became the best investment in Roadshow history. Last in the series
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Retrospective Special
Michael Aspel looks back on the past series, tracing what became of some of the items valued over the six-month period, discovering which pieces were sold at auction and which went back in the attic. Plus, a preview of forthcoming spin-off programme 20th Century Roadshow, with Alan Titchmarsh examining collectibles from the past 100 years. Last in series
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Retrospective Special
In the last of the current series, Michael Aspel focuses on what happened to objects after they were valued on the show. He reveals how a scrap of paper bearing a few jotted thoughts has since been confirmed as the genesis of a hit TV sketch, and how a grubby painting yielded its secrets in the hands of a restoration specialist. There's also a visit to the purpose-built home of collector May Savidge
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RHS Wisley 2
Michael Aspel and the team evaluate decorative objects and rarities from the Royal Horticultural Society gardens at Wisley. Among the treasures are an early fortune teller's caravan and a credenza - but will either be worth a fortune?
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Rochdale
Michael Aspel and the team visit Rochdale's town hall, where objects brought in for scrutiny include a gold pencil given as a gift by George IV, paintbrushes used by Salford-born artist LS Lowry and the diaries of a British hangman
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Rochester
The team pay a visit to Rochester Cathedral, where they unearth some surprising finds including a rare Scottish sword found hidden behind a chimney and some well maintained delivery bicycles that are still being put to good use
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Rochester Cathedral
Michael Aspel and the team pay a return visit to Rochester Cathedral, where they uncover an early piece of TV equipment and toast the festive season with Napoleon's drinking glass
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Rotherham
Michael Aspel and the team visit the Magna Centre in Rotherham. Discoveries include a rare clock given as a gift by Queen Victoria, a valuable hoard of silver, some much-loved Beatles memorabilia and one of the largest pieces ever to be put in front of the panel of experts
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Royal Holloway
Part two of two. The team returns to Royal Holloway College, in Surrey, where items assessed include a ring with an unusual diamond and a rare gold watch
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Royal Holloway - Part One
Part one of two. The team travel to Royal Holloway College in Surrey, where they value a collection of miniature paintings depicting West Indian planters, a selection of costume designs rescued from a dustbin and a walking stick which once belonged to Enrico Caruso
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The Royal Horticultural Society Gardens at Wisley
Letters written by Lewis Carroll; a carriage clock saved from a skip.
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Royal International Pavilion
Platinum brooch; credenza; table for salting pork.
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Royal Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh
Royal Museum of Scotland; toys.
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Royal Navy Hospital, Gosport
The team examines collectibles at the Royal Navy Hospital in Gosport, where valuables include a Steiff teddy and an Edward Lear sketch
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Royal Navy Hospital Haslar
The team of experts visit the Royal Navy Hospital at Haslar, Gosport, and value more heirlooms, including a satinwood secretaire known as Aunt Selina, a radiograph of Edward VIII's hand, and ceremonial silverware presented to HMS Lion by Tsar Nicholas II
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Royal Yacht Britannia Special
Michael Aspel introduces a compilation of unseen footage from the series while taking a tour of the Royal Yacht Britannia. The rarities featured include a collection of lorgnettes, a monk's bench, a pair of plaques bought for a week's wages and Beatles autographs
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Rugby
An impressive collection of drawings relating to hot-air ballooning, some by Daily Mail cartoonist Hugh, a post box from Penny Lane in Liverpool, an assortment of suffragette memorabilia and a signed Rolling Stones album are just some of the treasures brought to the experts in Rugby
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Saffron Walden
Walden.
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Salford
Michael Aspel and the team travel to Salford, where they cast their eyes over a drawing by local artist LS Lowry, Zulu wedding beads, an American scrimshaw whale's tooth and an album of Victorian photographs
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Salisbury
Seeking antiques in Salisbury, England.
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Scarborough
Michael Aspel and the team of experts visit Scarborough, North Yorkshire, where some of the more unusual items include a rare roll of Beatles wallpaper, a passport which once belonged to the world's smallest man and carved whales' teeth that turn out to be very valuable
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Scarborough 2
Scarborough's hotel on the seafront, spa and sun terrace, ironwork bridges, cliff trams and the museum.
