Antiques Roadshow
A royal portrait by Beryl Cook and artwork by "Pennine Painter" Peter Brook an art deco bracelet a diamond necklace.
A royal portrait by Beryl Cook and artwork by "Pennine Painter" Peter Brook an art deco bracelet a diamond necklace.
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A royal portrait by Beryl Cook and artwork by "Pennine Painter" Peter Brook an art deco bracelet a diamond necklace.
The team visits Buckfast Abbey, a Benedictine monastery in Devon, where they find a tiara, a mysterious teddy bear, and a silver platter.
A mourning ring connected to Charlotte Brontë a Welsh love spoon handed down through the generations.
A four-leaf clover brooch a collection of Radiohead memorabilia a former Concorde pilot talks about the celebrities he used to fly across the Atlantic.
A Cartier clock a tiny bowl with a giant price tag and a royal portrait which is not all that it seems.
At Eltham Palace in London, the team finds a pair of dueling pistols, a typewriter, and some of Winston Churchill's personal items.
The show rolls into Manchester's MediaCityUK, home to some of Britain's best-loved television programmes, where Fiona Bruce meets "Blue Peter" presenters past and present.
At Cromer seafront in Norfolk, the experts uncover two pieces of exquisite Italian design a Chinese vase bought from a London market turns out to be a very special find.
Ornate silver from Iona signed Harry Potter books a unique Brooklyn Dodgers baseball a German art deco figurine an intricate Italian bracelet.
An emerald and diamond ring worn on the Titanic a fan's collection of James Bond props a Welsh love spoon carved in 1859.
Two unknown paintings by Diego Rivera a collection of Gerry Anderson puppets.
The team take a look back at some of the most memorable finds from the past 40 years, and what happened to the selection of items.
The team presents from the Etaples Military Cemetery in France with a selection of emotive and poignant World War I items.
A celebration of the outstanding achievements of some of Britain's most inspirational women, marking 100 years since women won the right to vote in 1918.
Fiona and the team head to Leicester's Museum of Technology, housed in a Victorian sewage pumping station: the Abbey Pumping Station, complete with four working beam engines Mark Hill casts his expert eye over an abandoned sculpture.
The team return to Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, home to the Tollemache family for 500 years, where treasures include a sapphire ring, a Girl Guide sketch by Robert Baden-Powell and a collection of Native American artifacts.
Fiona and the team are at Trelissick House and gardens in Cornwall with treasures in all shapes and sizes, from a giant chair and an escape pod from a Vulcan bomber, to a miniature sewing kit that proves the best things do come in little packages.
The team sets up camp outside the Parliament Building in Belfast, home to the Northern Ireland Assembly items featured include the walking stick of Lord Haw-Haw, the traitor executed for helping the Nazis during WWII.
Fiona Bruce and the team return to Cardiff Castle, where silver specialist Gordon Foster is fascinated by an elaborately decorated Indian flask John Benjamin reveals that what was thought to be costume jewelry is actually the real thing.
Fiona and the team are at Minehead Railway Station where spirits are high despite the weather as the sun breaks through, the treasures begin to arrive, including a chair said to have belonged to Henry VIII and a Butlins dance trophy.
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