Home / Series / Antiques Roadshow / Aired Order /

All Seasons

Season 1

Season 2

Season 3

Season 4

Season 5

Season 6

Season 7

Season 8

Season 9

Season 10

Season 11

Season 12

Season 13

Season 14

Season 15

Season 16

Season 17

Season 18

Season 19

  • S19E01 Portsmouth

    • October 27, 1996
    • BBC One

  • S19E02 Ludlow

    • November 3, 1996
    • BBC One

  • S19E03 Skye

    • November 10, 1996
    • BBC One

  • S19E04 Chepstow

    • November 17, 1996
    • BBC One

  • S19E05 Market Harborough

    • November 24, 1996
    • BBC One

  • S19E06 Grosvenor House

    • December 1, 1996
    • BBC One

  • S19E07 Penzance and the Scilly Isles

    • December 8, 1996
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and his team of experts examine antiques at Penzance Harbour, looking at the Scilly Isles and the importance of the Great Western Railway.

  • S19E08 Michelham Priory

    • December 15, 1996
    • BBC One

    At Michelham Priory near Eastbourne in East Sussex, Hugh Scully and a team of experts look at a range of antiques brought along by members of the public.

  • S19E09 The Next Generation

    • December 29, 1996
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and the experts visit the Royal Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh. Treasures brought along by young people include a fan owned by Queen Victoria, a dolls' house and Star Wars memorabilia.

  • S19E10 Christ's Hospital School: Horsham

    • January 5, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and the team examine antique objects from Christ's Hospital School in Horsham, West Sussex, including a watercolour collection and letters written by George I of Greece.

  • S19E11 The Wirall

    • January 12, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S19E12 Lyme Regis

    • January 19, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and the team visit All Hallows School near Lyme Regis. The experts are stunned to discover a pre-Raphaelite painting. Other items under examination include a Faberge vodka cup.

  • S19E13 Waddesdon Manor 1

    • January 26, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S19E14 Waddesdon Manor 2

    • February 2, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S19E15 Pickering

    • February 9, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S19E16 Aberystwyth

    • February 16, 1997
    • BBC One

    In Aberystwyth, Hugh Scully and a team of antique experts invite members of the public to bring along their antiques for expert examination.

  • S19E17 Saffron Walden

    • February 23, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S19E18 Chatsworth

    • March 2, 1997
    • BBC One

    From Chatsworth House in Derbyshire, Hugh Scully and the team examine a host of objects. These include two Pip, Squeak and Wilfred annuals, a cobra-shaped jug and an eighteenth-century tapestry frame.

  • S19E19 Chatsworth House Special

    • March 9, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully presents this special programme from Chatsworth House, Derbyshire. He surveys some of the estate's treasures and is joined by Christopher Payne, Gordon Lang and the Duchess of Devonshire.

  • S19E20 Perth

    • March 16, 1997
    • BBC One

    In Perth, Hugh Scully and a team of antique experts invite members of the public to bring along their antique treasures and heirlooms for examination.

  • S19E21 Skegness

    • March 23, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S19E22 Lord's

    • March 30, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and a team of antiques experts visit the Indoor School at Lord's. Cricket memorabilia features heavily in the experts' line-up of inspected objects.

  • S19E23 Moreton-in-Marsh

    • April 6, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and a team of antiques experts visit Moreton-in-Marsh. Objects discovered include a ceramic plate with a fish design, a marble dog and an oil painting featuring cows.

  • S19E24 Scone Palace Special

    • April 13, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and a team of antiques experts visit Scone Palace in Perth. Here they invite members of the public to bring along and exhibit their antique objects for examination.

  • S19E25 Arras, North France

    • April 20, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S19E26 Lanhydrock House

    • April 27, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and the team examine antiques members of the public have brought to Lanhydrock House, near Bodmin.

Season 20

  • S20E01 Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth

    • November 2, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and a team of antique experts host this opening edition from the Britannia Royal Naval College in Dartmouth. Objects featured include a George III table and a Raimundo Madrozo painting.

  • S20E02 Barnsley

    • November 9, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S20E03 Woking

    • November 16, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S20E04 Walsall

    • November 23, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and a team of antique experts visit Walsall Town Hall. Featured objects include a majolica urn, ruskin pottery, fire engine lamps and a collection of silver spoons.

  • S20E05 Marlborough

    • November 30, 1997
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and the team visit Marlborough College in Wiltshire. Here the experts discover a collection of Dylan Thomas poetry. Other interesting items unearthed include an ostrich egg box.

  • S20E06 Claverton

    • December 7, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S20E07 Blickling Hall

    • December 28, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S20E08 The Next Generation, Cardiff

    • December 28, 1997
    • BBC One

  • S20E09 Christchurch

    • January 4, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E10 Weston-Super-Mare

    • January 11, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E11 Durham

    • January 18, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E12 West Dean College 1

    • January 25, 1998
    • BBC One

    From West Dean College near Chichester, Hugh Scully and the experts provide more commentary on antique items. These include an assortment of oriental pieces and an oil painting by Talbot Hughes.

  • S20E13 West Dean College 2

    • February 1, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E14 Altrincham

    • February 8, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E15 Fort William

    • February 15, 1998
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully, alongside a team of antiques experts visit Fort William, inviting members of the public to bring along and exhibit their antique objects for examination.

  • S20E16 Newport, Isle Of Wight

    • February 22, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E17 Hull

    • March 1, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E18 Burghley House 1

    • March 8, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E19 Burghley House 2

    • March 15, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E20 Porthmadog

    • March 22, 1998
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and the experts host this edition from the coastal town of Porthmadog in Wales, inviting members of the public to bring along and exhibit their antiques for examination.

  • S20E21 Bolton

    • March 29, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E22 St. David's

    • April 5, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E23 Minehead

    • April 12, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E24 Harewood House Special

    • April 19, 1998
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully presents a special compilation programme from Harewood House near Leeds, which shows previously unseen finds from the series.

  • S20E25 Brecon

    • April 26, 1998
    • BBC One

  • S20E26 Canterbury

    • May 3, 1998
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and the team visit Canterbury and unearth a variety of antique treasures, including a collection of cinema posters, a Victorian diamond ring and three pre-Raphaelite paintings.

  • S20E27 Cannock

    • May 10, 1998
    • BBC One

    Hugh Scully and the team visit Cannock where they examine a bronze tiger, a portrait of a flower girl, an ornate match-striker and a cricket bat.

  • S20E28 Dromoland Castle, County Clare

    • May 17, 1998
    • BBC One

Season 21

Season 22

Season 23

  • S23E01 Victoria and Albert Museum

    • October 1, 2000
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel presents his first Antiques Roadshow from the magnificent surroundings of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Accompanied by the familiar team of experts, they uncover a treasure trove of unusual objects including an original hand-written poem by W B Yeats, examples of Meissen from the earliest days of European porcelain manufacture, and a rare silver tobacco box rescued from a London dustbin. Plus there is a valuable painting by the leading candlelight painter of the 19th century. And John Bly tells Michael about the art of discovering the history of a piece of furniture.

  • S23E02 Barnstaple

    • October 8, 2000
    • BBC One

    A visit to Barnstaple in North Devon turns up an important enamel miniature by Henry Bone, a valuable collection of walking sticks, a World War I pilot's watch once worn by TE Lawrence, a valuable painting from the Newlyn School, and a native Canadian 'octopus bag' from the 19th century. Host Michael Aspel finds his own modern collectable - an autographed fan picture of himself taken over 40 years ago.

  • S23E03 Biddulph

    • October 15, 2000
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and a team of experts examine curios and artefacts offered up by the public. This episode was filmed in the Valley Leisure Centre in Biddulph, Staffordshire, and features a rare 18th-century Wedgwood egg scrambler, a genuine Constable sketch, a fine English repeater watch, a remarkable collection of ship's documents giving details of the auctioning of slaves and a handkerchief that Queen Victoria gave to the lady who strung her pearls.

  • S23E04 Glamis Castle 1

    • October 22, 2000
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and a team of experts examine curios and artefacts offered up by the public. This time, the venue is Glamis Castle in Angus, Scotland, childhood home of the Queen Mother, where Macbeth is said to have killed Duncan. Michael Aspel and the experts find a posy ring with a macabre story, a dining table whose original purpose was for resting a coffin on, diamond jewellery which survived not only fire but a torpedo, a pair of 18th-century miniatures with musical connections and the fascinating scrapbook of a WW1 pilot.

  • S23E05 Glamis Castle 2

    • October 29, 2000
    • BBC One

    A special edition in which Michael Aspel introduces sequences from previous roadshows and recounts stories of the Queen Mother's early life at Glamis Castle. Featuring ivory figures collected by a man nicknamed 'Steptoe' by his family, a pair of valuable Chinese imperial bowls once used as plant pots, a necklace of very ancient stones, and a collection of handbag mirrors.

  • S23E06 Selby

    • November 5, 2000
    • BBC One

    Items of interest in this edition include a picture embroidered with sock-darning wool in memory of gallant Captain Oates by a private in his regiment, a copy of Beatrix Potter's book The Fairy Caravan dedicated to Fred Satterthwaite, who was portrayed in it as his dog Metal, two rare cornets from local bands and a splendid collection of Masonic porcelain worth over a quarter of a million. Michael Aspel and the experts visit Selby in North Yorkshire.

  • S23E07 Wisbech

    • November 12, 2000
    • BBC One

    A valuable vase covered in paint and bought for £1 at a car boot sale, a Martinware bird which cost two shillings at a fete and a rare hair ring bought in at auction, because 'nobody else was interested and I bid £1 and got it' - three great bargains turn up when Michael Aspel and the experts visit Wisbech in Cambridgeshire. There's also an impressive collection of royal invitations, letters, sketches and items from eminent Victorians put together by the librarian at Windsor Castle in the 1860s.

  • S23E08 Blackpool

    • November 19, 2000
    • BBC One

    It is a good day out when Michael Aspel takes the experts to Blackpool to dig up seaside treasures. There is a programme for the 1936 cup tie between Blackpool and Bolton signed by the players, including Stanley Matthews, a very rare salt-glazed mug made for a supporter of Bonnie Prince Charlie and an unusual medal awarded for selling Hoovers in the 1930s. And Michael Aspel discovers the predecessor of his big red book.

  • S23E09 Newport

    • November 26, 2000
    • BBC One

    A teapot that holds 144 cups of tea, a gruesome 18th-century mourning ring, a rare Hungarian vase, a painting of Britannia too large to fit in the house and the 'nicest netsuke seen on the roadshow'; these are some of the discoveries when Michael Aspel takes the experts to Newport in Gwent. Plus, Michael is shown a home-made device used for clearing incendiaries in WWII.

  • S23E10 Knebworth House

    • December 3, 2000
    • BBC One

    The items featured in this edition include a diamond brooch which almost went to a car boot sale for £1, a marine chronometer left to the owner by a drinking pal, a bronze Spirit of Ecstasy which, if genuine, could be worth £10,000, and a satsuma pot which David Battie says, 'is as good a piece as I've ever seen on the Roadshow.' Michael Aspel and the experts gather for an al fresco day in the gardens of Knebworth House in Hertfordshire.

  • S23E11 Knebworth

    • December 10, 2000
    • BBC One

    A pair of revealing female figures originally displayed in a French brothel, an unusual table clock with a floating turtle which tells the time, a chemist's mortar dating from 1573 and a Victorian toilet given as a present. From Knebworth House in Hertfordshire, Michael Aspel introduces unseen finds from previous Roadshows in the series and talks to expert Clive Farahar about Knebworth's colourful former incumbent Edward Bulwer Lytton, Victorian playwright and philanderer, whose turbulent marriage caused a major scandal.

  • S23E12 University of Birmingham

    • December 17, 2000
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the experts visit Birmingham and find a Victorian painting which was damaged in the blitz, a telescope given for saving the lives of nine castaways, an early 19th-century wooden ark filled with 89 animals, and a small pottery Turk's head which turns out to be the most valuable piece of English pottery ever found at a Roadshow.

  • S23E13 The Next Generation

    • January 1, 2001
    • BBC One

  • S23E14 Cliveden

    • January 7, 2001
    • BBC One

    Another chance to see the valuable collection of jewellery found in a rubbish tip, a Stanley Spencer sketch of the owner's father who was the baker in Cookham, a brooch presented by the Prince of Wales to his tiger-hunting host and a silver beaker which was filled with gold coins as a bonus to a whaling captain. All are among the items brought to the experts at Cliveden in Buckinghamshire. And Michael Aspel is surprised to discover that a champion's boxing belt was awarded to the owner's mother!

  • S23E15 Cliveden 2

    • January 14, 2001
    • BBC One

    A second chance to see Michael Aspel and the experts when they return to the gardens of Cliveden in Buckinghamshire and discover a ladies bureau brought in by a relative of Joshua Reynolds, an 'eccentrically large' barometer, an unusual 'McMickey' Mouse and a silver cruet set made by one of the great silversmiths, worth £30,000.

  • S23E16 Lochgilphead

    • January 21, 2001
    • BBC One

    Another chance to see Michael Aspel and the experts when they travel north to Lochgilphead in Argyll and Bute. Among the finds are a valuable painting on an asbestos tile done in an internment camp, a pair of Staffordshire zebras which might provide the owner with a holiday, a painting of a young girl by Scottish artist Hamilton McKenzie, who met a tragic end, and a carved bone ship made by Napoleonic prisoners of war out of mutton bones and worth up to £10,000.

  • S23E17 Salford

    • January 28, 2001
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel takes the experts to Salford near Manchester and discovers an album full of valuable photographs taken by a celebrated Victorian photographer; Zulu wedding beads from the 1900s accompanied by some rare photos of them being worn; an American scrimshaw whale's tooth bought for just £5; and a drawing by the local artist LS Lowry.

  • S23E18 Eastnor Castle

    • February 4, 2001
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and a team of experts examine curios and artefacts offered up by the public. Among the turrets and terraces of Eastnor Castle in Herefordshire, they find some bizarre objects, including a wooden bicycle, a huge pocket knife with 96 implements, an embroidered egg, a World War I pack with a bullet lodged in it and the first All Blacks rugby shirt.

  • S23E19 Eastnor Castle Special

    • February 11, 2001
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and a team of experts examine curios and artefacts offered up by the public. In this edition, the team return to Eastnor Castle in Herefordshire with expert Paul Atterbury, who surveys its Victorian interior and collections. And in a sequence of unseen clips from recent roadshows, exciting finds include a 17th-century wine bottle, suffragette memorabilia, a bust of General Gordon given to the owner's great-grandfather by Gordon's sister, and a much-loved Victorian dressing case.

  • S23E20 Eston

    • February 18, 2001
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and a team of experts examine curios and artefacts offered up by the public in Eston, Cleveland. Exciting finds include a sculpted elephant by Eduardo Paolozzi used to promote floor covering; a Victorian painting bought for five shillings while sheltering from the rain; the first commercially produced toy robot made in the 1930s; a collection of craft jewellery found in an old envelope at the end of a jumble sale; and a fibre-glass chair which Paul Atterbury says is 'an antique for the future'.

  • S23E21 Melksham

    • February 25, 2001
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and a team of experts examine curios and artefacts presented by the public in Melksham, Wiltshire. Among the items are a Cossack dagger, a drawing by Edmund Dulac, a dog collar made in 1784, and a collection of bedpans and a gold box found in the mud in Wales.

  • S23E22 Caernarfon

    • March 4, 2001
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel presents the show in which experts examine antiques. A stunning lantern clock made in the early 17th century, a set of chairs worth a great deal more than their original price of one guinea each, a jade necklace with a Chinese influence, and a 200-year-old bleeding bowl bought for 25p with a value which leaves its owner speechless. A rich and varied collection when Michael and the experts visit Caernarfon in North Wales.

  • S23E23 Rugby

    • March 11, 2001
    • BBC One

  • S23E24 V&A Museum

    • March 18, 2001
    • BBC One

  • S23E25 Forde Abbey

    • March 25, 2001
    • BBC One

  • S23E26 Forde Abbey 2

    • April 1, 2001
    • BBC One

Season 24

Season 25

Season 26

Season 27

Season 28

  • S28E01 Lichfield

    • September 4, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team are at Lichfield Cathedral in the Midlands. Among the items brought to light are a small statue thought to be from the tomb of Tutankhamun.

  • S28E02 Lampeter

    • September 11, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team are in mid Wales, where among the intriguing finds are a bust of Dylan Thomas, an intricate book of early silhouettes, and a plate bought for five pounds that turns out to be worth much more.

  • S28E03 Edinburgh

    • September 18, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team return to Edinburgh in search of Scottish treasure. Amongst the items uncovered are an early Mickey Mouse mascot and a rare deco figurine.

  • S28E04 Normanby Hall

    • September 25, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team visit Normanby Hall, where finds include a marble bust gifted by a generous neighbour that turns out to be valued at £15,000, and a pair of rare candlesticks won in a newspaper competition.

  • S28E05 Tavistock

    • October 2, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team head for Tavistock in Devon, where they discover a cache of curiosities and treasures including an inmate's canvas uniform and a cat o'nine tails from the early days of Dartmoor prison, an antique hunting horn used to sound the advance at the D-Day landings and a plate bought for a song at a boot sale turns out to be worth £1,000.

  • S28E06 Compilation 1

    • October 9, 2005
    • BBC One

  • S28E07 Ipswich

    • October 16, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team head to Ipswich, where among the treasures they find are a duke's chamber pot now used to drink champagne from, one of the earliest record players, and a 50p find on a white elephant stall which turns out to be worth much more.

  • S28E08 Beamish

    • October 23, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team step back in time at the Beamish Open Air Museum near Newcastle. Amongst the items brought to light are a rare rapier sword allegedly smuggled out of Russia in the props box of the Bolshoi Ballet. We meet a keen collector of battlefield finds known as trench art, and the finest music box to appear on the Roadshow is valued.

  • S28E09 Manderston

    • October 30, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team enter Border country as the Roadshow visits Manderston, near Berwick-upon-Tweed. Amongst the items featured are pieces from Queen Victoria's household, a gruesome man trap and Lord Palmer's collection of rare biscuit tins.

  • S28E10 Rochdale Town Hall

    • November 6, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team are at Rochdale Town Hall. Among the finds are a gold pencil gifted by King George IV, paint brushes used by Lowry and the diaries of a British hangman.

  • S28E11 The Royal Hospital Chelsea

    • November 13, 2005
    • BBC One

    In an edition to mark Remembrance Sunday, Michael Aspel and the team visit the Royal Hospital in Chelsea, home to the Chelsea Pensioners.

  • S28E12 Ventnor

    • November 20, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team are in Ventnor on the Isle of Wight. Among the objects under scrutiny is a portrait showing the future speaker of the House of Commons as a young boy.

  • S28E13 Compilation 2

    • November 27, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel introduces a selection of unscreened finds from previous Roadshows. Items include an Edward VIII coronation souvenir that was hastily converted to an abdication mug.

  • S28E14 Lancaster

    • December 4, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team are in Lancaster, where items uncovered include a valuable pair of clogs, a moving series of letters from the Crimea, an anti-slavery ring and a rare and intricately woven tapestry.

  • S28E15 Coughton Court 1

    • December 11, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team head for Coughton Court in Warwickshire. Amongst the items under scrutiny are original designs from one of Britain's leading graphic artists of the 20th century, a bizarre Japanese depiction of skeletons dancing and a lost masterpiece valued at £60,000.

  • S28E16 Coughton Court 2

    • December 18, 2005
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team head for Coughton Court in Warwickshire, where the experts get excited about an Agatha Christie letter and a rare china figure of the Queen on horseback.

  • S28E17 The Next Generation

    • December 28, 2005
    • BBC One

  • S28E18 Sydney

    • January 1, 2006
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team embark on the show's longest haul ever undertaken, with a visit to Sydney in Australia. The journey is well rewarded as thousands of Roadshow fans turn out with a remarkable array of treasures. Amongst the items under scrutiny are pieces of furniture made by convicts transported to Australia, a part of the keel of Captain Cook's ship Endeavour, and a collection of items belonging to opera star Maria Callas, which receives one of the biggest valuations in Roadshow history.

  • S28E19 Norwich 1

    • January 15, 2006
    • BBC One

  • S28E20 Norwich 2

    • January 22, 2006
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team are in Norwich where, in the cathedral cloisters, they uncover more treasures. Items include original illustrations to the childhood classic Black Beauty, a rare saucer used for many years as an ashtray and valued at £1,000, and fragments of porcelain which act as a poignant reminder of the events that destroyed Hiroshima in World War II.

  • S28E21 Londonderry

    • February 5, 2006
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team travel to Londonderry for the first time in the show's history. Amongst the items under scrutiny are some very intricately produced hand-cut pictures, a cache of silver valued at over £100,000 and a cushion woven from human hair.

