
Antiques Roadshow
A 3,000-year-old baby rattle; a Fabergé treasure, one of most valuable items ever seen on the show.

A 3,000-year-old baby rattle; a Fabergé treasure, one of most valuable items ever seen on the show.

As part of its 40th anniversary series, Antiques Roadshow arrives on the set of EastEnders.

Senate House in Bloomsbury; brick that survived the Great Fire of London in 1666.

Fiona Bruce and the experts visit the National Trust's beautiful Nymans garden near Crawley.

Mallory's axe from his 1922 ascent of Everest; a sofa that starred in a classic movie.

Objects brought in include a bracelet made from jewels once owned by the last of the Romanovs.

Fiona Bruce and the team roll out their 40th anniversary tour; Castle Howard in Yorkshire.

Garnet and diamond cross believed to have been gifted by Marie Antoinette en route to guillotine.

Fiona Bruce and the team travel to the Lake District.

Items include a communion book once owned by Wilfred Owen and a vintage Aston Martin.

Diamond jewels hidden in upholstered chair; claret jug; banner for Britain's oldest library.

A pearl necklace bought cheaply at a boot sale; a valuable clock found in a flea market.

A gold ring containing a lock of Byron's hair; two Chinese paintings.

Items featured include Walter Scott's walking cane and two very early cricket bats.

Fiona Bruce and the team head for the gardens of Trelissick near Truro in Cornwall.

Fiona Bruce and the experts head to Senate House, Britain's first skyscraper.

Pembroke Castle in West Wales; rare sapphire ring and Pope Pius XII's papal hat.

Photographs revealing the last days of the Russian royal family are brought for valuation.

Notes from one of Shakespeare's earliest readers; gold ring from a British family.

Fiona Bruce and the team head for Burton Constable Hall near Hull.