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Selby
Michael Aspel and the antiques team value finds in Selby, North Yorkshire, turning up Masonic porcelain, a picture embroidered from sock-wool in memory of the gallant Captain Oates and a personalised copy of Beatrix Potter's book The Fairy Caravan
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Sheffield
Michael Aspel and the team pay a visit to Sheffield City Hall, where heirlooms under scrutiny include an abstract sculpture rescued by its owner from a scrap yard, a canvas painted by one of the old masters, and a piece of royal history in the form of letters written by Mary Queen of Scots
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Sherborne
The team value decorative objects and rarities at Sherborne School in Dorset, where finds include a George Cross awarded to a bomb disposal expert, a collection of work by original Winnie-the-Pooh illustrator EH Shepard, a paper globe dating from 1830 and a Patek Philippe pocket watch
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Sherborne Two
Michael Aspel and the team of experts visit Sherborne School in Dorset, where the rarities include letters written by Lewis Carroll, a risque cigarette case, part of the airframe of the R100 airship, an original monk's bench and a valuable 18th-century satinwood cabinet
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Shetland
Michael Aspel and his band of experts value the wares of islanders on Shetland. An enamelled 18th-century glass, a Scottish pearl set in a gold ring and a portrait by celebrated railway artist Terence Cuneo are among the items that catch their eyes
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Shughborough
Michael Aspel and the team of experts visit Shugborough Hall in Staffordshire, family seat of the Earls of Lichfield, to value items including a hat stand with a family of bears climbing up it and a poster signed by Jimi Hendrix
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Skegness
Lincolnshire.
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Skegness, Lincolnshire
Egyptian stool; bent-metal rocker; bottle.
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Skye
Card table; Dutch bureau.
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Southampton
Seeking antiques in Southampton, England.
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Southport
The team value more decorative objects and collectibles in Southport's Floral Hall, including a rare perfume bottle, a mobile phone from the Victorian era and a collection of extremely valuable pop stars' autographs. Presented by Michael Aspel
- Southport
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Southwell 1
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Southwell Minster in Nottinghamshire, where they discover a collection of rare silver that has been gathering dust in an attic, a talking clock and a 17th-century betrothal box containing a number of secret drawers
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Southwell 2
Fiona Bruce and the team return to Southwell Minster in Nottinghamshire, where they examine a host of treasures including the earliest toy train in the programme's history and a pocketwatch created by Britain's finest watchmaker. There's also a staggering valuation for a romantic painting
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Spalding
Seeking antiques in Spalding, England.
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St Austell
Michael Aspel and the team visit St Austell in Cornwall, where they are presented with objects including a sock-making machine, a pair of stuffed eagles and a treasured collection of personal memorabilia from a member of the 1932 Olympic swimming team
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St David's
Hugh Scully and the team visit St David's to value more antiques
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St George's Hall
Michael Aspel and the team journey to Bexhill's De La Warr Pavilion to uncover more hidden heirlooms. Items under scrutiny include one of the finest pieces of silverware ever to be discovered on the show, a collection of fragments telling the story of a daring escape from Colditz, and a trove of saucy seaside postcards once banned by censors
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St Ives
The experts value more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public when they visit St Ives in Cambridgeshire. Among the items brought in for valuation are one of the first pocket calculators ever produced and a jug purchased for next to nothing
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St. Ives 2
Wool and cattle made St. Ives in Cambridgeshire successful.
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St. Peter Port
American bronze; Charlie Chaplin clockwork toy; Japanese fountain.
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Stafford
Seeking antiques in Stafford, England.
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Stirling University
Glass; jade earrings.
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Stornoway
Michael Aspel and the team travel to the Outer Hebrides for the first time, visiting Stornoway on the island of Lewis. They cast their expert eyes over an assortment of curios and antiques, including a collection of barbaric medical instruments, a uniquely hand-crafted table and a contemporary painting
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Stowmarket
Seeking antiques in Stowmarket, England.
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Stranraer
Jeweler's stock; sculpture; painting.
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Stratford-upon-Avon
Seeking antiques in Stratford-upon-Avon, England.