  • S28E22 Compilation 3

    • February 12, 2006
    • BBC One

  • S28E23 Montacute House 1

    • February 26, 2006
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team are at Montacute House in Somerset. Among the finds are a set of chairs that witnessed the battle of Trafalgar aboard one of Nelson's ships, and a valuable postcard collection which began life as an occasional hobby. Also, a vicar's wife confesses to a weakness for vintage underwear.

  • S28E24 Montacute House 2

    • March 5, 2006
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team are at Montacute House in Somerset. Among the more intriguing finds is a very rare piece of silver which was dug up in a garden.

  • S28E25 Melbourne

    • March 12, 2006
    • BBC One

    Over 20,000 fans applied for tickets when the Roadshow visited Australia for the first time. But what did they bring? From the magnificent Royal Exhibition Building, Michael Aspel and the team uncover a rich vein including relics from the days of gold strikes, a flag flown at the battle of Trafalgar and a sad looking bear with a jaw-dropping value.

  • S28E26 Retrospective

    • March 19, 2006
    • BBC One

Season 29

Season 30

  • S30E01 Hereford

    • September 2, 2007
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team kick off their 30th Anniversary Celebrations in Hereford.

  • S30E02 Arundel

    • September 16, 2007
    • BBC One

  • S30E03 Alnwick Castle

    • September 9, 2007
    • BBC One

  • S30E04 Middleport Pottery

    • September 23, 2007
    • BBC One

    The team survey antiques and heirlooms at England's last working Victorian pottery.

  • S30E05 Bristol

    • September 30, 2007
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team survey antiques and heirlooms in Bristol.

  • S30E06 Coventry

    • October 7, 2007
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team survey antiques and heirlooms at Coventry Cathedral.

  • S30E07 Banqueting House 1

    • October 14, 2007
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team take a trip to Banqueting House, in the heart of London.

  • S30E08 Banqueting House 2

    • October 21, 2007
    • BBC One

  • S30E09 Highcliffe Castle

    • October 28, 2007
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team are at Highcliffe Castle in Dorset.

  • S30E10 Compilation

    • November 4, 2007
    • BBC One

  • S30E11 East Kirkby 1

    • November 11, 2007
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team visit East Kirkby airfield in Lincolnshire.

  • S30E12 East Kirkby 2

    • November 18, 2007
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team pay a second visit to East Kirkby Airfield in Lincolnshire.

  • S30E13 Exmouth

    • November 25, 2007
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team head to Exmouth on the Devon coast.

  • S30E14 Powis Castle

    • December 2, 2007
    • BBC One

    The team heads to the beautiful gardens of Powis castle in Wales.

  • S30E15 Rochester 1

    • December 16, 2007
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team make some surprising finds at Rochester Castle.

  • S30E16 Rochester 2

    • December 23, 2007
    • BBC One

    The team return to Rochester Cathedral, including a toast with Napoleon's drinking glass.

  • S30E17 De La Warr Pavilion

    • December 30, 2007
    • BBC One

    The team visit an iconic modernist building, the De La Warr Pavilion at Bexhill-on-Sea.

  • S30E18 Castle of Mey

    • January 6, 2008
    • BBC One

    The team visit the Queen Mother's former residence, and brave the Scottish weather.

  • S30E19 St George's Hall 1

    • January 13, 2008
    • BBC One

    The team are at St George's Hall in Liverpool to uncover some valuable finds.

  • S30E20 St George's Hall 2

    • January 20, 2008
    • BBC One

    The team return to St George's Hall in Liverpool to uncover some more valuable finds.

  • S30E21 Kentwell Hall

    • January 27, 2008
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team visit Kentwell Hall in Suffolk.

  • S30E22 De Montfort Hall

    • February 3, 2008
    • BBC One

    The team visit De Montfort Hall in Leicester, and things take a theatrical turn.

  • S30E23 Ulverston

    • February 10, 2008
    • BBC One

    Michael Aspel and the team visit The Coronation Hall in Ulverston.

  • S30E24 De La Warr

    • February 17, 2008
    • BBC One

  • S30E25 Sheffield

    • March 2, 2008
    • BBC One

    Michael and the team visit Sheffield City Hall.

  • S30E26 Farewell to Michael Aspel

    • March 30, 2008
    • BBC One

Season 31

  • S31E01 Bolton Abbey

    • September 7, 2008
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow team head to the atmospheric ruins of Bolton Abbey in Yorkshire where a rich haul of treasures are brought in by visitors. These include a lambing chair first used 200 years ago by farmers to offer protection against poor weather, a fascinating collection recording the risky life of a First World War aviator, whilst a trinket that's languished unloved for years is recognised to be a magical piece made by Faberge.

  • S31E02 Althorp

    • September 14, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Althorp in Northamptonshire, once the home of Princess Diana. Among the items under scrutiny are a valuable writing desk found in a coal shed, a sword that fought in the English Civil War, and an important painting that was found on a tip.

  • S31E03 Chester

    • September 21, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to Chester Cathedral where they are greeted by 2,000 eager visitors waiting in the nave. Among the treasures under scrutiny are some of the smallest and most valuable pieces of furniture ever to be seen on the show, Elvis memorabilla, and a collection of jewels which were sewn into the hem of a dress and smuggled out of pre-revolution Russia.

  • S31E04 Ascot

    • September 28, 2008
    • BBC One

    The team travels to Ascot Racecourse, where objects valued include the first ever document-copying machine, dating back to 1780, and a model of a champion racehorse.

  • S31E05 Compilation

    • October 5, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce introduces a bumper edition with unscreened finds from recent visits to Althorp and Ascot. Among the objects uncovered are an early English tapestry with a five-figure value, a pile of significant modern paintings saved from a skip, and rare documents recording the rescue of members of the Russian royal family aboard a British battleship at the time of the Russian revolution.

  • S31E06 Lanhydrock

    • October 12, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team set up for business in the grounds of Lanhydrock, near Bodmin in Cornwall. The experts are kept busy with another series of exciting finds, including a gold bangle set with precious stones that was found at the bottom of a water tank. An early Valentine tells the story of an unrequited love affair, while a valuation on a silver cup brings the house down.

  • S31E07 Southwell (1)

    • October 19, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are in Nottinghamshire meeting the people of Southwell in the magnificent Minster. Objects exciting the experts include a 17th-century love token of a betrothal box which bursts with secret compartments, and a rare haul of silver that has been gathering dust in an attic. Also, the original speaking clock comes out of retirement.

  • S31E08 Southwell (2)

    • October 26, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts gather amidst the beautiful interior of Southwell Minster in Nottinghamshire. It's a thrilling day for the team as the oldest toy train in the programme's history emerges early on, swiftly followed by a pocket-watch made by Britain's finest watchmaker. But the real show-stopper is a romantic painting with a handsome valuation.

  • S31E09 Leeds Castle (1)

    • November 2, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head for Leeds Castle, near Maidstone in Kent. Objects exciting the experts include a rare painting illustrating the first air raids over London in World War I and a casket reputedly owned by Anne Boleyn, while a collection of 1,000 tie pins is given a startling valuation. Plus, it proves a memorable day for ceramics expert, Henry Sandon.

  • S31E10 Leeds Castle (2)

    • November 9, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts return to Leeds Castle in Kent. Amongst the treasures uncovered are a cannonball shot at the Battle of Trafalgar and a collection of cigarette cards worth a small fortune. Plus, there's a treat in store for Blue Peter fans.

  • S31E11 Gateshead

    • November 16, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts set up for a busy day at The Sage Gateshead. Objects under scrutiny include a phonograph once owned by Harry Lauder and a tatty tablecloth, claimed by its owner to have been hand illustrated by the artist Francis Bacon. Meanwhile, it takes five men to lift in a piece which is awarded the highest valuation ever seen on the programme.

  • S31E12 Bodnant Garden

    • November 23, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team assemble on the lawns of Bodnant Garden in North Wales. Items exciting the experts include an elaborate tea service made for a maharajah and designs for the tomb of the Unknown Soldier, while a rare bronze depicting the defeat of Native Americans receives a surprising valuation.

  • S31E13 Compilation 2

    • November 30, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce introduces previously unscreened finds from two recent venues: Lanhydrock in Cornwall and Bodnant Garden in North Wales. Objects uncovered by the experts include a collection of jewellery made for suffragettes, a rare painting rescued from a skip at Sissinghurst, and a fascinating group of photographs recording the Queen's first Christmas broadcast.

  • S31E14 Oxford

    • December 7, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce returns to visit Hertford College in Oxford, where she studied as a student. Objects brought before the experts in the quadrangle include a unique record of a Beatles recording session, a Maori carving with a macabre past life, and a Russian painting, which provides a shock valuation for its owner.

  • S31E15 Dumfries House

    • December 21, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Dumfries House near Ayr in Scotland. Objects intriguing the experts include an early toy train in remarkable condition, an outstanding example of Chippendale furniture, and a glass vase bought at a boot sale, which hides a stunning valuation. There is also a special interview with HRH The Prince of Wales about his involvement in the rescue mission to save the unique collection at Dumfries House from being broken up.

  • S31E16 Bridlington

    • December 28, 2008
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to the seaside resort of Bridlington for a special edition from the splendid Art Deco jewel of the Spa Royal Hall. Such gracious surroundings make the perfect backdrop to ask the experts to nominate their ideal age of elegance. Was it the flamboyant days of the flapper, the fop or the '50s? Their choices make for some surprising and revealing answers about what makes the team tick. Amidst the excitement there is still plenty of time for some surprising finds from the people in the East Riding of Yorkshire, including a valuable ceramic bathing beauty who once lived in a fairground caravan and a rare nativity painting. The team also meets a woman with an obsession for collecting vintage prams.

  • S31E17 Belfast (1)

    • January 4, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team set up for business in Belfast. To mark the centenary of construction commencing on the Titanic, the show is recorded in the former drawing offices of Harland and Wolff where the ship was conceived. Amongst the objects under scrutiny are the camera and original images that captivated the world when the Cottingley fairy photos were first seen, a nude dancer with a high price tag and a dressing table originally made for the Titanic.

  • S31E18 Belfast (2)

    • January 11, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return for another busy day at the Titanic Drawing Offices in Belfast. Objects uncovered include a medicine chest from early Victorian times, complete with many intact medicines; an historic document marking the end of World War II; and a pair of rare Irish plate buckets worth the price of a new car.

  • S31E19 Wells (1)

    • January 18, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team travel to the Bishop's Palace in Wells, Somerset. Among the objects under scrutiny are one of the earliest objects ever seen on the Roadshow, a painting by Rolf Harris's grandfather, and a plate reputedly found in Captain Scott's tent on the ill-fated Antarctic expedition.

  • S31E20 Wells (2)

    • January 25, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts return to Wells in Somerset, where they welcome visitors with their valuables. Objects under scrutiny include a valuable bracelet once gifted by Queen Victoria and a small seal used by campaigners for the abolition of slavery, and there is a revealing moment for the owners of a rare tapestry.

  • S31E21 Dundee

    • February 1, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts are in Dundee. Among the treasures unearthed are a valuable miniature clock smuggled out of Germany in the Second World War, and the world's first copying machine, invented by a Scot in 1780. Plus, an extraordinary letter sent to a conscientious objector comes to light.

  • S31E22 Dulwich (1)

    • February 8, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Dulwich Art Gallery in South London. Among the objects brought in by the public to excite the experts are an early and little-known photograph of Winston Churchill, a theatrical costume dating from the early days of pantomime, and one of the most valuable paintings seen on the show in recent years.

  • S31E23 Dulwich (2)

    • February 15, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return to Dulwich Picture Gallery in South London to uncover more intriguing heirlooms, including an early illustration by madcap artist Heath Robinson. There is also a mysterious set of rare and valuable miniatures found on a bus, and a book returned after a 50-year loan turns out to be worth a small fortune.

  • S31E24 Bridlington

    • March 29, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return to the Spa Royal Hall in Bridlington to value more items brought along by members of the public. Among the objects intriguing the experts are artefacts of HMS Falcon excavated from the sea bed, and a set of rare buttons commemorating the Battle of Quebec in 1759. There is also a first-hand account of life as a Japanese prisoner of war.

  • S31E25 Oxburgh Hall

    • April 5, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to Oxburgh Hall in Norfolk. Despite the wet weather, there are plenty of exciting finds, including a 300-year-old treasure box stuffed with surprises, precious family objects honouring the men of the Pathfinder squadron in the Second World War, and a set of discarded posters which bring the house down with a staggering valuation.

  • S31E26 Retrospective

    • April 12, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team choose their favourite moments of the series and give updates on some of the star items valued. Includes the moment when a one-pound bootsale buy became the best investment in Roadshow history, with footage from the exciting auction.

Season 32

  • S32E01 Jersey

    • September 20, 2009
    • BBC One

    The series begins at Samares Manor in Jersey where an international flavour soon sets in, with objects from Japan, South Africa, Egypt, America and France under the experts' scrutiny. There is excitement as they uncover one of the most valuable watches ever seen on the show, along with the bizarre find of Marilyn Monroe's lemon squeezer. There is a first for the programme when a forensic test is performed live on camera to prove the worth of a valuable gold bangle.

  • S32E02 Blackpool (1)

    • September 27, 2009
    • BBC One

    Objects under discussion include a Bible containing handwritten extracts from Charlotte Bronte; powerful images drawn under fire by a war artist; and a boot sale brooch that makes the owner want to scream with delight when she hears the valuation.

  • S32E03 Blackpool (2)

    • October 4, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return for a second visit to the Tower Ballroom in Blackpool. Objects examined by the experts include one of the earliest prayer books seen on the programme and a valuable pair of duelling pistols, while the original Teddy from Watch with Mother makes a surprise appearance.

  • S32E04 Oxford

    • October 11, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return with a second helping from a recent visit to Hertford College, Oxford. Objects under the cameras include a bracelet once worn by a princess with a tragic story; expensive ceramics bought for a song at a boot sale; and a rare document recording the end of hostilities in the First World War. Plus, one of the experts shows his hand as an accomplished amateur potter.

  • S32E05 Morwellham Quay

    • October 25, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head for the beautiful Tamar Valley in Devon and weigh anchor at Morwellham Quay. Objects fascinating the experts include an ugly brown jug with a handsome valuation, a stunning and rare silver salver, and a long-case clock which arrives in unexpected fashion.

  • S32E06 Lincoln (1)

    • November 1, 2009
    • BBC One

    A huge turnout of visitors awaits Fiona Bruce and the team at Lincoln Cathedral. Objects under scrutiny include a gruesome set of surgeon's tools from the 1860s, and a plate hidden for years in a cupboard, which provides its owner with a big surprise. Plus, meet the visitor on a quest to recover his grandfather's paintings.

  • S32E07 Lincoln (2)

    • November 8, 2009
    • BBC One

    A second visit to Lincoln Cathedral for Fiona Bruce and the experts. Cameras roll as the team gets excited about a Chinese picture bought for a song, a Georgian dining table with a stunning valuation and a collection of early TV implements first used to screen the Queen's Coronation.

  • S32E08 Bowes Museum

    • November 15, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are in County Durham for a visit to The Bowes Museum. Objects under scrutiny include a silver box given in thanks when troops liberated the Netherlands in World War Two, some of the most valuable chairs seen on the show, and a bust reputed to be cursed.

  • S32E09 Bletchley (1)

    • November 22, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts welcome thousands to Bletchley Park near Milton Keynes, home of the Enigma code-breaking team in World War Two. Objects under scrutiny include a pair of important and valuable candlesticks, pieces rescued from the golden age of British liners, and intriguing evidence of early encounters with the Beatles. Plus there's a surprise appearance from an airborne visitor.

  • S32E10 Bletchley (2)

    • November 29, 2009
    • BBC One

    A return visit to Bletchley Park near Milton Keynes with Fiona Bruce and the team of specialists. Pieces under examination include an ornate vase rescued at the last minute from the dishwasher, a teddy bear with a secret story, and a surprise valuation. Plus a stunning Art Deco brooch brings the house down.

  • S32E11 Burghley

    • December 6, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Burghley House near Stamford in Lincolnshire. Objects exciting the experts include a valuable Lalique figure bought in a junk shop for under a pound, an exquisitely carved model ship made by Napoleonic prisoners of war, and a rare medal awarded to an heroic pigeon. Plus, the valuation on a collection of cherished boxes prompts a brilliant reaction.

  • S32E12 Abbotsford

    • December 20, 2009
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts head to the Scottish borders for another busy day of valuations at Abbotsford, near Melrose, once the home of Sir Walter Scott. Objects under scrutiny include a bottle used by smugglers to fool the customs men, a miniature battle scene exquisitely hand cut by a prisoner during World War One, and a dinner service fit for a queen.

  • S32E13 Guernsey

    • January 3, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team set sail for the Channel Islands, where the people of Guernsey give them a warm welcome at Saumarez Park. Objects intriguing the experts include a piece of furniture used as target practice by the Germans during the occupation of the island, a giant sapphire once owned by a Maharajah, and a single bank note which turns out to be worth a fortune.

  • S32E14 Brooklands (1)

    • January 10, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are at full throttle as they arrive at Brooklands Motor Racing and Aviation Museum, near Weybridge in Surrey. Thousands flock to the paddocks, where the experts are on duty. Amongst the objects exciting their interest are a risque bust found abandoned in a garden, rare artefacts recording the Bluebird attempts to break world speed records, an old chest given away on the internet and valuable Aboriginal tools.

  • S32E15 Brooklands (2)

    • January 17, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts return to the Brooklands Motor Racing and Aviation Museum near Weybridge for another busy day of valuations. Objects brought before the cameras include a rare and highly valuable stirrup cup, books once owned by Churchill and rescued from a garden fire, and a remarkable bracelet given to Queen Victoria that was found in a gutter. Plus Fiona welcomes the return of a friendly Roadshow face.

  • S32E16 Aberglasney

    • January 24, 2010
    • BBC One

    The team heads to Wales as Fiona Bruce and the experts arrive at Aberglasney Gardens in Carmarthenshire. Despite the rain that welcomes them, there's a deluge of treasures including valuable illustrations found abandoned in a loft, a poignant remnant from the ill-fated Charge of the Light Brigade, and one of the most valuable plates ever seen at a Roadshow.

  • S32E17 Bath (1)

    • January 31, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are in Bath where thousands flock to the Assembly Rooms with their treasured objects. Items under scrutiny include a marble statue which requires six men to lift, a pair of antique bronzes found under a caravan, and a genuine work by Constable.

  • S32E18 Bath (2)

    • February 7, 2010
    • BBC One

    A second helping from Bath, where Fiona Bruce and the team welcome visitors to the magnificent Assembly Rooms. Cameras focus in on family treasures including a rare teapot bought at a boot sale, an unusual image of Hitler depicted in propaganda posters, and a painting of a gentle Irish landscape hides a dramatic valuation.

  • S32E19 Ironbridge

    • February 14, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to Blists Hill Victorian Town near Ironbridge in Shropshire. Objects exciting the experts include a rare group of early puppets, a collection of clothes and accessories from the Swinging Sixties, and a valuable oak dresser described as the 'best of the best'.

  • S32E20 Leeds (1)

    • February 21, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit a packed Leeds Town Hall for another busy day of valuations. Among the items intriguing the experts are a valuable diamond brooch left as security for an unpaid off-licence bill, and a 15th-century spoon found by a builder while digging a trench. The price of a single glass nearly induces heart failure in one lucky owner.

  • S32E21 Leeds (2)

    • February 28, 2010
    • BBC One

    The programme makes a return visit to Leeds Town Hall as Fiona Bruce and the team of experts set up for another busy day. Objects under scrutiny include an enormous sculpture of carved elephants weighing a ton and bought on the internet, a gold ring from the 16th century dug up in a field, and a doll with a tragic tale is brought out of her glass case for the first time in a hundred years.

  • S32E22 Somerleyton

    • March 7, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to the most easterly edge of Britain, to Somerleyton Hall near Lowestoft. Amongst the objects intriguing the experts are a glass vase, believed by the owner to be a fake, which turns out to be both rare and valuable; items recovered from the crashed plane that brought Rudolf Hess to Scotland in the Second World War; and the fedora worn by Michael Jackson whilst on a UK tour turns out to be a bit of a thriller.

  • S32E23 Hopetoun

    • March 21, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team greet over four thousand visitors who flocked to Hopetoun House on the banks of the Forth in Scotland for one of the busiest Roadshows on record. Objects under scrutiny include a rare illustration of Queen Victoria visiting Balmoral for the first time, a valuable pottery pig kept in a cat basket, and some of the earliest records in the story of British broadcasting.

  • S32E24 Stanway (1)

    • March 28, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are in the Cotswolds to visit Stanway House. The team of experts make some intriguing finds, including a moving collection of love letters that tell a tragic tale from World War One, and the owner of a suite of furniture is in for a big surprise. Plus, there's a big reaction when the owner of a box of posters bought for 50p is given a current day valuation.

