
Antiques Roadshow
Fiona Bruce and the team are at Tewkesbury Abbey in Gloucestershire two sisters gifted with their great-great-grandmother's jewelry are drawn into the "battle of the bangles" to find out who has the finest inheritance.

Fiona Bruce and the team are at Tewkesbury Abbey in Gloucestershire two sisters gifted with their great-great-grandmother's jewelry are drawn into the "battle of the bangles" to find out who has the finest inheritance.

The show pays a second visit to Trentham Gardens near Stoke-on-Trent, as Fiona Bruce and the team of specialists prepare for another busy day valuing family treasures.

The team makes a return visit to the Spa town of Harrogate in Yorkshire. Fiona Bruce and the experts are at the Royal Hall and top of the bill is a little ink drawing that Phillip Mould believes could be by the hand of Pablo Picasso.

Fiona Bruce and the team head for the elegant Royal Hall in Harrogate for another busy day as two thousand visitors bring family treasures for their scrutiny there is also a frisson of excitement in the air as a sporting icon is brought in.

For the first time Antiques Roadshow devotes an entire episode to celebrating the art and culture of one nation with this special episode hosted from the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir, more commonly known as the Neasden Temple in North London.

The team returns to Bowood House where treasures include an 18th century box engraved with a secret code, an enamel cigarette case by a Russian master craftsman and collection of items from the golden age of tailoring.

The team visits Bowood House in Wiltshire where treasures include a collection of glass car mascots, a portrait used for target practice and a previously unseen account of the sinking of the Titanic written by an officer who survived.

A festive edition from Lyme Park in Cheshire exploring the changing taste in toys given as presents dating back to Edwardian days.

Treasures brought by visitors include an 18th century bottle unearthed by a digger, a mirror inspired by Charles Rennie Mackintosh and a remarkable collection of medals awarded to a man who served in both World Wars.

The team return to Bolsover Castle in Derbyshire where treasures include a rare jade pendant found in a garden, a painting by novelist D.H. Lawrence and huge collection of vintage hats.

From Bolsover Castle in Derbyshire, where treasures include original illustrations for a Roald Dahl story.

From the Royal William Yard in Plymouth, treasures include a book of garden designs by a renowned landscape gardener, one of the last flasks of naval rum to be produced and a ceremonial wooden spoon awarded for the worst exam results in Cambridge.

From the Royal William Yard in Plymouth, finds include doorknobs said to have belonged to Lord Nelson, a psychedelic painting of a band that played at Woodstock and a diamond necklace the length of a skipping rope.

Fiona Bruce introduces a return visit to Durham Cathedral where treasures include a missionary's medical kit, an early etching by Dame Laura Knight and a beautiful carriage clock discovered on WWII bombsite.

Fiona Bruce welcomes visitors to Broughton Castle near Banbury in Oxfordshire where unusual finds include a book of early police mug shots, a Victorian baby bouncer and a musical penknife.

The Antiques Roadshow visits RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire, an operational station home to the Battle of Britain Memorial flight.

Will Farmer investigates the life of a talented, but little-known sculptor, if any of his work survive and if the artist's family to trace it.

Fiona Bruce introduces a unique celebration of the life and reign of Queen Elizabeth II from Balmoral Castle. Highlights include a recording of a speech the young Princess Elizabeth made on Children's Hour in 1940.

The team visit Plas Newydd in Wales, where finds include a Victorian cane, a tollgate made from the Menai suspension bridge, a toilet from the 1840s, two toy giraffes, and an 18th-century grandmother clock.

Fiona and the team travel to Hillsborough Castle, where finds include a medal from the Battle of Waterloo, a rare surviving souvenir of the Great Suffragette Rally in 1908, a Biba umbrella and a glass ladies' dressing table casket.