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Stroud
The team visits Stroud, where discoveries include a beaker made by craftsman and interior designer CR Ashbee which is decorated with a design reflecting his name. They also unearth a 17th-century cushion, while Simon Bull finds a rare marine chronometer in its original box, and Michael Aspel is intimidated by a headhunter's sword from Borneo
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Sudeley Castle
Michael Aspel and his team of experts visit the gardens of Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire where they examine a sapphire pendant by Guiliano, a regulator clock of the highest quality, and examples of Winchcombe pottery and Cotswold furniture. They also find a native American pouch that was traded by the Cligatac nation with a dentist in exchange for pulling teeth. Plus, Simon Bull discusses the dangers of using luminous paint on pre-1950s watches
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Swansea
Michael Aspel and the team head for Wales, where they set up camp in the Brangwyn Hall, Swansea. Among the items under scrutiny are one of Marc Bolan's guitars and some of his stage suits, along with a collection of suffragette items. There's also a surprise in store for the owner of a Victorian painting
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Sydney
Michael Aspel and the team travel to Sydney, Australia, to value artefacts and rarities on the other side of the world. Among items brought in are part of the keel of Captain Cook's ship Endeavour, furniture made by convicts transported to the country during the 18th century, and a collection of opera star Maria Callas's belongings - which receives one of the highest valuations ever given on the programme
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Syon Park
With Hugh Scully in the Great Conservatory at Syon Park, London. Finds include a previously unknown collection of intimate letters from Henry Moore, and a child's correction chair with a very straight back
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Taunton
Cookbook; teddy bear; Austrian cabinet; botanical watercolors; plastic guitar; fountain pens.
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Tavistock
The team values more rarities owned by the public in the Pannier Market at Tavistock in Devon. Items under scrutiny include an early inmate's uniform and cat o'nine tails from Dartmoor prison, a plate worth £1,000 and a vintage hunting horn used to sound the advance during the D-Day landings of 1944
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Tavistock 2
Michael Aspel and the team value more rarities owned by the public in the market at Tavistock in Devon. Objects under scrutiny include two unusual items created by furniture-maker Robert 'Mousey' Thompson, better known as the Mouseman, plus a painting that hides a sinister story, and an Elizabethan jug found in a well
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Tenby
Michael Aspel and the experts visit Tenby in Wales, where they value a Welsh dresser with no drawer handles, a travelling chamber stick used in the Crimean War and a sledge flag from Shackleton's ill-fated 1916 Antarctic expedition
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Tideworth B
One of the oldest villages in Britain.
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Tidworth
Michael Aspel and the team value a diverse range of items in the Wiltshire garrison town of Tidworth, including a regimental silver centrepiece, rare French porcelain, valuable toys and an unusual sardine tin
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Toronto
Michael Aspel hosts as the team value rarities in the Canadian city of Toronto, where finds include a traditional box decorated with porcupine quills, a valuable Newlyn School painting, fine English oak furniture and an American soda siphon. The biggest surprise of the day is a jacket once owned by the leader of the expedition to find Sir John Franklin
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Torquay
Hugh Scully and the antiques team value finds in Torquay, including Dr Crippen memorabilia and a diamond and sapphire ring
- Trentham Gardens
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Truro Cathedral
Abacus; Worcester plaques; silver snuffbox.
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Tunbridge Wells
Seeking antiques in Royal Tunbridge Wells, England.
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Tyntesfield
The team travels to Tyntesfield House near Bristol, where they value more of the public's antiques and curios, while Michael meets a man with a button obsession. Items brought for valuation include a ruby and diamond brooch, a unique silver grape holder, and a cabinet which houses a collection of rare microscope slides
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Ulverston
Michael Aspel and the heirloom hunting team head to the Coronation Hall in Ulverston. Timeworn collectors items include a boot sale find with a surprising price tag, and a valuable clock given to a nurse during the Crimean war by what is reputed to be a mysterious royal patient
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University of Birmingham
Another chance to see the team's visit to Birmingham, where they come across a Victorian Noah's ark, a maritime telescope with a fascinating history, and an extremely rare bust of a Turk, which could make a fortune at auction if it proves to be a 17th-century English piece. Presented by Michael Aspel
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University of Salford
The team discover a wealth of interesting artifacts in Salford near Manchester, including a letter from Elvis Presley, signed photographs of the stars of Coronation Street, a manuscript of Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time, and an album of Victorian photographs taken by Ralph Herbert Lord
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Ventnor
The team visit Ventnor on the Isle of Wight to assess more rarities brought by the public. Among the objects presented for their scrutiny are a family portrait featuring a Speaker of the House of Commons, 75 Austin vehicles made at the Longbridge production plant, and a photograph that saved a woman's life during World War One
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Victoria and Albert Museum 1
Michael Aspel and Paul Atterbury return to the Victoria and Albert Museum to view more of the exhibits, and present previously unseen sequences from the series. Highlights include Winston Churchill memorabilia comprising signed books and cigar boxes, a model of a Churchill tank and a collection of Spanish watercolour paintings
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Victoria and Albert Museum Special
Michael Aspel and the team return to the Victoria and Albert Museum to view more of the exhibits. Highlights include a collection of Japanese hair decorations, a necklace made up of beads once worn by Egyptian mummies and discovered by Victorian archaeologists, and letters written to relatives by Alice in Wonderland author Lewis Carroll
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Waddesdon Manor
Manor exhibits; Ming vases.