  • S32E25 Stanway (2)

    • April 4, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts return to Stanway House in Gloucestershire and are in for a busy day of valuations. Objects brought to the cameras include a painting found dumped by a motorway, a collection of Dame Barbara Cartland's hats bought by a milliner, and a very valuable self-portrait.

  • S32E26 Compilation - Abbotsford and Burghley

    • April 11, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return to Burghley House near Stamford and Abbotsford in Melrose for previously unscreened finds. Among the objects discussed are a jewel box made for, yet never given to, a royal princess, and the oldest walking stick seen on the programme. Plus, the owner of a Chinese watercolour receives a staggering valuation.

  • S32E27 Chester

    • April 18, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team greet over 4,000 visitors who flocked to Hopetoun House on the banks of the Forth in Scotland for one of the busiest Roadshows on record. Objects under scrutiny include a rare illustration of Queen Victoria visiting Balmoral for the first time, a valuable pottery pig kept in a cat basket, and some of the earliest records in the story of British broadcasting.

  • S32E28 Greenwich (1)

    • April 25, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team set up for a busy day at the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich, London. Objects intriguing the experts include the effects of Queen Mary's personal bodyguard and a Victorian toilet described as the owner's 'pride and joy'. The arrival of a painting of a female spy from World War One triggers the discovery of an important painting.

  • S32E29 Greenwich (2)

    • May 2, 2010
    • BBC One

    A second visit to the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich. The team of experts is kept busy by a huge crowd of visitors eager to learn more about their treasures. Objects under scrutiny include one of the rarest groups of medals to be seen at a Roadshow and a Lalique figure found under a hotel bed by a chambermaid. Plus, Fiona Bruce discovers it's true that when waiting for a bus, three can turn up at once.

  • S32E30 Retrospective

    • May 9, 2010
    • BBC One

    In a special edition to mark the end of the current series, Fiona Bruce and the experts look back at some of the most talked about finds, with updated stories on what has happened to the pieces since first being aired. Amongst the highlights is one of the most dramatic and valuable discoveries ever made on Antiques Roadshow, that of a previously unknown work by an important British artist.

Season 33

  • S33E01 Beverley Minster (1)

    • September 19, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts visit Beverley Minster in Yorkshire. Pieces under scrutiny include a valuable medieval ring dug up on a farm; two Victorian paintings given in exchange for a gambling debt; and a car rescued from a pig farm's outbuilding, which turns out to be a former rally winner once driven by Stirling Moss.

  • S33E02 Beverley Minster (2)

    • September 26, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are back for a second visit to Beverley Minster in the East Riding of Yorkshire. Hundreds of visitors pack the nave eager to see the experts. Amongst the objects caught on camera are a pair of valuable medical leech jars once used to bleed patients, a curious sideboard that hides secret drawers that took the owners thirty years to find, and a ring with a locket containing the hair of Napoleon Bonaparte.

  • S33E03 Somerleyton

    • October 3, 2010
    • BBC One

    The team head to Somerleyton Hall near Lowestoft where treasures include a bracelet given to Queen Victoria and a paintbox which may have been owned by John Constable.

  • S33E04 Swindon (1)

    • October 10, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team continue their tour in search of treasures. They disembark at the Steam Museum in Swindon, where objects attracting the experts' eyes include one of the rarest pieces of silver even seen on the show, a valuable painting once destined for a skip, and a small ring that holds a big surprise for one owner. Fans of bizarre collections will also enjoy some choice pickings, including uneaten slices of royal wedding cakes dating back from Queen Victoria's day, plus hundreds of rail tickets bought for stations all closed by Beeching in the 1960s.

  • S33E05 Brighton College (1)

    • October 17, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to Brighton, where large crowds have unearthed their family treasures for valuation. Amongst the pieces under the experts' eyes are a Trafalgar medal awarded to a boy sailor who witnessed the epic battle in 1805 at the tender age of thirteen; one of the largest, rarest and most valuable pieces of Clarice Cliff pottery ever seen on the programme; plus a small silver box gifted by President John F Kennedy to a family shortly before his tragic death.

  • S33E06 Brighton College (2)

    • October 24, 2010
    • BBC One

    A return visit to Brighton College where many hundreds gathered to welcome Fiona Bruce and the team of experts recently. Among the objects brought to the cameras are a valuable cup and saucer bought at a boot sale, a portrait of a pig by a famous artist, and surprise treasures found in a safe once owned by Agatha Christie.

  • S33E07 Hopetoun House

    • October 31, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts return for a second visit to Hopetoun House in Queensferry, Scotland, where the finds include Victorian dresses worn by royalty, a 16th century silver jewel box, and a photograph of the Forth Bridge that the Nazis used for propaganda during World War Two.

  • S33E08 British Museum (1)

    • November 7, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team set up camp for another busy day as thousands of visitors bring their own treasures to the forecourt of the British Museum in London. It's a timely visit, as Fiona reflects on the A History of the World project. Meanwhile, the experts are kept busy with an intriguing array of objects including a pair of wooden pillars from HMS Victory that are thought to have witnessed the Battle of Trafalgar, and a dandy's outfit from the early 18th century. Plus the team meet an 8-year-old boy whose personal collection includes an MBE.

  • S33E09 Tatton Park (1)

    • November 14, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts welcome thousands of visitors to the gardens of Tatton Park in Cheshire. Henry Sandon has a memorable day when one of the rarest 18th century pieces of Royal Worcester turns up. Other finds include a box of the world's most valuable and beautiful diamonds, that aren't quite what they appear to be, and an old box of golf balls with a value that's definitely not below par.

  • S33E10 Tatton Park (2)

    • November 21, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts pay a return visit to Tatton Park in Cheshire. They uncover more objects and stories rich in history, including a silver inkstand reputed to be given to Admiral Nelson by his lover, Lady Emma Hamilton, in 1805; and an oak coffer that arrives via an unusual mode of transport. Plus John Benjamin finds an unlikely-looking gem lurking within a box of costume jewellery.

  • S33E11 Hatfield House (1)

    • November 28, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Hatfield House in Hertfordshire. Amongst the objects exciting the experts are a collection of almost 500 ornamental pigs, doll's house furniture made out of shell cases from the Somme in World War One, and three small tiles salvaged by a builder, which turn out to be worth a fortune. Meanwhile, Fiona takes a spin in the car that stars in the programme's opening sequence - the classic Daimler Dart.

  • S33E12 Chatsworth (1)

    • December 5, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts head to Derbyshire, where thousands await them at Chatsworth House for another busy day. Amongst the pieces intriguing the experts are a rare boxing tile commemorating one of the biggest bare knuckle fights, a portrait painted by Stanley Spencer and brought in by the model, while an Egyptian head found buried in a Derby garden surprises everyone.

  • S33E13 Chatsworth (2)

    • December 26, 2010
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team pay a second visit to Chatsworth House in Derbyshire, where the experts are kept busy as more family treasures are brought from miles around. Cameras hone in on a painting thought to be by Constable, but is it genuine? And lost designs surface for exotic jewellery made by Cartier in the mid-20th century.

  • S33E14 Blair Castle

    • January 2, 2011
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head for Blair Castle, near Pitlochry in Scotland, where the treasures include a chair once used by Einstein, a necklace made from stags' teeth, and a rare and valuable watch with no hands.

  • S33E15 Hampton Court Castle (1)

    • February 20, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S33E16 Dartmouth (1)

    • February 27, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S33E17 Dartmouth (2)

    • March 6, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S33E18 Saltaire (1)

    • March 13, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S33E19 Saltaire (2)

    • March 20, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S33E20 St Fagans

    • March 27, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S33E21 British Museum (2)

    • April 3, 2011
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts return to the British Museum in London where more members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S33E22 Swindon (2)

    • April 10, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S33E23 Hatfield House (2)

    • April 17, 2011
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts return to Hatfield House in Hertfordshire where more members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued

  • S33E24 Winchester (1)

    • April 24, 2011
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are in Winchester where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S33E25 Winchester (2)

    • May 1, 2011
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are still in Winchester where more members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S33E26 Hutton-in-the-Forest

    • May 8, 2011
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are in Hutton-in-the-Forest where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S33E27 Hampton Court Castle (2)

    • May 29, 2011
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts return to Hampton Court Castle, near Leominster, Herefordshire where more members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S33E28 Retrospective

    • June 5, 2011
    • BBC One

    Fiona takes a look back at some of the best moments from the series

  • S33E29 Compilation

    • July 17, 2011
    • BBC One

Season 34

Season 35

  • S35E01 RAF Marham (1)

    • October 7, 2012
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts visit an active air base at Marham in Norfolk.

  • S35E02 Port Sunlight (1)

    • October 14, 2012
    • BBC One

  • S35E03 Port Sunlight (2)

    • October 21, 2012
    • BBC One

  • S35E04 St Andrews University

    • October 28, 2012
    • BBC One

  • S35E05 Scarborough Grand Spa Hall (1)

    • November 4, 2012
    • BBC One

  • S35E06 Farnborough (1)

    • November 11, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S35E07 Falmouth National Maritime Museum (1)

    • November 18, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S35E08 Falmouth National Maritime Museum (2)

    • November 25, 2011
    • BBC One

  • S35E09 Aberystwyth University

    • December 2, 2012
    • BBC One

  • S35E10 Wightwick Manor

    • December 9, 2012
    • BBC One

  • S35E11 2012 Christmas Special

    • December 23, 2012
    • BBC One

  • S35E12 Fountains Abbey

    • December 30, 2012
    • BBC One

  • S35E13 Stowe House (1)

    • January 6, 2013
    • BBC One

  • S35E14 Cawdor Castle

    • January 13, 2013
    • BBC One

    The team head to Scotland for a busy day in the grounds of Cawdor Castle near Inverness.

  • S35E15 Chatham Historic Dockyard (1)

    • March 17, 2013
    • BBC One

    The team discover rare treasures on a visit to Chatham's historic dockyards.

  • S35E16 Chatham Historic Dockyard (2)

    • March 24, 2013
    • BBC One

    The team discover rare treasures on a visit to Chatham's historic dockyards

  • S35E17 Newstead Abbey

    • March 31, 2013
    • BBC One

  • S35E18 Cheltenham Town Hall (1)

    • April 7, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts gather in a packed Cheltenham Town Hall as visitors arrive for another busy day of evaluations. Objects on show include a curious table from the nearby racecourse, complete with carved horse hooves for legs; some fascinating examples of espionage microdots used by the Norwegian Resistance in World War Two; and a group of bargain boot buys turn up trumps for the owner

  • S35E19 Cheltenham Town Hall (2)

    • April 14, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts make a return visit to Cheltenham Town Hall. Featured family treasures include a valuable silver fruit bowl damaged when thrown in a domestic tiff, relics of Captain Scott's last expedition to the South Pole and a humble house brick with an important story.

  • S35E20 Castle Coole

    • April 21, 2013
    • BBC One

    A return visit to Castle Coole near Enniskillen in Northern Ireland. Fiona Bruce and the team of experts welcome visitors as they bring their family treasures for inspection. Pieces featured include a poignant reminder from the battlefields of World War One, a beautiful and valuable modern painting of an Irish landscape, and a collection of compacts with a jaw-dropping valuation

  • S35E21 Farnborough (2)

    • April 28, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts return to the exciting backdrop of the Farnborough wind tunnels for another busy day of evaluations. There is a diverse collection of objects brought before the cameras, including a mammoth's tooth dug up in a garden; the Monopoly board game used by the Great Train Robbers whilst in hiding, including real cash from the heist; lavish gifts given by Hollywood stars to a favourite film cameraman; plus a family photo album which proves worth cashing in for a new kitchen

  • S35E22 Chepstow Racecourse

    • May 5, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head for the races as they arrive at Chepstow Racecourse in Wales. Family treasures featured include medals from early Olympic Games, awarded when tug-of-war was a competing sport; a light bulb containing a painstakingly-made model of Lincoln Cathedral gifted by a German prisoner of war in World War 2; and perhaps the oddest and one of the oldest pieces of glass ever featured on the programme, which excites curiosity for its near-perfect condition over three hundred years after it was made.

  • S35E23 Stowe House (2)

    • May 19, 2013
    • BBC One

    A second visit for Fiona Bruce and the experts at Stowe School in Buckinghamshire brings thousands of visitors eager to discover more about their heirlooms. Featured on the programme are a KCVO awarded to the surgeon who operated on George VI at Buckingham Palace and bestowed by the king in his dressing gown; a single plate from 'the finest porcelain dinner service ever made', worth five figures, which must represent one of the best-ever returns on investment; plus racing driver Jackie Stewart brings in two silver cups awarded for his prowess at a very different sport. Perhaps most memorable though must be the show closer, which features a remarkable series of stories of animal service in wartime, complete with a knockout valuation

  • S35E24 Scarborough Grand Spa Hall (2)

    • June 16, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts return to the Scarborough Spa Pavilion for another busy day. Cameras hone in on objects ranging from a silver reliquary found in the rubble of a building site, a paperweight from Churchill's desk given in gratitude after the nursing of his wife Lady Clementine, and a sparkling tiara which brings the house down with its beauty and value

  • S35E25 RAF Marham (2)

    • June 23, 2013
    • BBC One

    This is the second episode from RAF Marham, Norfolk.

Season 36

  • S36E01 Polesden Lacey

    • August 18, 2013
    • BBC One

    The antiques series returns as Fiona Bruce and the team head around the UK in search of more family treasures. Over 4,000 people join them at the first venue, Polesden Lacey near Dorking in Surrey, for one of the busiest days in recent years. In this opening episode, curios on show include an object originally created as a deterrent for rats that is now worth a small fortune, and a glove believed to have belonged to Elizabeth I. There is a moving story of a brooch which was kept hidden for years whilst the owner was in a prisoner of war camp. Plus Fiona introduces a new feature called Rogues Gallery, in which the audience is challenged to spot the fake from four silver tea caddies

  • S36E02 Wightwick Manor

    • August 25, 2013
    • BBC One

    A return visit to Wightwick Manor near Wolverhampton for Fiona Bruce and the experts. Discoveries include two drawings made by one of Britain's greatest artists, JMW Turner, including one found recently in the manor itself, objects once owned by the last survivor of the Titanic which were sold to pay for the cost of care home accommodation and a collector brings in examples from his hundreds of posters celebrating the spaghetti western.

  • S36E03 Eastbourne Bandstand (1)

    • September 1, 2013
    • BBC One

    In a first for the Roadshow, Fiona Bruce and the team record a programme at a sea front setting at Eastbourne Bandstand. Family treasures featured include a collection of pottery with a moving story, a rare signalling lamp used at D-Day, plus rare images of Marilyn Monroe taken at her last photographic session.

  • S36E04 Eastbourne Bandstand (2)

    • September 8, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts pay a second visit to East Sussex as they welcome thousands of visitors to Eastbourne Bandstand. Objects brought before the cameras include a collection of a thousand lead soldiers, which tell the story of a remarkable Victorian childhood; one of the earliest digital watches from the 1960s; plus perhaps the highest value for a single piece of jewellery, which has the team in raptures.

  • S36E05 Fountains Abbey

    • September 15, 2013
    • BBC One

    A return visit for Fiona Bruce and the team to the magnificent Fountains Abbey near Ripon in Yorkshire. Objects brought in by visitors include a sentimental jewel bought after a farmer sold her favourite cows, a cache of love letters with a touching story, antiques once owned by comedian Ronnie Barker, plus some artefacts relating to the Nuremberg trials at the end of the Second World War.

  • S36E06 Southsea - Royal Marines Museum (1)

    • September 22, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team set up for another busy day at the Royal Marines Museum in Southsea, near Portsmouth. There are some remarkable stories behind objects brought to the camera including chairs that claim to be made from timber off HMS Victory, rare spoons found in pig swill, a bangle left behind by a Russian princess, and a pile of paintings once owned by the man who inspired the character Indiana Jones.

  • S36E07 Royal Agricultural University, Cirencester (1)

    • September 29, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts are at the Royal Agricultural University near Cirencester for this week's show. Objects featured include what could prove the most valuable picture ever seen on the show, a tea caddy first used in Regency days as a repository for a pet budgie's ashes, and what are believed to be the last signatures made by Edward VIII before his abdication.

  • S36E08 Newstead Abbey

    • October 6, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts pay a visit to Newstead Abbey in Nottinghamshire. Among the discoveries are a medal for bravery awarded to a pigeon in World War Two, an English Literature prize presented to the young DH Lawrence, and the very bugle that was used to sound the Charge of the Light Brigade.

  • S36E09 Towneley Hall

    • October 13, 2013
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team arrive at Towneley Hall near Burnley in Lancashire. Despite heavy rain, thousands arrive to show their family treasures. Objects brought before the cameras include a garden ornament that turns out to be more important than first thought, a collection of handbags that has prompted a domestic tiff, and a 16th/17th century ring bought in a boot sale for a song.

  • S36E10 The Scottish Gallery of Modern Art (1)

    • December 22, 2013
    • BBC One

  • S36E11 Retrospective

    • December 29, 2013
    • BBC One

  • S36E12 The Royal Ballet School, Richmond (1)

    • January 5, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit the Royal Ballet School. Objects include a World War Two long bow and a sketch of Dylan Thomas's wife.

  • S36E13 Sainsbury Centre Norwich (1)

    • January 12, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts head to the University of East Anglia where they are joined in the shadow of the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts by large crowds from Norwich. There is an eclectic mix of objects brought to camera, including the death mask of William Gladstone, a complete kitchen from the 1950s, a horn found by a serving soldier whilst on duty in Afghanistan, and a remarkable sampler sewn in Victorian days by a resident of an asylum, complete with hand-sewn accusations aimed at those responsible for her incarceration.

  • S36E14 Exeter Cathedral (1)

    • March 23, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team set up for a busy day at Exeter Cathedral. Objects under inspection include a table reputed to have been used by Bonnie Prince Charlie, a silver cup found when re-thatching the roof of a cottage, artwork painted by Edward VII as a child, and a pair of the rarest Delft plates ever featured on the show.

  • S36E15 Scone Palace

    • March 30, 2014
    • BBC One

    A visit to Scone Palace, near Perth in Scotland, sees Fiona Bruce and the team meeting thousands of visitors bringing precious heirlooms. Pieces featured include an 'ugly' family brooch with a surprising value; one of the most significant books seen on the show, which dates back to the 15th century; t-shirts bought at a Clash concert over 30 years ago; and a tea caddy from the 1780s, which the expert describes as 'perfection'

  • S36E16 World War I Special

    • April 6, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona presents a special World War One themed edition of the show.

  • S36E17 Royal Agricultural University, Cirencester (2)

    • April 13, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are at the Royal Agricultural University near Cirencester where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S36E18 Polesden Lacey (2)

    • April 20, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of antiques experts pay a return visit to Polesden Lacey.

  • S36E19 Gregynog

    • April 27, 2014
    • BBC One

  • S36E20 Southsea - Royal Marines Museum (2)

    • May 4, 2014
    • BBC One

    A return visit to the Royal Marines Museum at Southsea, near Portsmouth. Fiona Bruce and the team welcome thousands of visitors bringing their family treasures including a Jolly Roger flag once flown by the crew of a British submarine in the Second World War, a wine glass that is at the centre of a domestic dispute, plus perhaps the creepiest doll complete with a revolving head of four different faces comes spookily to life

  • S36E21 Exeter Cathedral (2)

    • May 11, 2014
    • BBC One

    A return visit to Exeter Cathedral for another feast of finds for Fiona Bruce and the experts. Treasures featured include Chinese objects which revealed a shocking family secret, rare artworks by the sculptor Elisabeth Frink, a map of the Battle of Waterloo drawn by an eyewitness, and one of the earliest dolls to be featured on the show.

  • S36E22 The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art (2)

    • May 25, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are at the National Gallery in Edinburgh where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S36E23 The Royal Ballet School, Richmond (2)

    • June 1, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are at The Royal Ballet School, Richmond where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S36E24 Sainsbury Centre, Norwich (2)

    • June 22, 2014
    • BBC One

    Treasures include a rare 18th-century glass bought for 10p from a charity shop.

  • S36E25 Wentworth Woodhouse (1)

    • June 29, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts travel to Wentworth Woodhouse in south Yorkshire.

  • S36E26 Wentworth Woodhouse (2)

    • July 6, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts make a return visit to the magnificent Wentworth Woodhouse.

Season 37

  • S37E01 Hillsborough Castle

    • September 14, 2014
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow returns for its 35th year as a favourite on Britain's TV screens, an occasion marked by a very special visit from Her Majesty the Queen to meet members of the team at Hillsborough Castle in Northern Ireland. Fiona Bruce introduces three of the show's specialists to the Queen and Prince Philip and we find out what their research revealed about a curious collection of items in the royal residence. Two and a half thousand visitors brave the rain for a memorable day near Belfast, bringing along treasures including a Shirley Temple doll, a mysterious lock and key found in a skip and a vintage wine bottle with a surprising value. There is also a return visit from the proud owners of a recently restored Cartier watch in a new feature that takes a fresh look at memorable items from past series - Antiques Roadshow Uncovered. It was devised in response to the question the Roadshow team gets asked most often by viewers - 'what happened next?'

