Antiques Roadshow
A Jolly Roger flag counts among the family treasures presented to Fiona Bruce and the team during a return visit to Southsea.
A Jolly Roger flag counts among the family treasures presented to Fiona Bruce and the team during a return visit to Southsea.
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Fiona Bruce meets families with poignant stories of courage and humanity in wartime letters, photographs, paintings and everyday family items provide an intimate and revealing insight into the events of WWI and their impact on a generation.
The Roadshow returns to Chenies Manor near Amersham in Buckinghamshire where they discover a forgotten train set, a dazzling piece of Whitefriars glass and a 19th century plant stand that provides one of the biggest surprises of the series.
Finds include two paintings of the Titanic, a bamboo pot and a piece of "Star Wars" memorabilia.
Finds include a pair of Clarice Cliff bookends won in a pub darts tournament, a silver Christening cup with a surprising history and a portrait by a renowned British artist, painted on a fragment of a pillowcase in a prisoner of war camp.
The team return to Scone Palace in Perthshire, Scotland, which provides an imposing backdrop for a roadshow brimming with beautiful treasures.
Treasures featured include Chinese objects which revealed a shocking family secret and rare artworks by the sculptor Elisabeth Frink.
The team encounter what could be the world's smallest stuffed dog and an extraordinary carved chair inspired by the MP's expenses scandal.
A rare 18th-century glass a pair of Queen Victoria's large knickers a special sports day medal awarded during an early 20th-century expedition to the Antarctic.
A table made from timber from Old London Bridge a Maori feather box patriotic musical chamber pot an artist's brush pot.
A sketchbook believed to have been made in 1851 aboard the S.S. Great Britain a landscape of a maritime scene found in a skip a jade Buddhist Lion Dog that brings good fortune to its owner.
A Jolly Roger flag counts among the family treasures presented to Fiona Bruce and the team during a return visit to Southsea.
Fiona Bruce and the experts visit Gregynog and discover secret plans drawn up by a British prisoner of war in Borneo during World War Two, a design by a British artist made in tribute to Americans killed in race riots and a rare type of sapphire.
Fiona Bruce and the team discover a painting of JMW Turner's house on the banks of the Thames, a set of some of the earliest board games designs, and an instrument panel from a Lancaster bomber.
Fiona Bruce and the team visit the Royal Ballet School at Richmond Park in London objects brought to camera include exquisitely modeled porcelain figures made by ballerina Anna Pavlova and a long bow reputed to have been used in World War II.
Fiona Bruce looks back on the most talked about finds of 2013 with updates on star items from the year.
Fiona Bruce and the team head to Scotland where a large crowd awaits the experts at the National Gallery of Modern Art in Edinburgh objects include a small carved ivory figure from the 18th century and an original manuscript by Robert Burns.
Fiona Bruce and the team arrive at Towneley Hall near Burnley in Lancashire despite heavy rain, thousands arrive to show their family treasures.
Fiona Bruce and the experts pay a visit to Newstead Abbey among the discoveries are a medal for bravery awarded to a pigeon in World War Two.
Objects include what could be the most valuable picture ever seen on the show, and a tea caddy.
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