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Waddesdon Manor Special
Manor.
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Wakehurst Place
Michael Aspel and the team travel to Wakehurst Place in West Sussex. They evaluate a decorative cast-iron finial from Tower Bridge which was dislodged in a World War Two bombing raid and a collection of 13th-century church carvings removed in the Victorian era. Plus, one of the finest and most valuable pieces of art to have been featured on the programme
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Walsall
The experts invite members of the Walsall public to bring in their valuables for assessment
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Warwick B
Michael Aspel and the experts continue their visit to Warwick Castle, and cast their eyes over more treasures, including the strangest cigar lighter ever seen on the programme, a model guillotine made by French PoWs and a life drawing of remarkable quality
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Wells 1
Fiona Bruce and the team set up at the Bishop's Palace in Wells, for the first of two programmes from the Somerset city. Items brought in for valuation include a painting by Rolf Harris's grandfather and one of the earliest recorded objects seen in the series. Plus, a plate which reputedly belonged to Captain Scott during his ill-fated expedition to the Antarctic
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Wells 2
Fiona Bruce presents a second programme from the Bishop's Palace in Wells, Somerset. Among the items valued by the team of experts are a bracelet once given as a gift by Queen Victoria, a rare tapestry which leads to a revealing moment for its owners, and a seal used during the campaign to abolish slavery
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Welshpool
The team travel to Welshpool in mid-Wales where they examine an original Rembrandt etching and a hippopotamus's skull from an African journey
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West Dean College
Hugh Scully and the team value antiques at West Dean College
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Weston-super-Mare
Edwardian picnic set; ceramic sheet; multipurpose table.
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Westonbirt (Gloucestershire)
Letter from Beatrix Potter; gold ring; painting.
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Weymouth
Paintings; dining table; clock; pinups.
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Whitchurch
The team visits Whitchurch in Shropshire to examine valuable items, including a pair of silver claret jugs, Irish wooden peat buckets made in the early 1800s and a collection of card cases, snuff boxes and vinaigrettes
-
Whitehaven
Seeking antiques in Whitehaven, England.
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Wigan
Michael Aspel and the team visit Wigan, where objects brought in for valuation include a cache of silver which was buried during World War Two to hide it from the Nazis, an early depiction of women's rights and an art nouveau cabinet nicknamed 'the Monstrosity' by its owners
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Wilton House
Michael Aspel and the team travel to Wilton House near Salisbury where they cast their eyes over more antiques and curios brought in by members of the public. Items include a suffragette doll with a unique wardrobe, a collection of typewriters and a ring with regal connections dating back to 1635
-
Winchester College 1
Part one of two. The team visit Winchester and examine rare Indian watercolours from the 1820s and a collection of jewellery hidden for many years
-
Winchester College 2
Part two of two. Hugh Scully and the team reveal more unseen footage from Winchester College, including a Faberge box, a selection of unusual silver cruets and an 18th-century sampler
-
Winchester College Compilation
Mustard and pepper pots; Faberge box.
- Windermere
-
The Wirral
Bebington.
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Wisbech
Michael Aspel and the team visit Wisbech in Cambridgeshire, where a Martinware bird, thought by its owner to be a tobacco jar, turns out to be anything but. A rare ring proves to be an interesting find and a selection of royal letters, invitations and sketches collected by a Windsor Castle librarian in the 1860s reveal a secret history
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Wisley
The Royal Horticultural Society's gardens in Wisley, England.
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Wisley 2
The gardens, laboratories, insect collection and seed-sorting room at the Royal Horticultural Gardens at Wisley, England.