  • S37E02 Kirby Hall (1)

    • September 21, 2014
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow visits Kirby Hall in Northamptonshire, a romantic ruin originally built to impress Queen Elizabeth I, where star finds include a vintage TV set and a jade bowl once used as a butter dish. Other eyecatching items include marine paintings from the family of Captain Bligh, a bewitching medieval ring found with a metal detector and a wind-up Charlie Chaplin doll. The team are also reunited with a 500-year-old religious painting, first seen in 2010 and now beautifully restored. Now that the ancient devotional object has been returned to its former glory, art specialist Philip Mould is hoping he can learn more about its origins and potential value.

  • S37E03 Kirby Hall (2)

    • September 28, 2014
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow is back among the dramatic ruins of Kirby Hall in Northamptonshire, where the team encounter what could be the world's smallest stuffed dog and an extraordinary carved chair inspired by the MPs' expenses scandal. The sun shines on the crowds who flock to one of English Heritage's less-well-known gems and there are plenty of curious and highly valuable finds, including Victorian jewellery, Art Deco enamel, a toy football team and a Venetian drug jar worth a fortune - if it's original. Yet one item stops the team in their tracks - an elaborate chair carved just a few years ago by a craftsman keen to make a point about the MPs' expenses scandal. Fiona Bruce and Paul Atterbury decode its satirical message and offer a surprising valuation.

  • S37E04 Scone Palace

    • October 5, 2014
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow returns to Scone Palace in Perthshire, Scotland, where the team discover an ornate wooden box said to have been stolen from Napoleon, a portrait of a wartime heroine and a rather vicious-looking strap once wielded in Scottish classrooms. Scone Palace provides an imposing backdrop for a roadshow brimming with beautiful treasures and items reputed to have famous historical connections. Family legend holds that a 19th-century military campaign box was stolen from Napoleon - but can it be proven? A striking portrait reveals the story of a woman who helped save the lives of hundreds of Jews in occupied Holland during the Second World War. And we admire a silver tea service that was once due to be melted down to raise funds for a spitfire during the war. Fiona Bruce also meets a teacher with a fearsome leather strap - the Scottish equivalent of the cane, an implement of corporal punishment only outlawed in the 1980s

  • S37E05 Derby Roundhouse

    • October 12, 2014
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow welcomes visitors to Derby's Roundhouse, a vast railway shed that dates back to the golden age of steam, where finds include a portrait on a pillowcase, a chilly Russian paperweight and the world's earliest football trophy. Fiona Bruce introduces a show that takes place inside the world's first and oldest surviving railway roundhouse, where dozens of trains were once serviced. Entertaining 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. A silver claret jug awarded to Hallam Football Club in 1867 also makes a return appearance in the Antiques Roadshow Uncovered feature, as recent research leads silver specialist Alastair Dickenson to believe it could be far more valuable than first thought.

  • S37E06 Chenies Manor (1)

    • October 19, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are at Chenies Manor where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S37E07 Chenies Manor (2)

    • October 26, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are still at Chenies Manor where more members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S37E08 World War One Special

    • November 2, 2014
    • BBC One

    In the second Antiques Roadshow special from the Somme battlefields, Fiona Bruce and a small group of experts meet families bringing poignant stories of courage and humanity in wartime.

  • S37E09 Tredegar House (1)

    • November 23, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are at Tredegar House near Newport in Wales where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S37E10 Towneley Hall

    • November 30, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are at Towneley Hall in Burnley, Lancashire where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S37E11 Walthamstow Town Hall (1)

    • December 7, 2014
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are at Waltham Forest Town Hall in east London where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S37E12 Christmas Special

    • December 21, 2014
    • BBC One

    A look back at some of the year's highlights and updates on some memorable items.

  • S37E13 Durham Cathedral

    • December 28, 2014
    • BBC One

    Treasures include a sweetheart brooch, a Victorian penknife and secret D-Day documents.

  • S37E14 Walthamstow Town Hall (2)

    • January 11, 2015
    • BBC One

    Treasures include an Art Deco pendant with a hint of Egypt and some charming tiles.

  • S37E15 Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral (1)

    • March 22, 2015
    • BBC One

  • S37E16 Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral (2)

    • March 29, 2015
    • BBC One

  • S37E17 Belton House (1)

    • April 5, 2015
    • BBC One

  • S37E18 Belton House (2)

    • April 12, 2015
    • BBC One

  • S37E19 Lowther Castle (1)

    • April 19, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow pays a visit to Lowther Castle in Cumbria, once home to the flamboyant Earl of Lonsdale - known as 'the Yellow Earl' for his distinctive livery.

  • S37E20 Lowther Castle (2)

    • April 26, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow makes a return visit to Lowther Castle, where treasures include Action Man figures, a giant skeleton clock and watercolours by Beatrix Potter.

  • S37E21 Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum

    • May 3, 2015
    • BBC One

    At Kelvingrove Museum and Art Gallery in Glasgow, the team are intrigued and a little unsettled by an army of insects mounted in precious metals.

  • S37E22 Barrington Court (1)

    • May 10, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow team visit Barrington Court in Somerset, where finds include a toy Noah's ark, an Elizabethan wine jug and ceramic brewery figures.

  • S37E23 Barrington Court (2)

    • May 24, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow returns to Barrington Court in Somerset, where finds include a revolver believed to have been owned by Wild West showman Buffalo Bill.

  • S37E24 Ashton Court (1)

    • BBC One

  • S37E25 The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art

    • June 14, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow is at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, where discoveries include a stunning piece of Swedish glass.

  • S37E26 Tredegar House (2)

    • June 21, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow returns to Tredegar House, where finds include a locket given by Queen Victoria, a Welsh-made classic car and an implement for creating tattoos.

  • S37E27 Ashton Court/Hillsborough (2)

    • June 28, 2015
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team travel to Hillsborough Castle, the official royal residence in Northern Ireland, and Ashton Court in Bristol.

Season 38

  • S38E01 Plas Newydd 1

    • September 6, 2015
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team of experts are at the Plas Newydd Country House and Gardens on Anglesey where members of the public bring their antiques and collectibles to have them valued.

  • S38E02 Balmoral Royal Special

    • September 13, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow pays tribute to Her Majesty the Queen as she becomes Britain's longest-serving monarch with a special edition looking back at memorable moments from past series that have touched on the life of Elizabeth II. Fiona Bruce introduces a unique celebration of the life and reign of Queen Elizabeth II from Balmoral Castle, where the Antiques Roadshow filmed this summer. The Roadshow team have scoured the archives to find some of the most surprising items and poignant stories relating to the Queen that have been filmed over the past 20 years. Highlights include a recording of a speech the young Princess Elizabeth made on Children's Hour in 1940, described by the children of presenter Uncle Mac, and a behind-the-scenes account of the Queen's first televised Christmas message, complete with photos of Prince Charles and Princess Anne trying out the camera equipment. The team appraise royal memorabilia, from mugs and crisp packets to a surprising valuable piece of the Queen's wedding cake, while a seamstress recalls the thrill of helping to make the royal wedding gown. Several items provide a rare insight into the Queen's day-to-day life, such as her interest in racing pigeons, and a personal letter to a vet reveals wry comments about the weight of a corgi and touching lines on the death of a beloved pet. There's also another chance to see the Queen's meeting with the Antiques Roadshow team at Hillsborough Castle in 2014, when three experts got the chance to appraise antiques on display in the house and discuss them with the Queen and Prince Philip.

  • S38E03 RAF Coningsby 1

    • September 20, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow visits RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire, an operational station home to the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight, where treasures include a portrait by John Singer Sargent, a teddy bear that flew with the Dambusters and an outrageous decanter from Las Vegas. Fiona Bruce introduces the programme from the back of a Dakota aircraft in mid-flight, setting the scene for an episode that includes a stuffed toy that flew on the Dambusters raid and original designs for the Vulcan bomber scrawled on a newspaper. A portrait of a 1920s socialite by celebrated artist John Singer Sargent catches the eye of Grant Ford, while a bronze bust known affectionately as Gus turns out to be closely connected to the world's most famous Impressionist painter. Miscellaneous specialist Mark Hill is dazzled by a show-stopping crystal decanter bought on a holiday in Las Vegas, while a coat found in a skip turns out to have been worn by an officer in the American civil war. There's a big surprise in store for an Australian visitor who bought a pair of earrings for a fiver in a charity shop in Perth, and John Benjamin introduces the episode's edition of The Imposter, presenting Fiona with four sets of rubies - only one of which is a genuine, highly valuable Burmese gem.

  • S38E04 Broughton Castle 1

    • September 27, 2015
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce welcomes visitors to Broughton Castle near Banbury in Oxfordshire, where unusual finds include a book of early police mugshots, a Victorian baby bouncer and a musical penknife. A beautiful art nouveau vase that survived the Second World War in Ukraine catches the eye of ceramics specialist Will Farmer, but could it be the work of master craftsman Emile Galle? The team are charmed by a Georgian dolls house complete with period features and a Victorian baby bouncer said to have been used by the royal household. Pictures specialist Philip Mould hears about a tax inspector with a passion for art who was paid in paintings by several renowned, and now highly valuable, modern artists. A book of early police mugshots provides a remarkable insight into crime at the turn of the 20th century, and a letter from Lord Nelson about a sheep taken on board HMS Victory turns out to have an amusing twist. Jewellery specialist Geoffrey Munn challenges Fiona to spot the odd one out among a collection of magical talismans, and a novelty musical penknife of exquisite craftsmanship provides the biggest gasp of the day.

  • S38E05 Durham Cathedral 2

    • October 4, 2015
    • BBC One

    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 a Second World War bombsite. Fiona Bruce admires a remarkable collection of rare books in the cathedral's collection, including a 7th-century bible and an early version of Magna Carta, while ceramics specialist John Axford is charmed by a late 19th-century plate whose childlike decoration belies its value. The team appraise a rather gruesome 19th-century medical kit used by a missionary in Africa who followed in the footsteps of Stanley and Livingstone, and an early etching by renowned artist Dame Laura Knight. Clocks and watches specialist Ben Wright is amazed by the story of a beautiful engraved and gilded carriage clock that was discovered in a pile of rubble on a bombsite in Durham during the Second World War. Family treasures include football mementoes belonging to a man who played for Sunderland in 1913 and a collection of medals awarded to a young RAF navigator in World War II, now the proud property of his young grandson.

  • S38E06 The Royal William Yard 1

    • October 11, 2015
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce presents from the Royal William Yard in Plymouth where 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. Nautical treasures are well represented on the waterfront in Plymouth, from a ship in a bottle to a painting of HMS Impregnable from 1789, but militaria specialist Graham Lay has doubts about a pair of doorknobs that were supposedly Lord Nelson's. The team are impressed by a chess set made from parts of the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal, a winged armchair that has travelled from Vermont, USA, and a rare Japanese bronze vase that had been languishing in a Yorkshire garden. A psychedelic painting of a band that played at Woodstock intrigues Clive Stewart-Lockhart, and Hilary Kay meets a woman who is trying to locate a lost portrait of her cousin by Laura Knight. Jewellery specialist John Benjamin marvels at a huge diamond necklace that might be better described as a skipping rope, donated to the city of Plymouth by Lady Astor.

  • S38E07 The Royal William Yard 2

    • October 18, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow makes a return visit to the Royal William Yard in Plymouth where treasures include a unique 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. Jewellery specialist John Benjamin is the bearer of surprising news for a woman who thinks a charity shop bracelet dates from the 1960s and he offers a lesson in Art Deco to a young man who hopes to inherit a diamond and emerald brooch. Maritime curiosities are much in evidence and include a ceremonial hammer and chisel used to launch a ship and one of the last flasks of naval rum to be issued before the rum ration came to an end in 1970. Fergus Gambon is entranced by a set of doll's house furniture made from bonnet wire by destitute children in a charity school in Victorian London while Clive Stewart Lockhart is amused by a giant ceremonial wooden spoon once presented to the recipient of the lowest exam mark at Cambridge University. A rare piece of Republican silver steeped in Irish history stuns Alastair Dickenson while the value of a unique book of early 19th-century garden designs by Humphry Repton reduces its owner to tears.

  • S38E08 Bolsover Castle 1

    • October 25, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow visits Bolsover Castle in Derbyshire, where treasures include original illustrations for a Roald Dahl story, a miniature workshop stocked with thumb-sized working tools, and racing leathers worn by legendary motorcyclist Barry Sheene. There's childhood nostalgia aplenty when the team appraise two original illustrations for Roald Dahl's story Fantastic Mr Fox and a collection of Star Wars toys, complete with boxes, looking for a good home now that their owner needs to make room for a new baby. Glass specialist Andy McConnell is thrilled by a daughter's quest to find a replacement Venetian glass figure for her mother after a cherished piece dramatically exploded, while a mystery metal rod keeps the crowd guessing and turns out to be far older and more valuable than anyone expected. What seems on first glance to be a rather plain doll's house turns out to have been designed to show a plumber how to install a central heating system, while specialist John Foster marvels at a miniature workshop stocked with tiny working tools that was crafted by a disabled man with incredible skill. Ronnie Archer-Morgan challenges Fiona to spot the Impostor among a collection of rare silk scarves, and a pair of battered racing leathers evoke fond memories of motorcycle legend Barry Sheene.

  • S38E09 Bolsover Castle 2

    • November 1, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow returns to Bolsover Castle in Derbyshire, where treasures include a rare jade pendant found in a garden, a painting by novelist DH Lawrence and a huge collection of vintage hats. The team are transported back to childhood by a complete set of Enid Blyton's Famous Five books, while a vast collection of vintage hats draws a crowd as Fiona meets a woman whose hobby has become a full-time profession. Books specialist Justin Croft gets a new insight into DH Lawrence, author of Lady Chatterley's Lover, when he is asked to appraise a painting by the novelist, while a broken pot depicting a slave auction turns out to be a valuable piece of abolitionist memorabilia inspired by the novel Uncle Tom's Cabin. A beautifully crafted early 19th-century flintlock pistol catches the eye of militaria specialist Robert Tilney, and a flea-market purchase turns out to be a rare painting by Sidney Hunt, a member of the Seven and Five Society of artists that included Henry Moore and Ben Nicholson. A jade pendant dug up in the garden of a 17th-century house stuns Ronnie Archer-Morgan, who wants to know how a Maori hei-tiki artefact that could be over 300 years old ended up in a corner of England.

  • S38E10 RAF Coningsby 2

    • November 8, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow makes a return visit to RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire, where treasures include an aristocratic harp that survived the French Revolution, a beautiful Liberty necklace and a carved piece of wood with a mysterious function. There are plenty of mysteries in the show as jewellery specialist Susan Rumfit hears about a diamond brooch found hidden inside a barometer, and Jon Baddeley reveals the true purpose of a curious piece of carved wood dated 1775, leaving its owner lost for words. Fiona is intrigued by a length of tree that ended up inside a Lancaster bomber on a raid in Norway in the Second World War, while militaria specialist Graham Lay is moved by the remarkable story behind a pair of boots, a child's drawing and a parachute handle. The team admire a Liberty necklace that a young girl plans to wear for her school leaving ball, but a dilapidated French harp that dates from before the French Revolution poses a considerable restoration challenge for its owner. In a programme that has more than a hint of the Battle of Britain spirit, Mark Hill is intrigued to find a pair of wartime propaganda posters printed on hessian sacking, saved from a skip and kept under the owner's bed.

  • S38E11 Walmer Castle 1

    • November 15, 2015
    • BBC One

    It's a glorious summer's day in Kent as the Antiques Roadshow arrives in Walmer Castle near Deal, where treasures include a valuable Wemyss piglet, a remarkable prisoner of war diary and a showstopping collection of ceramic grotesque birds by Martin Brothers. There are surprises in store for a woman who has always believed that her mother's ring contained a large topaz stone, and the owner of a rare Wemyss piglet, casually kept on a windowsill. A late 18th-century round revolving table with a secret compartment intrigues furniture expert Lennox Cato, while books specialist Justin Croft is enthralled by the story of Captain Webb, the first recorded man to swim the channel in 1875. Other curiosities include the diary of a British prisoner of war held captive in Germany, complete with photos of amateur dramatics, cartoons, and labels saved from food packages, and a beautiful set of French fashion illustrations from the 1920s. Rare objects include a table clock by renowned 17th-century maker Daniel Quare, and a showstopping collection of Martin Brothers pottery cherished by a man who began buying the bizarre, grotesque birds long before they became fashionable. Andy McConnell challenges Fiona to spot 'the Impostor' amongst a collection of Roemer glasses, only one of which is a genuine 18th-century piece - with a surprise guest appearance from Andy's mum.

  • S38E12 Walmer Castle 2

    • November 22, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow returns to Walmer Castle, near Deal in Kent, where treasures include a rare enamel racing car sign, an art deco mask that frightens its owner's children and a jacket worn by JFK that could be one of the most valuable items seen on the show in recent years. Ceramics specialist Fergus Gambon suspects that an empire-style vase with a Sevres factory mark isn't quite what it seems. There's a surprise for Clive Farahar when the owner of a letter said to be from Nelson reveals the contents of a small box with a profound connection to her late husband. Marc Allum is thrilled to see a collection of post-war Italian design classics, from red a plastic Valentine typewriter to a fold-up lamp that had a tendency to melt, while oriental specialist Lee Young is intrigued by two vases and a statue that belongs to a family who once ran a travelling circus.

  • S38E13 Plas Newydd 2

    • November 29, 2015
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow returns to Plas Newydd on the Isle of Anglesey in Wales, where treasures include a Chinese silver punchbowl, a collection of historical items relating to deafness and a fabulous musical hummingbird. A mystery cabinet with a small brass tap is revealed to have a special purpose for the avid angler, while a magazine rack bought for a few pounds turns out to be the work of great Italian designer Piero Fornasetti. Marc Allum is fascinated by a collection of items relating to deafness, including ear trumpets and vintage hearing aids, and learns about George Downing, a 17th-century statesman who became fluent in sign language after growing up in a deaf community in Kent. A huge Chinese silver punchbowl puts a smile on the face of specialist Duncan Campbell, while the owner of a dynamic marine painting by Montague Dawson is relieved that they went back home to get it after pictures specialist Dendy Easton glimpsed a photo on their phone. The connection between a photo of a young man in an RAF uniform and a photo of the Apollo 11 astronauts moves books specialist Justin Croft as he hears the story of a teenage obsession and a life cut tragically short. Jewellery specialist Geoffrey Munn is dazzled by the jewelled hummingbird that pops out of a gold box, and reveals a value that leave its owner on the verge of tears.

  • S38E14 Balmoral 1

    • December 6, 2015
    • BBC One

    By special permission from the royal household, Antiques Roadshow welcomes visitors to Balmoral, the Queen's private residence in Aberdeenshire, where treasures brought before the experts include a diamond tiara, a giant telescope and a ceramic pot by Pablo Picasso. In the Imposter Challenge, militaria specialist Mark Smith wonders whether Fiona Bruce can spot a forgery amongst a collection of rare medals.

  • S38E15 Balmoral 2

    • December 13, 2015
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow makes a return visit to Balmoral, the Queen's private residence in Aberdeenshire, where 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 and helped rescue survivors from the Titanic. Fiona Bruce enjoys the chance to drive a Land Rover originally acquired by the royal household in 1953 for use on the estate and now privately owned, and there's a glimpse of rare archive footage of the young Prince Charles and Princess Anne driving an electric child's car around the grounds. Two pieces of valuable glass turn out to have had lucky escapes, as Andy McConnell marvels at a bottle from the 1740s that survived being dug up by a mechanical digger and Eric Knowles admires a 1920s Lalique vase mistaken for a doorstop. Paul Atterbury is impressed by a fine piece of Scottish craftsmanship in the form of a mirror made in the Art Nouveau style by a student at the Glasgow School of Art during Charles Rennie Mackintosh's time. The team are enthralled by the life story of a pianist who accompanied world-famous opera singer Maria Callas on tour for two years and amused by a couple who bought a Clarice Cliff coffee set in a charity shop in the 1970s for £1, only to misplace the coffee pot and accidentally plaster one of the cups behind a wall. Militaria specialist Mark Smith is overwhelmed when a humble Christmas tin turns out to contain one of the most remarkable collections of medals he has ever seen, belonging to a man decorated for his service in both World Wars and his role in the rescue of survivors from the Titanic.

