The Victorian Flower Garden
BBC Home & Garden
BBC Home & Garden
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In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
In a six-part series, architectural historian Dan Cruickshank visits houses in Britain never before open to public view, including South Wraxall Manor, Kinross House in Scotland, Easton Neston, Wentworth Woodhouse, Clandeboye in Northern Ireland, and Marshcourt. Cruickshank roams the corridors and rummages in the cellars as he tells the story of each house -- who built them, the generations who lived in them, and the families who lost them.
Over the centuries, Buckingham Palace has witnessed it all Alexander Armstrong reveals the surprising stories hidden behind the walls of Britain's most iconic royal residence.
Over the centuries, Buckingham Palace has witnessed it all Alexander Armstrong reveals the surprising stories hidden behind the walls of Britain's most iconic royal residence.
Over the centuries, Buckingham Palace has witnessed it all Alexander Armstrong reveals the surprising stories hidden behind the walls of Britain's most iconic royal residence.
Over the centuries, Buckingham Palace has witnessed it all Alexander Armstrong reveals the surprising stories hidden behind the walls of Britain's most iconic royal residence.
Alexander Armstrong returns to the late 18th century and learns that the royal building wasn't originally a palace but a private country house constructed by the Duke of Buckingham.
Dan Cruickshank explores the castles of King Ludwig II, a man who spent his life in pursuit of the ideal of beauty, an ideal that found expression in three of the most extraordinary, ornate architectural schemes imaginable.
Claridge's in London's Mayfair is one of the oldest luxury hotels in the capital.
The Dorchester Hotel on London's Park Lane is one of the most opulent hotels in the world.
A look at 1952, when tragedy struck as King George VI died in his sleep, discovering what happened as the new Queen began her reign.
The death of Edward VII in 1910 rocks Sandringham and the royals the privately-owned house was inherited by Edward VII's wife, Alexandra how the abdication crisis threw the very future of the house into question.
Be transported back to 1862 when the building first came into royal hands Nigel Havers reveals that it was Queen Victoria who snapped up the original Sandringham Hall as a 21st birthday present for her party-loving son Prince Bertie.
Kelly Louise designs a floral dreamworld for a couple's perfect English country wedding, while Edinburgh's Fleurs de Villes showcases some of the brightest recreations of history's most iconic women.
BBC Home & Garden
Jamie's in Venice with a limitless budget for the wedding of one of his most treasured clients lan's team are attempting their biggest ever floral arch Ricky adorns the most photographed loos in London with tens of thousands of bright blossoms.
Showing 1 to 20 of 308 results