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Witley Court
Michael Aspel and the team visit Witley Court in Worcestershire, where they discover an early puppet theatre, a Worcester plate made as a royal gift and a drawing by Salford artist LS Lowry. They also value a rare piece of early Staffordshire slipware, similar to the famous 'Ozzie the Owl'
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Witney
The roving team values decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public in Witney, Oxfordshire, uncovering many bargains and a surprise find. Including a portrait by a famous 20th-century painter bought for its frame, an album of watercolours salvaged from a jumble sale and the interesting discovery of a bracelet of gold eggs
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Woburn Abbey
Michael Aspel and the team visit Woburn Abbey in Bedfordshire, one of the grandest stately homes in England. Among the treasures on display are a rare washing bowl for beards, a portrait of a cat and a Victorian bracelet that imitates a snake
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Woburn Abbey 2
Michael Aspel and the team pay a second visit to Woburn Abbey, where they take a tour of the home of the Dukes of Bedford. Items brought forward for scrutiny include a Tiffany inkwell, a pair of rare cow creamers and the smallest object ever valued - an engraved grain of rice
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Woking
Members of the public from Woking have their valuables assessed
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Worcester
A 17th-century stoneware pot and a collection of majolica sweet stands worth a small fortune
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Worcester Cathedral
Stoneware pot.
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Worthing
Seeking antiques in Worthing, England.
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Wrekin College
Racing cup; Chippendale clock.
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Wrexham
The team travel to Wrexham, where they examine early Worcester porcelain and a black iron umbrella stand
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Wymondham, Norfolk
Georgian dining-table; stone sculpture; painting.
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Yeovil
Seeking antiques in Yeovil, England.
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York
Seeking antiques in York, England.
Antiques Roadshow: Special (2000 - 2006)
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25th Anniversary Special
Twenty-five years since the programme was first aired, the roving team, many of whom have been involved since the beginning, join a selection of dedicated viewers to recall their favourite highlights. Also featured is a visit to a recent recording on a wet day, showing how resilient the British public is, and one of the experts receives an invitation to attend the American version of the show
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Antiques Roadshow Unwrapped
The 21st anniversary of the show; the recording of an episode.
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Eastnor Castle Special
The experts make a return visit to Eastnor Castle in Herefordshire, where they value a 17th-century wine bottle and a collection of letters, photographs and medals belonging to three suffragettes from Glasgow. Among the other treasures are a Victorian dressing case which, despite having travelled from England to Brazil and Guernsey, remains in pristine condition. Presented by Michael Aspel
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Falmouth Special
The Suhaili sails in the world's third-largest natural harbor.
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Farewell Michael
Veteran presenter Michael Aspel bids farewell to BBC's flagship antiques show with a special programme dedicated to highlights from the 200 episodes he hosted. Items highlighted include a watch that once belonged to Lawrence of Arabia - found on Michael's first roadshow. With contributions from fellow antiques enthusiasts Eric Knowles and Hilary Kay. Last in series
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Glamis Castle Special
The roving team values more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public on a visit to Glamis Castle
-
Greatest Finds Special
A look back at some of the most valuable rarities featured in the series, including a collection of silver unearthed in West Sussex, and an item that sold for a six-figure sum
- Harewood House Special
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Mellerstain Special
Michael Aspel introduces a second special programme from Mellerstain House in Scotland and talks to expert Deborah Lambert about the influence of Robert Adam on the decoration. He also examines unseen finds from previous shows, including a Minton figure, a Japanese dagger and a painting with a smokey past
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The Next Generation : Children's Special
The roving team value more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public
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Royal Hospital Chelsea
Remembrance Sunday special from the Royal Hospital in London, home of the Chelsea Pensioners. Michael Aspel and the team offer their opinions on a roulette table built to foil cheats, a collection of buttons worn by Charles Dickens and a gilded bee from a royal throne thought to have magical powers
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Scone Palace Special
Palace.
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Special/Compilation
An opportunity to view some unseen treasures unearthed by the team on their recent travels. A car boot sale purchase proves much more valuable than the money paid for it. Plus, the story of a watercolour painting bought for two cigarettes in a World War Two POW camp, told by the man who smuggled it into Britain
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Sport Relief Special
Michael Aspel meets Graham Gooch and Tessa Sanderson at Lord's Cricket Ground for a special programme dedicated to Sport Relief. Items discovered include one of the stopwatches used to time Roger Bannister's legendary four-minute mile and a medal thrown into a crowd of spectators by Jose Mourinho
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Syon Park Special
Unseen clips from previous episodes.
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Viewers Choice Special
The roving team value more decorative objects and rarities belonging to the public