  • S38E16 Christmas Special

    • December 30, 2015
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce introduces a festive edition from Lyme Park in Cheshire. Along with expert Will Farmer, she unwraps presents from Christmas past as they explore the changing taste in toys given as presents, going back to Edwardian days. Meanwhile, in the beautiful gardens, the team of experts meet over 2000 visitors bearing family treasures for valuation. Some precious objects boast impressive credentials, including a cup and saucer once owned by a queen, a pram believed to have been in use in Buckingham Palace and a dagger reputed to have been owned by Charles I. Adding to the seasonal atmosphere is a curiosity that celebrates the work of author Charles Dickens.

  • S38E17 Bowood House 1

    • January 3, 2016
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow visits Bowood House in Wiltshire, where treasures include a collection of glass car mascots, a portrait used for target practice by schoolchildren and a previously unseen account of the sinking of the Titanic written by an officer who survived. Andy McConnell applauds a man with a passion for glass mascots that would once have adorned the radiators of luxury cars, but were they designed by master craftsman René Lalique? An 18th-century portrait of a lady catches the eye of Dendy Easton, but he's alarmed to discover that the pupils of the local school where it hangs have been using it for target practice. Ronnie Archer Morgan admires an unusual 19th-century walking stick carved with the head of a goose, intertwined snakes and a pair of boxers, while Hilary Kay hears how an Australian woman got to meet the Beatles during their visit to Melbourne in 1964. The team are impressed by a lavishly illustrated book documenting the travels of 19th-century explorer John Whitehead and a collection of personal documents belonging to an officer who survived the sinking of the Titanic, including a moving account of the cries of the drowning passengers.

  • S38E18 Bowood House 2

    • January 10, 2016
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow makes a return visit to Bowood House in Wiltshire where treasures include an 18th century box engraved with a secret code, an enamel cigarette case by a Russian master craftsman and a collection of items from the golden age of tailoring. Jon Baddeley is intrigued by a mysterious 18th century box engraved with a secret code that may once have contained cosmetic 'beauty spots' while books specialist Clive Farahar enjoys a cartoon inspired by a news report about a lion that escaped from a circus and took refuge in a Wiltshire school. The team admire a collection of vintage transistor radios, a scent bottle housed in a wagon drawn by a pair of goats and a blue enamel cigarette case presented to an Englishman who aided the White Russian cause during the Russian Revolution. Mark Hill meets two young men with a passion for tailoring and the work of Montague Burton, while glass specialist Andy McConnell is inspired by the story of an ordinary Stourbridge glass engraver, as told by a proud son. In a moving encounter, Fiona Bruce meets a man who only discovered he had a different biological father when he found letters to his late mother from an American soldier, prompting him to undertake a remarkable search for answers in North Carolina.

  • S38E19 India Special

    • March 13, 2016
    • BBC One

    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. Many of the objects brought in for the scrutiny of Fiona Bruce and the experts demonstrate the interwoven history between the UK and India, such as ceremonial robes used in the flamboyant Delhi Durbar. Other pieces brought before the cameras include a ring given by a princess to a young boy who captured a kite after it was cut free in an aerial battle, and a 1925 Rolls Royce made for the Maharajah of Jodhpur. Finally, a bracelet once played with by children in a toy box turns out to hold its own secrets - including a surprise value.

  • S38E20 The Royal Hall Harrogate 1

    • March 27, 2016
    • BBC One

    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's a frisson of excitement as a sporting icon is brought in, complete with security guards and accompanied by BBC Sport's Gabby Logan and Leeds United's Eddie Gray. Gabby is intrigued to know if it is possible to value such a rare and unique object but Fiona Bruce and silver expert Alastair Dickenson are on hand to help. Alastair's valuation, his highest in 20 years on the programme, brings gasps from the audience. Geoffrey Munn hears the emotional story of a sapphire ring left to a young man by a recently departed friend. Paul Atterbury learns about the family history and inspiration behind the world famous Betty's Tearooms. Philip Mould hears the extraordinary background that lies behind a simple portrait of a factory worker who went on to change working conditions for children in Victorian Britain.

  • S38E21 The Royal Hall Harrogate 2

    • April 3, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts make a return visit to the Spa town of Harrogate in Yorkshire. The Royal Hall has played host to stars such as the Beatles and Duke Ellington, but top of the bill now is a little ink drawing that Phillip Mould believes could be by the hand of Pablo Picasso. If it is, it could be worth some very serious money. Oriental specialist John Axford keeps Fiona guessing as he challenges her to find the odd one out amongst four tea bowls. Plus Jon Baddeley values a model ship that took more than thirty years for its owner to construct and Marc Allum meets a man with a unique collection of model cars.

  • S38E22 Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum 2

    • April 10, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to Scotland for another busy day of evaluations at the impressive Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum. Objects exciting the experts include handsome jewels from 'auntie's treasure trove' that evoke a luxurious lifestyle from the art deco era, a painting by one of the Glasgow Girls group of artists and a family hand-me-down known as 'the ugly pot', designed by an important maker that carries a highly attractive value.

  • S38E23 Hanbury Hall 1

    • April 17, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team are at Hanbury Hall near Droitwich in Worcestershire. It's thought the creator of The Archers based the fictional village of Ambridge on Hanbury, and so it's quite possible that Hanbury Hall is the inspiration for Lower Loxley Hall. Mark Hill values a pop art jacket designed by Sir Peter Blake. Sadly its value has been reduced after being eaten in places by a ferret. Rupert Maas appraises one of the finest nude paintings he's ever seen. Glass specialist Andy McConnell values the oldest piece of glass he's ever handled in a lifetime of collecting. Meanwhile a sketch of Napoleon on his death bed made hastily on St Helena prompts a debate about the reputation of the man. Marc Allum shows Fiona four vessels that elegantly evoke the spirit of Ancient Greece. But can she spot the one genuine piece that actually dates back two and a half thousand years?

  • S38E24 Trentham Gardens 1

    • April 24, 2016
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow visits Trentham Gardens near Stoke-on-Trent, where treasures include rare items from the region's historic potteries, a brooch that belonged to flying ace Amy Johnson and a portable road map described as an early form of satnav. Jewellery specialist Susan Rumfitt challenges Fiona to spot the odd one out among a collection of gold necklaces and bracelets - one of which is actually made from a cheap imitation alloy known as pinchbeck.

  • S38E25 Lyme Park 2

    • May 1, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce visits the scene where Colin Firth famously emerged from the lake as Mr Darcy - Lyme Park in Cheshire. Objects of interest to the experts assembled in the gardens include a pair of impressive pistols used to protect the Royal Mail from highwaymen, a tea caddy cunningly concealed as a pile of books and a picture of actress Sarah Bernhardt once owned by Elton John.

  • S38E26 Trentham Gardens 2

    • May 15, 2016
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow 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. A very early movie camera excites expert Hilary Kay, who hears how it was first used back in 1910 to record some early natural history photography in Britain. A dagger with a gruesome history turns out to have been a clever recent purchase, while a flamboyant shawl that once belonged to film heart throb Dolores del Rio evokes a former glamourous lifestyle from the era of the 1930s in Hollywood. Closing honours go to a small figure of a Chinese man made in Staffordshire way back in the 1750s, which turns out to carry a high value today.

Season 39

  • S39E01 Tewkesbury Abbey 1

    • August 28, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are at Tewkesbury Abbey in Gloucestershire for the first episode of a brand new series, and over 2,000 visitors dig out their treasures in anticipation. Two sisters gifted with their great-great-grandmother's jewellery are drawn into the 'battle of the bangles' to find out who has the finest inheritance. A plain box catches the eye of our furniture expert Lennox Cato when the owner makes a claim for it to have once been in Anne Hathaway's cottage. An Australian visitor finds out if the set of silver knives she brought over was worth the cost of the ticket. And one of the most exciting finds in Roadshow history emerges when a collection of rare figures and dolls' house furnishings from 1705 stuns expert Fergus Gambon, who excitedly tells Fiona it is of national importance... and not insignificant value. Plus the first in a new audience guessing game with the Enigma, in which experts challenge us to guess the purpose of a mystery object.

  • S39E02 Audley End 1

    • September 4, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Audley End near Saffron Walden in Essex. Scouring through the family treasures brought in by visitors, the experts discover a varied set of items. These include the sword that ended the War of Independence in America, a large collection of toilet chains, a beautiful silver container that once contained the gall stone of a goat and three vases decorated with fairies.

  • S39E03 Audley End 2

    • September 11, 2016
    • BBC One

    A return visit to Audley End in Essex sees Fiona Bruce and the team of experts meeting thousands of visitors who are bringing family treasures for appraisal. Amongst objects brought to camera are a table that was supposedly used to sign Napoleon's abdication and a giant bronze cockerel buried in both world wars to avoid being melted down for ammunition. And there is a cautionary tale when a man brings in 650 design diagrams after bidding for just one following an interest prompted by watching Antiques Roadshow.

  • S39E04 Hanbury Hall 2

    • September 18, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts make a return visit to Hanbury Hall near Droitwich in Worcestershire, where it seems that extraordinarily large objects are the talking point of the day. Expert Adam Schoon appraises an enormous fishing rod, created by a man whose obsession for fishing saw him send prize specimens back home from the western front in World War One. Adam also sees the largest narwhal tusk he's ever encountered at almost ten feet in length. Military expert Robert Tilney discovers a piece of trench art that plays a tune from The Sound of Music, and veteran expert Hilary Kay demonstrates how sense of smell can decode a mystery object. Jewellery expert John Benjamin values four shiny buttons just bought from an auction for two pounds which produce the fastest profit seen in many a year.

  • S39E05 Arley Hall 1

    • September 25, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to Cheshire for a day of valuations at Arley Hall and Gardens. Combing through the objects brought in by visitors, the experts are excited to discover two different items that have spent many years hidden from view - a gold bracelet found mysteriously bricked up behind a wall that is linked to a tragic love story, and a time capsule, buried in 1886, which is opened on camera to reveal its secrets 130 years later. But the biggest gasps are held back for the discovery of a lost work by one of the most important artists of the late 19th century, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema.

  • S39E06 Arley Hall 2

    • October 2, 2016
    • BBC One

    A return visit to the enchanting gardens of Arley Hall in Cheshire finds Fiona Bruce and the team of experts hard at work. It's a rich day of finds as family treasures come under scrutiny. Amongst the objects featured are a portrait of a visitor's mother which was painted in India in the 1950s and identified by Asian art specialist Amin Jaffer as a superb example of a now highly collected artist whose work commands high prices today. There's a poignant diary hidden from Japanese guards by a prisoner of war whilst building the bridge over the River Kwai. And diamonds and emeralds once worn by a duchess deliver a final flourish as expert John Benjamin gets excited by their quality and sparkle.

  • S39E07 Broughton Castle 2

    • October 9, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team pay a return visit to the magnificent Broughton Castle near Banbury in Oxfordshire. Objects exciting the team include two very large portraits depicting servants who worked at the castle in the 18th century, which art expert Philip Mould says are rare and sociologically highly significant. We hear the story of the man who is believed to have flown the first scheduled air service in Britain before signing up to be one of the first combat pilots in the Royal Flying Corp in 1914. And silver expert Ian Pickford is enthused by the arrival of the finest Chinese-made silver mug he has seen in over twenty years on the Roadshow.

  • S39E08 Baddesley Clinton 1

    • October 16, 2016
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit the moated manor house of Baddesley Clinton, just 15 miles from the bustle of Birmingham. A busy day of valuations uncovers more fascinating finds, including a gruesome box containing a long wooden peg removed from a child's eye by a surgeon in the 1780s, a glittering diamond bracelet once worn by Hollywood star Rita Hayworth and a painting made by Lord Mountbatten of his family home. There's also much conversation about a carving of St George banished to the organ loft for offending parishioners, and a visitor gets a stern warning from a Roadshow expert after stripping a rare wooden pedestal of its original paintwork.

  • S39E09 Baddesley Clinton 2

    • October 23, 2016
    • BBC One

    A return visit to Baddesley Clinton near Solihull finds Fiona Bruce and the experts poring over more family heirlooms with memorable stories. Treasures brought to the cameras include a silver box, described by an excited silver expert as exceptionally rare, which was once nearly subjected to drilling by the surprised owner. There is a revealing painting called The Nudist Colony's Annual Dinner Dance, and the show-closer finds two exquisite gold boxes once used by wealthy surgeons to apply snuff in the early days of the 19th century drawing gasps from the onlooking crowd.

  • S39E10 Golden Age of Travel Special

    • October 30, 2016
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow boards the Flying Scotsman for a special edition that celebrates the golden age of travel.

  • S39E11 Highlights of 2016

    • December 28, 2016
    • BBC One

    In a special edition, Fiona Bruce looks at the most talked about finds of the year and reveals some surprising updates. Art scholars searched for years for a missing work by eminent Victorian artist Alma-Tadema. Since appearing on the show, the newly restored painting has gone on to be disaplyed in an international exhibition. The owner of a group of valuable jade figures reveals how he used the proceeds of their sale in tribute to his late wife. There's a twist in the tale for the man who brought the original script for the classic film The Third Man to the Roadshow when he's taken on a surprise trip to meet a mysterious man in Vienna. Plus a look ahead to the locations for 2017 as the show approaches its 40th year on the road.

  • S39E12 Tewkesbury Abbey 2

    • January 8, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the Antiques Roadshow team make a return visit to Tewkesbury Abbey in Gloucestershire to uncover more treasures. Amongst the objects featured are an extremely heavy Tudor table from a local pub that takes six sturdy men to move, an extensive collection of Maundy Money that excites expert John Foster, and a signed picture of Chairman Mao by Andy Warhol. Hilary Kay is thrilled to see an incredibly rare and valuable 18th-century painted silk dress which has been lying in a dressing up box for over 50 years.

  • S39E13 Holocaust Memorial

    • January 15, 2017
    • BBC One

    As preparations begin to mark Holocaust Memorial Day later this month, Fiona Bruce and a small team of experts meet a remarkable group of British survivors whose lives were shattered by the events of World War II. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office hosts a special gathering as Jewish families come together to talk - many for the first time on television - about life under Hitler's tyranny. Precious objects that help tell their stories include family silver hidden from the Nazis, a pair of striped trousers worn in Auschwitz and a gold coin used by a family as vital currency when fleeing over the Pyrenees. Broadcaster Natasha Kaplinsky explains her role in the work of the UK Holocaust Memorial Foundation, which involved conducting over a hundred interviews, and she meets again the woman who moved her most as she talks about life in Belsen. Relatives talk about the impact that is still wrought on their families, but there is hope in the form of four enormous quilts celebrating the lives of orphaned loved ones who were given refuge in the UK. In a rare break from tradition, the items screened will not be valued due to their priceless nature and historical importance.

  • S39E14 Burton Constable 1

    • March 19, 2017
    • BBC One

    The team visit Burton Constable Hall near Hull. Objects inspected by Fiona Bruce and the experts include the first transatlantic airmail letter, brought on the plane piloted by Alcock and Brown in 1919, uncomfortable diaries of an SS officer imprisoned in Britain in World War II and letters from the founder of modern nursing, Florence Nightingale. The award for most curious acquisition of the day must go to a bronze figure which was swapped for fish and chip suppers. And one family bring in 1,500 shoe buckles obsessively collected by a late husband. His investment proved to be a wise decision, however, when expert Judith Miller delivers the valuation.

  • S39E15 Burton Constable 2

    • March 26, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the Antiques Roadshow team head to Burton Constable Hall near Hull, a property filled with family legends and treasures, including a remarkable cabinet of curiosities. Objects brought in by visitors are just as diverse, including a ship's anchor found in a garden pond and a medal given for heroism to a local sailor who helped break Captain Scott's ship out of Antarctic ice in 1901. There is also a rare example of early flat-pack furniture dating back to the 17th century. And for anyone interested in the wisdom of investing in antiques and collectibles, there is a revelation about how a decision to purchase a flimsy booklet proved a much better investment 30 years ago than buying a second-hand car.

  • S39E16 BBC Caversham Park 1

    • April 2, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to Caversham Park near Reading which, since World War II, was home to the BBC's Monitoring service, where many news stories have been broken by the team who listen in to international broadcasts. It is a busy day for the experts who specialise in written documents, as they examine items such as a very rare booklet containing notes made in the 17th century by one of Shakespeare's earliest readers. A chunky gold ring complete with a moving letter tells the story of a British family that joined the Californian gold rush in search of personal fortune in 1848. But star item of the day must go to some beautiful watercolour illustrations made in the early 19th century depicting people in southern India. After being told the jaw-dropping valuation, a stunned owner tells viewers that he promised the grandchildren an ice cream if the illustrations were worth more than £100.

  • S39E17 Pembroke Castle 1

    • April 9, 2017
    • BBC One

    In this Episode, the team arrive in west Wales at the birthplace of King Henry VII, Pembroke Castle. There is a royal line-up of relics brought in by visitors, which include a stick pin gifted to George V's page of the back stairs in Buckingham Palace. There are also mementoes from Queen Victoria's champion butter maker from Balmoral, which show the skills of a dairy maid. But most extraordinary is a collection of photographs that tell the poignant story of the last days of the Russian royal family, the Romanovs, while in captivity in 1917.

  • S39E18 Pembroke Castle 2

    • April 16, 2017
    • BBC One

    A return visit for Fiona Bruce and the experts to the beautiful setting of Pembroke Castle in West Wales. Objects featured include a beguilingly rare sapphire ring that changes colour in different light, Pope Pius XII's papal hat, and a collection of remarkable Anglo-Indian paintings from 1780 which were once used to decorate a village scout hut.

  • S39E19 Senate House 1

    • April 23, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts head to Senate House, Britain's first skyscraper and the striking art deco home to the University of London in the heart of Bloomsbury. Objects brought in for scrutiny include elaborately decorated stained-glass panels found in a skip, the hoof of Lord Cardigan's charger Ronald, which bravely saw action at the battle of Balaclava, plus a French platinum and diamond bracelet which elicits one of the best reactions in Roadshow history when the owner learns its value.

  • S39E20 Trelissick 1

    • April 30, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head for the beautiful gardens of Trelissick near Truro in Cornwall. Objects under examination by the experts include a bust of Churchill found at the bottom of a lake and a group of medals owned by a proud grandson. A lifebelt tells the graphic story of a shipwreck off the Lizard peninsula in which the crew were rescued in desperate circumstances.

  • S39E21 Ightham Mote 1

    • May 7, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts set up camp at Ightham Moat near Sevenoaks in Kent, where they welcome 3,000 visitors laden with family heirlooms. Among the treasures are a gold ring containing a lock of Byron's hair, a remarkable cache of recently discovered postcards from 1916 which reveal how a British POW sent secret messages back to his family, and a boot-sale find of two Chinese paintings.

  • S39E22 Ightham Mote 2

    • May 21, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts set up camp at Ightham Mote near Sevenoaks in Kent, where they welcome 3,000 visitors laden with family heirlooms. Amongst the treasures brought to camera are a gold ring containing a lock of Byron's hair, a remarkable cache of recently discovered postcards from 1916 which reveal how a British POW sent secret messages back to his family and two Chinese paintings

  • S39E23 New Lanark 1

    • May 28, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts head to the banks of the Cyde to meet visitors bringing family heirlooms to the 18th-century cotton mill of New Lanark. As evidence that you should never throw anything out, treasures featured include a pearl necklace bought cheaply at a boot sale, a valuable clock found in a flea market, and a rare cuddly toy found abandoned in a skip. Plus there is a moment of disquiet when a guest reveals how a family painting is a reminder of an uncomfortable family secret that dates back to the days of Nazi Germany.

  • S39E24 New Lanark 2

    • June 11, 2017
    • BBC One

    A return trip to New Lanark on the banks of the Clyde finds Fiona Bruce and the experts busy examining more family gems. Treasures brought before the cameras include diamond jewels found hidden in an upholstered chair, a claret jug rescued from the pawn shop and a banner for Britain's oldest subscription library, founded in 1741.

  • S39E25 Caversham 2

    • June 18, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are in the grounds of BBC Caversham near Reading. Items featured include a communion book originally owned by the poet Wilfred Owen, an Aston Martin first driven by an RAF group captain in World War II, and a remarkably well preserved, finely embroidered stumpwork box from the 17th century that brings gasps of delight and surprise when its value is announced.

  • S39E26 Holker Hall 1

    • June 25, 2017
    • BBC One

    The team travel to the Lake District where Fiona Bruce and the experts meet hundreds of local visitors proudly bringing their family treasures for evaluation. There's an eclectic mix of objects featured ranging from a writing desk from the Czars Palace bought after the Russian Revolution, over 100 vintage fire helmets owned by a former firefighter, Edwardian weight lifting equipment still in use today by a 75 year old owner, and a collection of glam rock stage costumes. But closing honours goes to a rare collection of signed first editions by Beatrix Potter still owned by descendants of the writer's solicitor.

  • S39E27 Unscreened Gems

    • July 2, 2017
    • BBC One

    In this Episode, Fiona Bruce introduces unscreened gems from recent shows. Experts investigate some fascinating finds, including a garnet and diamond cross believed by the owner to have been gifted by Marie Antoinette en route to the guillotine. A suitcase of unopened letters from an imprisoned soldier in World War I finally reveal their secrets. There is also an attractive Arts and Crafts casket once intended to be the final resting place of a grandmother's ashes. And an emblem of survival amidst the chaos and destruction of Berlin at the end of World War II is touchingly depicted by a plaque of a butterfly made from crushed brick, tiles and broken glass taken from the ruins.

Season 40

  • S40E01 Castle Howard 1

    • September 24, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team roll out their 40th anniversary tour as they scour the country in search of hidden treasures. The magnificent Castle Howard in Yorkshire is their first stop as thousands of visitors raid their attics to bring in family heirlooms to show the experts. Objects brought to light suggest that, four decades on, there are plenty of unrecognised and valuable pieces still out there. A letter in which Darwin admits to making a mistake in The Origin of Species stuns book specialistClive Farahar. A diamond brooch draws gasps of delight as the owner is advised of the value. And could it really be a lost work by Renoir that art specialist Philip Mould ferrets out? There is also a very emotional meeting for Roadshow regular Ronnie Archer Morgan when he is vividly reminded of his most important childhood memory.

  • S40E02 Minehead Railway Station

    • October 1, 2017
    • BBC One

    On one of the wettest days in Roadshow history, over 2,000 visitors queue to see Fiona Bruce and the experts sheltering under the canopy at Minehead Station, which is run by West Somerset Railway. Objects brought to camera include a bracelet made from jewels once owned by the last of the Romanovs, the Russian royal family, photographs from the day The Beatles came to film A Hard Day's Night and a bronze by sculptor Rodin.

  • S40E03 Nymans 1

    • October 8, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to the magnificent setting of Nymans garden near Crawley for a busy day combing through family treasures. Objects exciting the experts include an axe which was reputedly used byMallory for his 1922 Everest expedition, a sofa that starred in a classic movie and a diver's watch. Closing honours go to a 'bag of trinkets' found on top of a wardrobe which leaves the owner open-mouthed at her unexpected discovery.

  • S40E04 Nymans 2

    • October 15, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the experts visit the National Trust's beautiful Nymans garden near Crawley, where they are kept busy as they comb through over 4,000 visitors' family heirlooms in search of treasure. Pieces brought to the cameras include a fine Picasso-designed ceramic once used as an ash tray and a jewelled locket given as a gift by Queen Victoria, and an addicted collector brings almost 1,000 keys for appraisal. But one of the best reactions to a recent valuation is given when a man with a box of silver gambling tokens given in lieu of debt demands a bodyguard at hearing his surprise news.

  • S40E05 Senate House 2

    • October 22, 2017
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team of experts visit the University of London's art deco jewel of Senate House in Bloomsbury. The first guest to head to camera is a man who has flown in that morning from Antwerp. He wants to know whether his airfare has been worthwhile as he shows a carved whalebone scrimshaw bought recently at auction. Meanwhile, Fiona is entranced by a brick from Pudding Lane that survived the Great Fire of London in 1666, and some of the flashiest jewellery seen in recent years has expert and visitor eyes out on stalks. But perhaps the most remarkable piece brought to camera is Molly, an artist's stuffed model used in the studios of some of the most famous Parisian painters of the early 19th century.

  • S40E06 Entertainment Special

    • December 31, 2017
    • BBC One

    As part of its fortieth anniversary series, Antiques Roadshow arrives on the set of EastEnders for a special episode celebrating the history of film, music, theatre and television. Set against the backdrop of Albert Square at the BBC's Elstree studios in north London, the Antiques Roadshow team appraise a selection of rare and unusual items of entertainment memorabilia owned by members of the public. These include the axe that Jack Nicholson wielded in The Shining, a script for the first episode of Doctor Who, and key props from the first Star Wars film and Raiders of the Lost Ark. Every item offers a glimpse into the world of movie legends, pop stars, theatrical giants and television favourites, from Liberace and Muffin the Mule to Fawlty Towers and wrestler Big Daddy. A collection of autographed items reveal a day spent with Andy Warhol, while a young woman's Harry Potter books bring back emotional memories of her mother's battle with cancer. Presenter Fiona Bruce also drops into The Queen Vic for a chat with actresses June Brown and Letitia Dean.

  • S40E07 Black Country Living Museum

    • April 15, 2018
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow visits the Black Country Living Museum in Dudley, where surprising finds include a 3,000-year-old baby rattle and a Faberge treasure destined to become one of the most valuable items ever seen on the show. Jewellery specialist Geoffrey Munn is left breathless by the majestic beauty of the regimental jewel, commissioned by the Countess of Dudley in 1903 for the Queen's Own Worcestershire Hussars in honour of their service in the Boer War. Other discoveries include a typewriter used by children's author Enid Blyton to create some of her most famous works and one of Laurence Olivier's first acting scripts, carefully transcribed in his own hand. Indian art specialist Amin Jaffer delivers a short history of the spittoon, while Andy McConnell challenges Fiona to guess which glass object has increased the most in value. The most poignant find of the day is a tin of children's toys and trinkets that had been hidden up a chimney as part of a treasure hunt in 1940. Could Roadshow viewers help identify the young girl who left the trail of clues after being struck down with illness?

  • S40E08 Castle Howard 2

    • April 22, 2018
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow returns to Castle Howard in North Yorkshire for a classic summer roadshow. The range of objects brought for the experts to peruse is as eclectic as the people who own them, from a humble terracotta figurine to a rare jade Buddha. A collection of dynamic aviation paintings proves a big hit with Paul Atterbury. Although not by a well-known artist, they are a contemporary, eyewitness account of some of the First World War's most vicious dog-fights. Plus a belt buckle used on a nurses uniform proves to be an exotic French creation worth thousands of pounds. Sometimes, it's a collection that makes headlines. At Castle Howard, finds include a collection of highly-decorative snuff boxes and another of Welsh cycling medals, many of which are solid gold. Fiona pits her wits against ceramic specialist Will Farmer to guess which of three items has increased in value over the 40 years that the Antiques Roadshow has been on air. Who will emerge triumphant?

  • S40E09 Floors Castle 1

    • April 29, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce presents from Floors Castle in south east Scotland, home of the Duke of Roxburghe. On a day of sunshine and showers, the nation's favourite group of experts turns up some real treasures, from a highly collectable watch to a rare book signed by JRR Tolkien. Fiona tells the story of this beautiful 18th-century building, which overlooks the River Tweed and the Cheviot Hills. She finds out that the many treasures to be found within are there thanks to the spending power of an American heiress who brought her collection of fine art, porcelain and furniture to the castle when she married into the family. Treasures are in plentiful supply outside the castle too - some Murano glass catches the eye of Judith Miller, what seems a motley collection of jewellery turns out to be worth a small fortune, and the valuation of a Chinese lantern used for family celebrations means it will be treated with kid gloves from now on.

  • S40E10 Helmingham Hall 1

    • May 6, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team head to Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, which has been home to 20 generations of the Tollemache family. The moated Tudor manor house, with two working drawbridges, is the perfect backdrop for a roadshow brimming with antique finds. Lee Young discovers a collection of 17th- and 18th-century decorative boxes that the owner is using as his pension fund. Militaria specialist Bill Harriman is intrigued by a medieval sword dredged up from a pond on a golf course, and Geoffrey Munn sees an Indian jewel, dating back to the Siege of Seringapatam in 1799, that carries a jaw-dropping value.

  • S40E11 Black Country Living Museum 2

    • May 20, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the Antiques Roadshow team make a return visit to the Black Country Living Museum in the West Midlands on one of the hottest days of the year. Susan Rumfitt discovers some jewels fit for a princess, while Hilary Kay explores local motor racing history at the Sunbeam Motor Car Company. A surrealist picture appeals to Rupert Maas, but is it the real deal? And the show takes a surprising turn to the Wild West with one of the rarest guns Bill Harriman has ever seen - a Colt 37 revolver!

  • S40E12 The Queen and Britannia

    • May 28, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and members of the Antiques Roadshow team head to the Royal Yacht Britannia in Edinburgh for a royal edition of the programme.

  • S40E13 Helmingham Hall 2

    • June 3, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team make a return visit to Helmingham Hall in Suffolk - a Tudor manor house with working drawbridges and stunning gardens. Paul Atterbury meets a man whose family have painstakingly constructed an entire working model fairground, complete with helter-skelter, Ferris wheel and carousel. Fiona Bruce looks at a unique piece of Donald Trump memorabilia - a vanity set from his private yacht. Clive Farahar values a document signed by Elizabeth I, while Mark Smith is enchanted by a rare WWI medal.

  • S40E14 Newcastle Civic Centre 1

    • June 17, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are at Newcastle's 1960s Civic Centre - an iconic building where everything from the modernist architecture, public art, carpets to the chandeliers was conceived by one man. Art specialist Frances Christie discovers a painting by a local coal miner, Norman Cornish, who packed in his job down the pit to become a respected professional artist. Paul Atterbury values a vast collection of design plans for RMS Mauretania that were saved from the skip. While militaria specialist Bill Harriman values what he calls 'the finest crossbow I have ever seen in all of my years on the Roadshow'.

  • S40E15 Osborne House 1

    • June 24, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are at Queen Victoria's favourite seaside residence, Osborne on the Isle of Wight. As the experts set up their tables overlooking the grand gardens with views of the Solent, visitors bring along treasures including some ordinary looking cutlery with a special mark. Other surprises include a globe-trotting trunk, a chair with a moving story behind it and a beautiful Japanese jar found in a water tank. Hilary Kay learns, thanks to a little locket, that not everyone has heard of The Beatles, while Geoffrey Munn unlocks the secret code on a Russian brooch.

  • S40E16 Floors Castle 2

    • July 1, 2018
    • BBC One

    In this Episode, the team returns to Floors Castle in south east Scotland, home of the Duke of Roxburghe. The visitors flock to the beautiful grounds on a glorious summer's day, bringing treasures from home and away. A silver box commemorating Robert Burns and a watercolour of Bonnie Prince Charlie represent the best of Scottish antiques, while hand-painted ceramic tiles from Persia, a Nile travel guide and an 18th century travel clock take the programme around the world. The estate lands of Floors Castle encircle the border town of Kelso, while the house, built in the 1720's and enhanced with turrets and battlements in the 19th century, is the perfect backdrop. Fiona meets the visitors and is taken aback by a solid gold denture plate found by a detectorist. The other half is still to be found. It's a day of surprises for the experts too - two 3D pictures of birds punch above their weight, a breath-taking diamond and pearl pendant from Canada sparkles in the sunshine, while a jade figurine from Beijing may not be quite what it seems. But it's a marble carving of a baby which is the hit of the day for Marc Allum, whilst a fragile cup and saucer, which have survived unscathed since the 18th century, are a very rare find indeed.

  • S40E17 Cardiff Castle 1

    • July 8, 2018
    • BBC One

    In this Episode, the team visit the iconic castle of the Welsh capital city of Cardiff. The castle grounds provide the perfect setting for a journey into the past, with treasures ranging from a simple pottery jug given as a love token, to an early Hockney print found in a junk shop. But the star of the day must be an early draft score of Elgar's Enigma Variations, signed by the composer.

  • S40E18 Minehead Railway Station 2

    • July 15, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit 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. The day produces some eclectic finds - a 19th-century washing machine, a historic wedding dress worn by seven brides and counting, and an exquisite miniature of Napoleon which is guaranteed to create a bidding war among collectors.

  • S40E19 Cardiff Castle 2

    • July 22, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team continue to scour the country in pursuit of hidden treasures, returning to Cardiff Castle in the Welsh capital. In this Victorian gothic setting, silver-specialist Gordon Foster is fascinated by an elaborately-decorated Indian flask, while John Benjamin reveals that what was thought to be costume jewellery is actually the real thing. Fiona is on the hunt for a lost 1933 penny worth a small fortune and Henry Sandon gets his hands on a piece of rare porcelain which he has been waiting 40 years to see. In Cardiff his dream comes true and he sets pulses racing with the valuation.

  • S40E20 Stormont Parliament Buildings and Estate 1

    • July 29, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team set up camp outside the iconic 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 the Second World War while John Baddeley takes a look at some diving gear associated with the Titanic. Can Fiona determine the changing fortunes of three books from literary masters? Richard Price takes time out to indulge in his passion for anything Antarctic. What will he make of a first-hand account of Shackleton's expedition aboard the Endurance in 1914?

  • S40E21 Trelissick 2

    • August 5, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Trelissick House and gardens in Cornwall, where the locals have dived into skips and cleared out their attics to bring along treasures in all shapes and sizes. There is a giant chair and an escape pod from a Vulcan bomber, while at the other end of the scale there is a miniature sewing kit and a gold snuff box with links to DH Lawrence.

  • S40E22 Helmingham Hall 3

    • August 19, 2018
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return to Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, home to the Tollemache family for 500 years, where treasures include a dazzling sapphire ring, a Girl Guide sketch by Robert Baden-Powell and an important collection of Native American artefacts. Glass expert Andy McConnell challenges the owner of a fine collection of mid-18th-century drinking glasses to identify the lone fake, while an intricate model of a butcher's shop intrigues Fergus Gambon. Fiona introduces Lady Tollemache to a visitor from Liverpool who has discovered a long-lost collection of poems about Helmingham Hall in a car boot sale, and miscellaneous specialist Marc Allum is stunned by a collection of Native American clothing and equipment, assembled by an intrepid ancestor who befriended tribes while working on the railways in the Rockie Mountains in the 1890s.

  • S40E23 Abbey Pumping Station 1

    • September 16, 2018
    • BBC One

    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, provides a unique backdrop for the show. On a busy day of valuations, Mark Hill casts his expert eye over an abandoned sculpture which looks strangely familiar, could it be a lost masterpiece? Richard Price values a clock powered by gravity and John Axford explains how a tiny frog can have a big price tag.

  • S40E24 Stormont Parliament Buildings and Estate 2

    • September 23, 2018
    • BBC One

    In this Episode, the Antiques Roadshow team are in Northern Ireland's capital city, Belfast. They settle into a prime location at the magnificent Parliament Buildings on the Stormont Estate, which has played a huge role in Northern Ireland's political history. In this episode an unloved muffin dish holds a surprise, while Justin Croft spots an unread copy of Ulysses by James Joyce. John Foster delves underground into Belfast's 18th-century water system with an old wooden water pipe, and Adam Schoon meets a man with a phenomenal George Best collection.

  • S40E25 Abbey Pumping Station 2

    • September 30, 2018
    • BBC One

    Tonight Fiona and the team make a return visit to the historic Abbey Pumping Station in Leicester, now the city's Museum of Technology. Complete with four working beam engines, it's a fine example of Victorian engineering. Expert Ronnie Archer-Morgan swoons over some 1960s steel sculptures, books specialist Rupert Powell meets playwright Joe Orton's sister, who brings in the typewriter on which he wrote some of his most important scripts, and Amin Jaffer discovers a valuable collection of exotic metal boxes - they look like snuff boxes, but their actual purpose is much more intriguing.

Season 41

  • S41E01 Pioneering Women Special

    • June 10, 2018
    • BBC One

    A celebration of the achievements of some of Britain's most inspirational women, marking 100 years since women first won the right to cast their vote.

  • S41E02 World War I Special

    • November 4, 2018
    • BBC One

    This special episode, filmed at the Etaples Military Cemetery in France, presents a selection of the most emotive and poignant items chosen by the team to mark the end of World War I and its aftermath. From cherished mementoes of sacrifice and remembrance to surprising objects that offer an insight into care for the wounded, the programme reveals how the impact of World War I was felt across the world and by all sections of society. Fiona Bruce and the team are profoundly moved by items including two poppies picked in the ruins of Ypres in 1915, a humble tray made by a soldier blinded by mustard gas and an extraordinary document that silenced the guns and brought the First World War to an end. Militaria specialist Mark Smith hears the story of Nabi Ahmad Sidiqi, an Indian Army surgeon, while Siobhan Tyrrell finds out about Lady Dorothie Feilding, a volunteer nurse and ambulance driver who became the first woman to earn the Military Medal for bravery. Hilary Kay also hears the remarkable story of a young musician who purchased a second-hand violin signed and dated '1915' and his quest to find out what happened to the man who made it - leading to an emotional meeting with a long-lost ancestor.

  • S41E03 Compilation 1

    • December 30, 2018
    • BBC One

    In this episodem the Antiques Roadshow looks back at some favourite finds from the past 40 years while a selection of experts reveal what happened next to some memorable items. Ronnie Archer-Morgan revisits his emotional encounter with a set of Sooty and Sweep puppets and explains how it rekindled memories of a long lost friend from his time in a children's home. In an extraordinary development, the Antiques Roadshow recording led to Ronnie being reunited with his friend for the first time in 63 years. We also discover the starring role the Roadshow played in a modern day fairytale, when one keen viewer decided that the Art Deco ring he'd seen on TV would make the perfect engagement ring. Fiona Bruce meets the young couple in question and hears how the Antiques Roadshow inspired a romantic proposal.

  • S41E04 Eltham Palace

    • January 6, 2019
    • BBC One

    Eltham Palace in south London is the backdrop for a Roadshow where finds include unknown paintings by Diego Rivera and a collection of Thunderbirds puppets.

  • S41E05 Erddig 1

    • January 13, 2019
    • BBC One

    In this episode, the team are at Erddig, North Wales, for this week's Roadshow. On a scorching hot day, the crowds come out, bringing with them items including a dazzling emerald and diamond ring worn by the owner's grandmother on the Titanic, a Welsh love spoon carved in 1859 by a young man for his sweetheart and an avid fan's collection of James Bond props. Plus Fiona hosts a 'basic, better, best' guessing game. This time, the challenge is to put some silver candlesticks in order of value.

  • S41E06 Crathes Castle 2

    • January 20, 2019
    • BBC One

    In this episode, Crathes Castle in Aberdeenshire and its beautiful gardens host a Roadshow with a distinctly Scottish flavour, with signed Harry Potter books and ornate silver from Iona. But there are also treasures from around the world, including a German art deco figurine, an intricate Italian bracelet and a unique Brooklyn Dodgers baseball with a value as extraordinary as its story.

  • S41E07 Cromer Pier

    • February 3, 2019
    • BBC One

    This week's Roadshow comes from the beautiful seaside town of Cromer in Norfolk.

  • S41E08 Buckfast Abbey 1

    • February 10, 2019
    • BBC One

    This episode of the Roadshow comes from the historic Buckfast Abbey in Devon, currently commemorating 1,000 years of worship on the site. On a perfect summer's day, the grounds of the abbey are packed with visitors bearing their treasures. Silver specialist Alastair Dickenson is impressed by a tankard dating back to 1703, while Adam Schoon shows how a hidden lock in a 1640s iron chest would have deterred thieves. Collectibles come in all shapes and sizes as Lisa Lloyd finds out when valuing some London street signs alongside a Biba frock. And militaria specialist Mark Smith is wowed by a piece of shrapnel from the battleship Bismarck.

  • S41E09 Aerospace 1

    • February 24, 2019
    • BBC One

    This week, the Roadshow comes from the Concorde Hangar at the recently opened Aerospace Bristol museum. As ever, the items turning up offer an exciting and eclectic mix for the experts to examine – from an intricate model of a vintage car made by a prisoner of war to an Elizabethan ring found in a muddy field, and even a collection of classic guitars. Concorde memorabilia takes top billing throughout the day while a unique medal for gallantry tells a thrilling story. But the big ticket item is a statue of the Buddha where the valuation leaves the owner speechless.

  • S41E10 Piece Hall 1

    • March 3, 2019
    • BBC One

    This week, Antiques Roadshow is in Yorkshire at the glorious Piece Hall in Halifax, the only surviving 18th-century cloth hall where textiles were once traded. Treasures include a Chinese imperial robe, an opal pig and a stunning sapphire brooch. Eric Knowles marvels at a Lalique bedside clock, saved from the tip, while specialist Lisa Lloyd explores the magic associated with a pair of mysterious 17th-century doors, rescued from a building site. Andy McConnell investigates what might be the oldest glass ever to appear on the programme – but is it genuine? And jewellery specialist John Benjamin has his own mystery to solve with what appears to be the largest sapphire he has ever seen, but which the owner believes to be glass.

  • S41E11 Wrest Park 1

    • March 10, 2019
    • BBC One

    This week, Antiques Roadshow is at Wrest Park in Bedfordshire, a grand house built in the style of a French chateau. Treasures turning up include a dazzling diamond and ruby pendant, an exotic and rare snuff container and a chair that once belonged to the Artful Dodger! Fiona Bruce finds out how Wrest Park was one of the first stately homes in Britain to be transformed into a First World War hospital and convalescence home. Two owners of Daum glassware are itching for expert Andy McDonnell to tell them which is worth the most, while picture specialist Rupert Maas congratulates one visitor on her keen eye after she explains how she bagged a bargain at a car boot sale.

  • S41E12 MediaCityUK 1

    • March 17, 2019
    • BBC One

    This week, the Roadshow rolls into Manchester’s Media City UK, home to some of Britain’s best-loved television programmes, including Blue Peter and Coronation Street. Fiona Bruce meets Blue Peter presenters past and present and reminisces over the treasures hidden in their unearthed time capsules. Pictures expert Dendy Easton values a drawing by Manchester artist L.S Lowry drawn on the back of a restaurant bill, and John Axford is set the challenge of drinking from an 18th-century 'puzzle jug' - but can he down the contents without spilling a drop? And militaria specialist Mark Smith values some albums of World War Two badges that he describes as 'a collectors dream'.

  • S41E13 Eltham Palace 2

    • March 24, 2019
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow comes from the elegant surroundings of Eltham Palace, just a few miles from the heart of London. Fiona Bruce will be exploring the Art Deco wing of the Palace, built by the eccentric millionaires Stephen and Virginia Courtauld in the 1930’s. Ronnie Archer Morgan can’t believe his luck when not just one but two rare Fijian war clubs turn up at his table and Robert Tilney can’t wait to get his hands on a pair of exquisite duelling pistols with a fascinating story to tell. Paul Atterbury discovers an intriguing stained glass panel made from the wreckage of the Houses of Parliament during the Blitz. And one person’s rubbish can be another’s treasure, such as the hoard of Churchill’s personal items found at the dump!

  • S41E14 Crathes Castle 1

    • March 31, 2019
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Crathes Castle in Aberdeenshire where treasures turning up include a stunning Cartier clock, a tiny bowl with a giant price tag and a royal portrait that is not all that it seems. And there are connections to showbiz royalty too – a hat once given to Ronald Reagan and a walking stick belonging to Scottish music hall star Sir Harry Lauder.

  • S41E15 Aerospace Bristol 2

    • April 7, 2019
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow comes from Aerospace in Bristol, under the wings of Concorde, where discoveries include a four-leaf clover brooch which brings luck to its owner, and a collection of Radiohead memorabilia. Glass specialist, Will Farmer, is thrilled to discover a very rare piece of Venetian glass, while silver expert Duncan Campbell is equally in awe of some stylish candlesticks. And items appear to have travelled here from all over the world - Ronnie Archer-Morgan comes across a Fijian war club while oriental specialist Lars Tharp is intrigued by a tiny Chinese vase with a big price tag.

  • S41E16 Erddig 2

    • April 14, 2019
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and Antiques Roadshow experts welcome thousands of visitors to Erddig in North Wales, the home of the Yorke family. Treasures turning up include a mourning ring connected to Charlotte Bronte, a Welsh love spoon handed down through the generations, a jade figurine from the Summer Palace in Beijing, and an 18th-century wine bottle which has links to a Scottish artist.

  • S41E17 Buckfast Abbey 2

    • April 21, 2019
    • BBC One

    The roadshow comes from Buckfast Abbey, a Benedictine monastery on the edge of Dartmoor in Devon, celebrating 1,000 years since worship began on this site. The monastery is a modern building, as the original was closed during the reign of Henry VIII. The current abbey church was rebuilt by the monks in the 19th and 20th centuries, and provides an imposing backdrop to a bumper roadshow crowd. Whilst the experts examine a range of family heirlooms, from a diamond tiara to First World War medals, Fiona Bruce tells the story of the abbey’s long tradition of beekeeping and samples their honey. Furniture specialist Christopher Payne is amazed by a unique collection of miniature furniture worth thousands of pounds, while Bunny Campione shocks the owner of a rare teddy bear with a sky-high value, and one visitor is thrilled to have held on to a Chinese vase which was destined for the charity shop.

  • S41E18 Piece Hall 2

    • April 28, 2019
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow comes from the Piece Hall in Halifax, recently restored to its full Georgian glory. Treasures turning up include a royal portrait by Beryl Cook and artwork by the ‘Pennine Painter’ Peter Brook. Jewellery expert Susan Rumfitt admires an art deco bracelet, so loved by its owner that she themed her wedding around it, while John Benjamin marvels at a diamond necklace given in return for making banana sandwiches. Stephen Moore takes care when handling a Wedgewood bowl that its owner claims is cursed, while military specialist Mark Smith discovers the story behind a 'lost' suitcase filled with letters from a captured WWII pilot. And Fiona Bruce gets her hands on a spectacular plumed hat once owned by the Duke of Wellington.

  • S41E19 Newcastle Civic Centre 2

    • May 5, 2019
    • BBC One

    At Newcastle’s Civic Centre, treasures include a tribute to Victorian heroine Grace Darling, who risked her life to save survivors of a wrecked steamship.

  • S41E20 Osborne House 2

    • May 26, 2019
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow returns to Osborne on the Isle of Wight for a second helping of finds, including a Wedgwood vase and some food tins that tell a story of Colditz.

  • S41E21 Wrest Park 2

    • May 19, 2019
    • BBC One

    Wrest Park in Bedfordshire is the setting for today’s roadshow, where treasures include a piece of Murano glass inspired by Picasso and a collection of 1950s advertising posters for Vauxhall cars. As usual, the day produces and eclectic mix of objects. Expert Ronnie Archer-Morgan challenges the audience to guess the origins of three pieces of ornate tribal jewellery, while the vicar turns up with a handsome silver flagon presented to the local church in 1684. And militaria specialist Mark Smith can’t believe his eyes when one visitor brings along a set of original blueprints for the bouncing bomb depicted in the film The Dam Busters.

  • S41E22 MediaCityUK 2

    • June 2, 2019
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow is at Media City UK, on the site of the former Manchester docks. Fiona Bruce investigates the history of the Manchester Ship Canal, which links the inland city to the River Mersey and the Irish Sea. Today'ss treasures include an opera singer’s perfume bottle, a travelling magician’s box of tricks and an early animation machine. Ronnie Archer Morgan examines possibly the heaviest item ever to be craned into the Antiques Roadshow – a Canadian totem pole 10 metres long and weighing almost two tonnes. Finally, expert John Axford values a statue of Buddha that’s been cleaned with wire wool and lemon juice. Has the owner ruined it or will it still be valuable?

  • S41E23 Cromer Pier 1

    • June 9, 2019
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow is on Cromer pier in Norfolk. Treasures brought along by the public include a letter from John Lennon, a contraption marked 'Certain Death' and some valuable Swedish glass bought at a church sale for 50p. Whilst the crowds bask in the sunshine, the experts are thrilled to discover items with links to historical figures, including the Duke of Wellington’s night cap, a 1643 note related to Oliver Cromwell and letters handwritten by Queen Victoria. And expert Geoffrey Munn sets Fiona the difficult task of guessing the values of three rare pieces of antique jewellery.

  • S41E24 Eltham Palace 3

    • June 16, 2019
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow is at Eltham Palace in London where treasures include a diamond bracelet, a tea set that went to Antarctica and a thermometer as tall as a person.

  • S41E25 Compilation 2

    • June 23, 2019
    • BBC One

    This special programme celebrates some of our favourite finds and learns what happened to them next. Items include a Banksy and a camera worth a small fortune.

Season 42

  • S42E01 Morden Hall Park 1

    • September 1, 2019
    • BBC One

    In this episode, Antiques Roadshow comes from the colourful surrounds of Morden Hall Park in south London, where big value finds include a rare Cartier driver’s watch, a tiny painting by a German impressionist and a plate designed by Pablo Picasso. Jewellery specialist Joanna Hardy is dazzled by a diamond-studded replica of a brooch originally designed for Wallis Simpson, the Duchess of Windsor, while glass specialist Andy McConnell covets three early 18th-century pieces bought for just a few pence. Alexandra Gill admires a painting by renowned Cuban artist René Portocarrero and hears how it was given as a gift by Cuban leader Fidel Castro. Hilary Kay delivers a show-stopping valuation when she appraises a remarkable self-portrait by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, done shortly after their wedding and famous ‘bed-in’ of 1969.

  • S42E02 Second World War Special

    • September 8, 2019
    • BBC One

    This episode marks 80 years since the start of World War II, and brings fresh insights to the conflict through personal stories and family mementos. Introduced by Fiona Bruce from Dover Castle, where the evacuation of Dunkirk was organised in the spring of 1940, the episode includes the stirring tale of HMS Hardy and its doomed efforts to protect the Norwegian port of Narvik – a mission that secured its captain the Victoria Cross. A sinister photo album belonging to an Austrian soldier offers a previously unseen glimpse of Neville Chamberlain’s ill-fated meeting with Hitler in 1938, and Fiona meets 95-year-old Ray Palmer, who has the rare distinction of being first a child evacuee and then a serving soldier. Hilary Kay samples a potato-based dessert cooked from a wartime ration book, while Ronnie Archer Morgan admires a collection of colourful silk scarves designed to deliver propaganda messages. And finally, Bill Harriman is moved by the story of a child evacuee called Audrey whose parents arranged for her to be taken from Britain to Canada in a desperate bid to ensure her safety – but with tragic consequences.

  • S42E03 Salisbury Cathedral 1

    • September 15, 2019
    • BBC One

    At Salisbury Cathedral, surprises include a strange object linked to the Titanic, a rare astronaut’s watch and an undiscovered letter written by Churchill.

  • S42E04 V&A Dundee 1

    • September 22, 2019
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow is in Scotland at the V&A Dundee. Amongst the treasures brought along are a silver bowl found at a car boot sale, a Vivienne Westwood jacket and some rare SAS medals.

  • S42E05 Lytham Hall 1

    • September 29, 2019
    • BBC One

    At Lytham Hall in Lancashire, finds include a rare automaton, a sketch by Lowry, a world-class watch and the medals won by Britain’s first black Olympian.

  • S42E06 Compton Verney 1

    • October 6, 2019
    • BBC One

    At Compton Verney in Warwickshire, this week’s finds include a unique Ashes cricket stump, the Duke of Wellington’s riding crop and Queen Victoria’s chocolate box.

  • S42E07 Morden Hall Park 3

    • October 13, 2019
    • BBC One

    The Antiques Roadshow returns to the bucolic splendour of Morden Hall Park in London, where the experts unearth a Faberge vanity case, a ring by one of the most innovative goldsmiths of the 20th century and a magnifying glass linked to the Pablo Picasso exhibition in New York in 1939. Art expert Phillip Mould is intrigued by a painting of rural life, but is it British or American? Lennox Cato also faces a puzzle when he appraises a pair of antique doors belonging to the local mosque. Are they the 400-year-old treasures they appear to be? And jewellery specialist Jon Benjamin gets his hands on the largest aquamarine he has ever seen.

  • S42E08 Battle Abbey 2

    • October 20, 2019
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Battle Abbey in East Sussex, where treasures brought along include a diamond ring that was bought for a pound, a 17th-century violin, the most valuable ever brought to the Roadshow, and a unique telegram from Hitler. Some iconic weather signs and a valuable princess’s dress are among other treasures turning up on the day.

  • S42E09 Castle Ward 1

    • October 27, 2019
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow comes from Castle Ward on the shores of Strangford Lough in Northern Ireland, where Fiona Bruce discovers that the architecture of this unusual house has something of a split personality. The visitors to Castle Ward produce an eclectic mix of finds. Irish treasures include a bronze sculpture known as The Leprechaun, a large table traditionally used for displaying the coffin at a wake and a picture of a fireman in action, brought along by Northern Ireland’s first female fire fighter. Treasures from further afield include a Tongan war club that narrowly escaped being chopped up for firewood and a 1960s TV set inspired by the first moon landing.

  • Episodic Special

    SPECIAL 0x31 What Happened Next

    • December 29, 2019
    • BBC One

    In a special edition of Antiques Roadshow, Fiona Bruce looks back at memorable items from recent years and finds out what happened next.

  • S42E10 Battle Abbey 1

    • March 1, 2020
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Battle Abbey, where treasures brought along include an incredibly rare Beatles guitar with an enviable history, which turns out to be one of the most valuable items ever seen on the show. Also featured are some royal letters from Queen Victoria’s children, a pawned diamond ring that saved a family from the poorhouse, a rare ninth-century gold coin and some valuable Chinese surprises.

  • S42E11 Salisbury Cathedral 2

    • March 8, 2020
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is in the grounds of Salisbury Cathedral in Wiltshire, where experts discover an eclectic mix of treasures including Napoleon's razor, letters from Enid Blyton and a piece of Queen Victoria's underwear. There is plenty of sparkle from jewellery with a story to tell, and artworks including a hand-painted Christmas card from the Second World War and original drawings of Judge Dredd.

  • S42E12 V&A Dundee 2

    • March 15, 2020
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce is at the V&A Dundee in Scotland. Treasures brought in include a self-pouring teapot, a glass helmet and a piece of tartan that has been to the moon.

  • S42E13 National Botanic Garden of Wales 1

    • March 22, 2020
    • BBC One

    This Episode comes from the lush surroundings of the National Botanic Garden of Wales in Carmarthenshire. Fiona Bruce explores the Victorian mania for collecting exotic plants and examines rare species grown inside the gigantic biodome. Mark Smith can’t believe his eyes when not one but two rare First World War Luftwaffe ‘honour’ goblets turn up at his table, while armourer Bill Harriman can’t wait to get his hands on one of the largest muskets he’s ever seen. Duncan Campbell discovers a Chinese box that Hollywood star Gregory Peck tried - and failed - to buy, and John Axford is amazed to see an extremely rare 12th-century bronze statuette brought back from Calcutta in the 1920s .

  • S42E14 Morden Hall Park 2

    • March 29, 2020
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow returns to the vibrant setting of Morden Hall Park in south London. We discover personal letters written by Mother Teresa and an exquisite bronze by the father of South African sculpture, Anton Van Wouw. There’s a colourful collage by the celebrated British artist and illustrator John Minton, and a huge collection of intricately designed silver vinaigrette boxes.

  • S42E15 Lytham Hall 2

    • April 5, 2020
    • BBC One

    At Lytham Hall in Lancashire, finds include a chair that is believed to be from Nelson’s flagship, a gruesome insight into Victorian dentistry and a fantastic series of watercolours rescued from a skip and worth thousands. Geoffrey Munn finds a diamond pendant presented by the city of Liverpool, and there is some sixties rock and roll memorabilia of the highest pedigree.

  • S42E16 Compton Verney 2

    • April 12, 2020
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow returns to the magnificent setting of Compton Verney in Warwickshire. Treasures brought in include some hand-painted fashion illustrations from the 1930s, a pair of bronze cockerels from Benin in West Africa and a rare Chinese incense burner worth a small fortune. We meet the granddaughter of the first British woman to win an individual swimming gold medal, at the 1924 Olympics, and military expert Mark Smith hears the extraordinary story of how a First World War hero earned the Victoria Cross.

  • S42E17 Castle Ward 2

    • April 26, 2020
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce pays a return visit to Castle Ward in Co Down, delving into the story of scientist, author and astronomer Mary Ward, who lived in the mansion in the 19th century. Items assessed by the team include two sculptures made out of ostrich eggs and a watch designed for astronauts to wear on the Moon, while military expert Robert Tilney unearths some top secret D-Day plans.

  • S42E18 National Botanic Garden of Wales 2

    • May 3, 2020
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow comes from the lush surroundings of the National Botanic Garden of Wales in Carmarthenshire, where Fiona Bruce discovers how plant-based remedies were mixed and bottled by Victorian pharmacists.Braving the rainy weather, visitors bring an eclectic range of items for the experts to appraise. James Bond memorabilia make an appearance alongside a miniature steam engine and a rare religious ring. Ceramics expert Jon Axford is astonished to see not one but three unique pieces of Martinware pottery, while silver specialist Duncan Campbell unearths a beaker dug out of a First World War trench and used as a shaving cup.

  • S42E19 VE Day Special

    • May 10, 2020
    • BBC One

    In this special edition of Antiques Roadshow, Fiona Bruce marks the 75th anniversary of VE Day. She looks back at some of the most powerful and moving stories ever heard on the programme – and some never seen before – which give personal insights into the momentous events of the Second World War. Through cherished objects, the programme traces the personal stories behind key events of the Second World War, including Dunkirk, D-Day, the Dambusters raid and the atrocities of the Nazi concentration camps. There is first-hand testimony from those who were present at VE Day, including the roadshow’s own Henry Sandon. Fiona also delves into the BBC archives to discover the challenges of reporting the VE Day announcement and the celebrations across the UK and abroad. Given the nature of these stories, no values will be given on items, which include the typewriter of journalist Claire Hollingsworth, who got the scoop of the century when she witnessed the Nazi invasion of Poland, a shrapnel-damaged memento from the first great naval battle of the war (the Battle of the River Plate) and some surprising items that celebrate the famous ‘Blitz spirit’, including an incendiary bomb that was extinguished and used as a doorstop.

  • S42E20 The Best of the Summer (1)

    • September 6, 2020
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce shares the best unseen items from roadshows around the UK, from space memorabilia to a jewel-encrusted dagger and a much-loved rocking horse.

  • S42E21 The Battle of Britain and the Blitz

    • September 16, 2020
    • BBC One

    To commemorate the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Britain and the Blitz, Fiona meets one of the last remaining Battle of Britain pilots and flies in a Spitfire.

  • S42E22 The Best of the Summer (2)

    • September 27, 2020
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce shares some of the best unseen items from recent Roadshows around the UK – from from a set of designer jewelry to an ancient strong-box and some engraved glasses which might not be all that they seem. Amongst the eclectic finds are some brooches handed down from the royal family, a spy camera, a prop from a St Trinian’s film and a hand-cut paper Valentine designed to win a hand in marriage.

  • S42E23 The Best of the Summer (3)

    • October 18, 2020
    • BBC One

  • Episodic Special

    SPECIAL 0x32 What Happened Next

    • December 27, 2020

    Fiona Bruce is at iconic Pinewood Studios to present a special episode following up some memorable finds of recent years to see what happened after the cameras stopped rolling.

Season 43

  • S43E01 Forty Hall 1

    • January 3, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Forty Hall in north London, where treasures include a policeman's helmet worn by John Lennon, a 1970s set of Star Wars toys and a Faberge cigarette case.

  • S43E02 Christchurch Mansion 1

    • January 17, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow comes from beautiful Christchurch Park in Ipswich, Suffolk, where the treasures include an heirloom Rolex, memorabilia related to Donald Campbell's land speed record and a necklace worth half a million pounds. Also featured, a rare Roman relic dug up in the garden and a pocket watch with a hidden secret.

  • S43E03 Newby Hall 1

    • January 31, 2021
    • BBC One

    The roadshow is at Newby Hall in Yorkshire, where the finds include an intriguing letter from Lord Nelson, a piece of the set from Live Aid and a ring picked up in a pawn shop.

  • S43E04 Culzean Castle 1

    • February 7, 2021
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are at Culzean Castle in Scotland, where treasures include a letter from President Eisenhower and one of the most valuable tables ever seen on the show.

  • S43E05 Bodnant Garden 1

    • February 14, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Bodnant Garden in north Wales, where finds include some novelty glass bottles with a hefty price tag, a pair of sailor's valentines from the West Indies and an ecclesiastical candlestick from a very special cathedral. There’s fun to be had when a tandem bicycle and sidecar rolls up, and toys become art in the form of some of the best automata of the 20th century.

  • S43E06 Windermere Jetty 1

    • February 21, 2021
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are at Windermere Jetty Museum in the Lake District, where finds include a valuable collection of silver trophies awarded to a pioneering woman sailor, a James Bond poster scraped off a wall, a guitar rescued from a skip, a wooden dinghy from the film Swallows and Amazons, and a pair of ‘lost’ necklaces with surprising values. Fiona finds out about the daredevils who have attempted to set speed records on the lakes.

  • S43E07 Stonor Park 1

    • February 28, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Stonor Park in Oxfordshire, where treasures include a rare artefact that survived the attack on Pearl Harbor, and a genuine LS Lowry painting.

  • S43E08 Kenilworth Castle 1

    • March 7, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Kenilworth Castle in the West Midlands, where treasures include a miniature safe, an interactive golf game and a trilby belonging to an 80s pop star.

  • S43E09 Forty Hall 2

    • March 14, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Forty Hall in Enfield, where treasures include a pair of hands crafted by Lucien Freud and a destination board from the front of an early London bus.

  • S43E10 Christchurch Mansion 2

    • March 28, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Christchurch Park in Ipswich, where treasures include an Imperial Chinese porcelain vase fit for an emperor and some intriguing portraits relating to the Profumo scandal of the 1960s. Also featured are intricate, solid gold lapel badges from the Australian gold fields and a pair of delicate paintings by a famous Suffolk artist.

  • S43E11 Culzean Castle 2

    • April 4, 2021
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit the spectacular Culzean Castle in Ayrshire, where items brought along include an early FA Cup medal and a valuable art nouveau clock.

  • S43E12 Newby Hall 2

    • April 18, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is back in the stunning setting of Newby Hall in Yorkshire, where treasures include a letter by Roald Dahl, a priceless chair and some rare football memorabilia.

  • S43E13 Bodnant Garden 2

    • April 25, 2021
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team are at Bodnant Garden in north Wales, where finds include a pair of rare Wedgewood tigers, a carved Russian chair and a silver box with a political connection. There is also some interesting art work: a picture from one of the great Parisian naturalist artists and an original Quentin Blake.

  • S43E14 World War II – The Aftermath

    • May 2, 2021
    • BBC One

    In this special episode, Fiona Bruce and the team hear moving stories about the aftermath of the Second World War and the desire to rebuild and reconcile after years of suffering.

  • S43E15 Windermere Jetty 2

    • May 9, 2021
    • BBC One

    The roadshow comes from the Jetty Museum on the shores of Lake Windermere in the Lake District, where finds include a Cherokee pipe and a unique piece of footballing history.

  • S43E16 Stonor Park 2

    • May 16, 2021
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow is at Stonor Park in Oxfordshire where finds include a rare group of Indian medals, Florence Nightingale’s toolkit and the story of a remarkable female pilot from the Second World War.

  • S43E17 Forty Hall 3

    • May 23, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Forty Hall in Enfield, north London, where treasures include some Chippendale tables with a hefty price tag, an original Punch and Judy set used to entertain children on the lawns of Forty Hall, and an intriguing necklace linked to a secret society. There’s also rare rock memorabilia, including a poster of Mick Jagger by Andy Warhol.

  • S43E18 Kenilworth Castle 2

    • July 18, 2021
    • BBC One

    The team make a second visit to Kenilworth Castle in the Midlands, where finds include some early Meccano toys and a Special Ops radio set used behind the lines in WWII.

Season 44

  • S44E01 Ham House 1

    • September 12, 2021
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Ham House in the London borough of Richmond. Could an 18th-century robe be the most valuable Chinese treasure ever found on the show?

  • S44E02 Dyffryn Gardens 1

    • September 19, 2021
    • BBC One

    At Dyffryn Gardens near Cardiff, treasures include an enormous amber necklace, an Antarctic compass and a penknife with hundreds of utensils.

  • S44E03 Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh 1

    • September 26, 2021
    • BBC One

    A visit to the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh includes Russian jewels, a rare Maori box, a priceless football trophy and three paintings by female artists who deserve to be better known.

  • S44E04 Aston Hall 1

    • November 7, 2021
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Aston Hall in Birmingham, where Fiona meets celebrated poet Benjamin Zephaniah, who grew up nearby and has fond childhood memories of playing in the grounds. Runjeet Singh, a specialist in Asian arms and armour, is thrilled to see some ornate and valuable ceremonial weapons from India, while Paul Atterbury is intrigued to see a rare example of the only artwork ever to be left on the moon. Hilary Kay hears the story of the Austin J40 pedal car and its inventor, while Eric Knowles covets a stunning collection of Liberty clocks. The team also hear from a Beatles fan who managed to secure their autographs after joining a water pistol fight between the band and Gerry and the Pacemakers.

  • Episodic Special

    SPECIAL 0x40 Christmas Special

    • December 19, 2021
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce presents a special Christmas show featuring unseen treasures from memorable episodes, festive treats from the experts and updates on items seen on past roadshows.

  • S44E05 Portchester 2

    • February 13, 2022
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team visit Portchester Castle in Hampshire, where treasures include punk clothing, paintings by 20th-century Indian artists and a rare set of Battle of Britain medals.

  • S44E06 Ulster 1

    • February 20, 2022
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team visit the Ulster Folk Museum near Belfast, where treasures include stained glass, teacups from a luxury ocean liner and an unusual piece of medical history.

  • S44E07 Woodhorn 1

    • February 27, 2022
    • BBC One

    The team are at Woodhorn Museum in Northumberland, a former colliery, where treasures include a gold Rolex from the 1980s and FA Cup medals won by a Newcastle United legend.

  • S44E08 Ham House 2

    • March 6, 2022
    • BBC One

    The team return to Ham House in Richmond, where treasures include jewellery found in a compost bag, a Derek Jarman artwork and an Omega watch marking the Apollo-Soyuz space mission.

  • S44E09 Bishop's Palace 1

    • March 27, 2022
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow visits the Bishop’s Palace in Wells in Somerset, where treasures include a precious ring from Thailand and a plaque from a pub that could be of national importance.

  • S44E10 Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh 3

    • April 3, 2022
    • BBC One

    The team return to the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, where finds include a set of traditional Highland dress. Fiona gets a closer look at a plant specimen collected by Charles Darwin.

  • S44E11 Aston Hall 2

    • April 10, 2022
    • BBC One

    The team return to Aston Hall in Birmingham, where treasures include Wind in the Willows figures, memorabilia from an Aston Villa footballer and items from a pioneering mountaineer.

  • S44E12 Dyffryn Gardens 2

    • April 24, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Dyffryn Gardens near Cardiff in south Wales. Will Farmer is thrilled to see a huge collection of Clarice Cliff ceramics, including many rarities picked up for just a few pounds, while Hilary Kay is amused by a toy figure of a fire-breathing mother-in-law that shoots real sparks.

  • S44E13 Ulster Folk Museum 2

    • May 1, 2022
    • BBC One

    Judith Miller is intrigued and just a little terrified by a collection of 1970s dolls with eyes that change colour, made by the short-lived Blythe's Boutique company. Mark Hill is thrilled to see an early Louis Vuitton trunk, while Wayne Colquhoun admires a pair of vintage Guinness signs from the wall of a popular pub.

  • S44E14 Woodhorn Museum 2

    • May 8, 2022
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow returns to Woodhorn Museum in Northumberland, a former colliery that tells the story of coal mining and the miners' way of life in the north east of England. Mark Smith hears the moving story behind a George Cross medal awarded to a miner who helped rescue the victims of a pit disaster in 1947, and Fiona Bruce finds out how miners' lamps proved a vital piece of safety equipment.

  • S44E15 Portchester 1

    • May 15, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow returns to Portchester Castle in Hampshire on the south coast of England. Mark Smith is stunned to see a Victoria Cross medal, the highest award for bravery in combat, and hears a story of incredible heroism during the First World War – with the staggering valuation of the humble bronze medal leaving its owners lost for words.

  • S44E16 Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh 2

    • May 22, 2022
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return to the stunning grounds of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Art expert Charlotte Riordan is excited to find that two striking paintings of three dimensional raindrops by celebrated Korean artist Kim Tschang-Yeul have turned up at the venue – and the valuation comes as a shock to the owners. Adam Schoon is intrigued by the story of an intrepid plant hunter who worked in the Himalayas and was given a Tibetan tea set and prayer wheel as a gift by the 13th Dalai Lama. Adam also meets piper Louise Marshall, who learned to play the bagpipes alongside her father at wedding parties in Gretna Green. Ronnie Archer-Morgan is fascinated by a walking stick that he discovers to be a botanist's gadget cane complete with shears, and Lisa Lloyd admires a curious rocking horse in the shape of a British army general that once belonged on a Victorian fairground carousel.

  • S44E17 Bishop's Palace 2

    • August 14, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow returns to one of the smallest cities in England - Wells in Somerset - where the Bishop's Palace hosts Fiona and the team. Elaine Binning hears the story of a gymnast who competed in the 1928 Olympics, the first time the games admitted female gymnastic competitors. Rupert Maas examines a piece of street art on a metal panel by the artist Bambi, while Eric Knowles admires a broken plate by the Victorian designer Augustus Pugin and is impressed that its owner even has a tattoo in the Pugin style.

  • S44E18 Ham House 3

    • August 21, 2022
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return to Ham House and gardens in Richmond-upon-Thames. Treasures are in plentiful supply, with miscellaneous expert Bunny Campione valuing an 18th-century effigy and military expert Mark Smith coming across an Indian Order of Merit medal awarded to a Sikh solder in the First World War. Other items include an Omega wristwatch, an 18th-century pistol and a gold necklace from the Alaskan Gold Rush.

  • S44E19 Ulster Folk Museum 3

    • August 28, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow journeys back in time at the Ulster Folk Museum, just outside Belfast, where treasures brought along include a stone head dug up in a garden and a carving with links to Belfast's maritime history.

Season 45

  • S45E01 Wollaton Hall 1

    • September 4, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow comes from the beautiful grounds of the imposing Elizabethan mansion Wollaton Hall in Nottingham.

  • S45E02 Sefton Park Palm House 1

    • September 25, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Sefton Park in Liverpool, where Chinese ceramics expert Lars Tharp sees a rare double Ming dynasty vase bought in a charity shop, Raj Bisram discovers some valuable Beatles memorabilia, and Dendy Easton admires a painting by George Melly.

  • S45E03 Brodie Castle and Estate, Morayshire 1

    • October 2, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Brodie Castle in the north of Scotland, where the programme kicks off with some Highland dancing. Fiona Bruce meets a Highland Games commentator who has brought along a collection of items including a weighty shot put, a heavy hammer and a brooch presented by Queen Victoria in 1848.

  • S45E04 Clissold Park 1

    • October 9, 2022
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Clissold Park in the London borough of Hackney, where treasures include some rather pricey whisky bottles and a silver ‘parrot' ring by Mocheh Oved that brings back memories for John Benjamin.

  • S45E05 Brodie Castle & Estate, Morayshire 2

    • October 16, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow comes from the beautiful grounds of Brodie Castle in northern Scotland, home to the Brodie Clan since the 16th century. Fiona Bruce explores the castle and its treasures, including a dog portrait by Edwin Landseer that was cut out of a larger canvas, and in the Playful Garden she meets a giant rabbit.

  • Episodic Special

    SPECIAL 0x33 100 Years of the BBC

    • October 23, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is at Alexandra Palace, the birthplace of television, for this special edition of the programme to celebrate 100 years of BBC broadcasting. Ronnie Archer-Morgan is thrilled to revisit the world of children's television with Baroness Floella Benjamin, together with Humpty and Jemima from Play School, while Fiona Bruce gets to lay her hands on the original shooting script from legendary comedy series Hancock's Half Hour, brought in by actor and collector Neil Pearson.

  • S45E06 Wollaton Hall 2

    • October 30, 2022
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow comes from the beautiful grounds of Wollaton Hall, an imposing Elizabethan mansion in Nottingham. Having once served as Wayne Manor in the Dark Knight trilogy of Batman films, Wollaton Hall is the perfect backdrop for Fiona Bruce as she tries to guess the value of Batman's mask, his utility belt and the Joker's suit, as worn by Jack Nicholson. She also comes face to face with a mighty T rex as she tells the story of Titus, whose bones were discovered in America in 2014 and have been on display at Wollaton Hall.

  • Episodic Special

    SPECIAL 0x34 Toys and Childhood Special

    • December 29, 2022
    • BBC One

    A special episode about the toys we love and how they've shaped our childhood, including some of the best loved toys of the past 100 years, from teddy bears and Sindy dolls to Star Wars action figures and computer games.

  • Episodic Special

    SPECIAL 0x35 Nursing Special

    • February 26, 2023
    • BBC One

    The team hear moving stories about the history of nursing, from Florence Nightingale to the Falklands War, while Fiona Bruce meets comedian Jo Brand, a former psychiatric nurse.

  • S45E07 Eden Project 1

    • March 5, 2023
    • BBC One

    In this special episode, filmed before the Accession, Fiona introduces the Queen Consort to roadshow visitors and members of the team of experts, and finds out about her close connection to the Eden Project and the charity The Big Lunch.

  • S45E08 Belmont House 1

    • March 12, 2023
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team visit beautiful Belmont House in Kent, where treasures include an early David Hockney, a Take That trophy and the telegram that ended World War II.

  • S45E09 Clissold Park 3

    • March 19, 2023
    • BBC One

    The team are at Clissold Park in Stoke Newington, where treasures include ancient Peruvian pottery, an archive of textile designs by pioneer Althea McNish and Harold Wilson’s pipe.

  • S45E10 Sefton Park Palm House 2

    • March 26, 2023
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team visit Sefton Park in Liverpool, where treasures include a medal given to one of the first men to land on D-Day, a dress by Ossie Clark and spoons used by Captain Cook.

  • S45E11 Powis Castle and Gardens

    • April 2, 2023
    • BBC One

    Fiona and the team visit one of the grandest houses in Wales, Powis Castle, where treasures include memorabilia from the 1966 World Cup, a statue of a lifeboatman and two polar medals.

  • S45E12 Brodie Castle 3

    • April 9, 2023
    • BBC One

    Fiona Bruce and the team return to Brodie Castle in Moray, where treasures include a watch that saved a life and a sheep that changed the world. Fiona meets a family of bagpipe makers.

  • Episodic Special

    SPECIAL 0x36 Royal Treasures

    • May 7, 2023
    • BBC One

    An Antiques Roadshow special celebrating royal treasures, featuring gems from the archive, quirky coronation keepsakes and a few million pounds' worth of penny black stamps.

  • S45E13 Belmont House 2

    • May 21, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow comes from the beautiful grounds of Belmont House in sunny Kent, where Fiona opens the show with perfect timing amongst Belmont’s world-famous collection of clocks. Alastair Dickenson is sweet on an immaculate silver honey pot, while Runjeet Singh explores a newly discovered photographic archive revealing the story of Sikh worship in this corner of the county. Raj Bisram is brought a humble piece of wood with links to one of the most notorious British ships in history – the HMS Bounty – and recounts this stirring tale of betrayal on the high seas. Cristian Beadman is surprised by a pair of bronze owls, each hiding a saucy secret within, and Fiona foxtrots her way through a chat with dancer and Strictly Come Dancing judge Anton Du Beke.

  • S45E14 Powis Castle and Gardens 2

    • May 28, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow visits one of the grandest, historic houses in Wales, Powis Castle. Duncan Campbell discovers a very rare silver tobacco box from the 1600s, and Serhat Ahmet examines a porcelain egg with a royal connection. Meanwhile, Paul Atterbury is taken back to the earliest days of Doctor Who, while Alexandra Aguilar values a jade ornament bought at a car boot sale for 50 pence. Geoffrey Munn uncovers a jewellery collection ‘of the highest quality’ with rubies and diamonds dating from the 1700s.

  • S45E15 Clissold Park, Stoke Newington 2

    • June 4, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow is at Clissold Park in Stoke Newington in the London Borough of Hackney, where treasures include a racing helmet worn by Lewis Hamilton, Scandinavian jewellery and memorabilia from the film, Blade Runner. Marc Allum hears the inspiring story of Brafa, the British Reggae Artists Famine Appeal, a fundraising response to Live Aid in 1985, while Will Farmer inspects a perspex mermaid sculpture by Arthur Fleischmann. Jon Baddeley admires a collection of 60s psychedelic rock music posters, while Siobhan Tyrrell surprises the owner of a pair of medals when she reveals they’re worth more because they’re made of plastic. Hilary Kay is thrilled to see a racing helmet worn by Formula One champion Lewis Hamilton and hears about one man’s memorable race day experience, while Jon Baddeley appraises a remarkable collection of film props and memorabilia from the cult science fiction classic, Blade Runner. Raj Bisram examines a one-of-a-kind Dunhill table lighter, and there’s stunning

  • S45E16 Eden Project, Cornwall 2

    • June 11, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow descends on the biomes of the Eden Project in Cornwall, where treasures include a psychedelic view of Paris, a Greek plate from 300BC and poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s hair.

  • S45E17 Sefton Park Palm House, Liverpool 3

    • June 18, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow is at Sefton Park in Liverpool, where treasures include 2,000-year-old cufflinks, a letter from Kate Bush, a portrait from the English Civil War and an early version of the Beatles logo made for a drumkit.

  • S45E18 Powis Castle and Garden, Welshpool 3

    • July 2, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow visits one of the grandest houses in Wales, Powis Castle, where treasures include a Scottish landscape bought for £20, a swan’s feather ring and a ventriloquist's dummy.

Season 46

  • S46E01 Swanage Pier and Seafront 1

    • September 3, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow is at Swanage Pier in Dorset, where highlights include a famous pantomime dame's costumes, a battered watch with a big price tag and valuable Star Wars memorabilia.

  • S46E02 Crystal Palace Park, London 1

    • September 10, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow is at Crystal Palace Park in London, where highlights include a diamond ring found in a sock, a Louis Vuitton trunk, and a surprise visit from an artist.

  • S46E03 Pollok Park 1

    • September 17, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow visits Pollok Park in Glasgow, where treasures include sculptures found in a charity shop, a painting by a famous Scottish artist and a Victoria Cross medal.

  • S46E04 Swanage Pier and Seafront, Dorset 2

    • September 24, 2023
    • BBC One

    In Swanage, Dorset, the treasures include dinosaur footprints, a pottery pelican and a valuable art deco bronze sculpture of a woman.

  • S46E05 Roundhay Park, Leeds 1

    • October 1, 2023
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow is at Roundhay Park in Leeds, where highlights include a rare Rolex Sea-Dweller watch, a gold handbag from a mystery benefactor and an album of Antarctic photos.

  • S46E06 Alexandra Gardens, Cardiff 1

    • October 8, 2023
    • BBC One

    The Roadshow is at Alexandra Gardens in Cardiff where highlights include valuable car boot jewellery finds, a silver goblet from Australia and illustrations by Beatrix Potter.

  • S46E07 Crystal Palace Park, London 2

    • October 15, 2023
    • BBC One

    Antiques Roadshow is in Crystal Palace in London, where treasures include James Bond books, a Lego portrait of the late Queen and vintage Vivienne Westwood outfits.

  • S46E08 Ebington Square, Derry/Londonderry 1

    • October 22, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow is at Ebrington Square in Derry/Londonderry, where highlights include gifts from a Chinese emperor, a curious paddle from the Pacific and a valuable pair of paintings.

  • Episodic Special

    SPECIAL 0x37 At Christmas

    • December 24, 2023
    • BBC One

    In a special edition of the Antiques Roadshow, the team look back over some of the most moving and memorable stories from recent years and ask: ‘what happened next?’

  • S46E09 Roundhay Park, Leeds 2

    • December 31, 2023
    • BBC One

    The roadshow is at Roundhay Park in Leeds, where highlights include an Alfred Wallis painting, a Fairyland Lustre bowl and a cap made from celebrated racehorse Red Rum’s hair.

  • S46E10 Pollok Country Park, Glasgow 2

    • January 7, 2024
    • BBC One

    The roadshow comes from Pollok Country Park in Glasgow, where treasures include Scottish silver with a royal connection, fashion designed by Alexander McQueen and a historic telescope.

  • S46E11 Alexandra Gardens, Cardiff 2

    • January 14, 2024
    • BBC One

    The roadshow comes from Alexandra Gardens in the heart of Cardiff, where treasures include a Maori pipe, a book listing wartime spies and a rare SAS medal collection.

  • S46E12 Ebrington Square, Derry/Londonderry 2

    • January 21, 2024
    • BBC One

    The roadshow comes from Ebrington Square in Derry/Londonderry, where highlights include a Celtic stone head, Belleek vases found in a charity shop and a drawing by Muhammad Ali.

  • S46E13 Crystal Palace Park, London 3

    • January 28, 2024
    • BBC One

    The roadshow comes from Crystal Palace Park in London, where highlights include rare car club badges, My Little Pony toys and a work by LS Lowry.

  • S46E14 Roundhay Park, Leeds 3

    • February 4, 2024
    • BBC One

    The roadshow team visit Roundhay Park in Leeds, where treasures include photos of Arnold Schwarzenegger, a psychedelic chair and a ring that could date from the 17th century.

  • S46E15 Pollok Park, Glasgow 3

    • February 11, 2024
    • BBC One

    The team visit Pollok Park in Glasgow, where treasures include an early painting by Jack Vettriano, a Ming dynasty Buddha and pages from the very first printing presses.

  • S46E16 Ebrington Square, Derry/Londonderry 3

    • March 17, 2024
    • BBC One

    The roadshow pays a final visit to Ebrington Square in Derry/Londonderry, where treasures include a statue from Java, Olympic boxing memorabilia and dazzling Sixties jewellery.

  • S46E17 Swanage Pier and Seafront, Dorset 3

    • March 24, 2024
    • BBC One

    The roadshow pays a final visit to Swanage Pier in Dorset, where treasures include shipwreck finds, a jewel encrusted bird and an early folding bike.

  • S46E18 Alexandra Gardens, Cardiff 3

    • March 31, 2024
    • BBC One

    The roadshow pays a final visit to Alexandra Gardens in Cardiff, where treasures include a rare Welsh rugby shirt, colourful cameo glass and unseen photos of The Rolling Stones.