Antiques Roadshow UK Series 16 Episode 12 Gibraltar, Iberian Peninsula

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[Music] a saluting gun is today the only artillery that files on Gibraltar where we've come for this week's Antiques Roadshow Gibraltar is one of the great wonders of the world a natural fortress commanding the entrance to the Mediterranean on the very tip of Europe with Africa just 14 miles across the Straits at least until the end of the Second World War it was of enormous strategic importance a vital link in the chain of empire a staging post on the Imperial route to India and it was because of its former strategic importance that Gibraltar was so heavily fortified the rock face is riddled with gun embrasures that give a clear line of fire in every direction threats from the Spanish the French and in the 1940s the Germans caused Gibraltar to dig in and dig deep the phrase solid as a rock has a rather hollow ring to it here in Gibraltar with more holes than a piece of Swiss cheese 33 miles of tunneling linking together gun emplacements with ammunition dumps hospital stores accommodation the whole idea was that it could be if necessary a city within a rock and would stand a very long siege the people of Gibraltar should know they've had 15 of them and the British garrison here within the rock would have felt particularly at home with local place names like Clapham Junction and the Great North Road and that feel of a Mediterranean home from home is everywhere around the red telephone and pillar boxes are a symbol of the fact that Gibraltarians value their close ties with Britain the British Way of life predominates here despite a racial mix that includes Spanish Italian Moroccan Maltese and of course expatriates from the UK many of whom are former servicemen who decided to stay here the story of Gibraltar is littered with great moments of British history perhaps none more so than the evening of the 28th of October 1805 when a battered HMS victory came here into Rosia Bay with the body of Horatio Nelson on board he'd been killed a week earlier in the famous battle that took place off cape trafalgar just 30 miles up the Spanish coast his body was preserved in a cask of brandy and ever since then that particular drink has been known in the Royal Navy as Nelson's blood well I've no doubt that during our day on the rock based here in the central hall we shall see and hear other reminders of gibraltars long association with Britain so let's now join our experts with the people of Gibraltar despite the fact this bars has an obvious crack down here and it has some problems to the upper part here it is still a magnificent piece it would have been made it's one of a pair that's for certain you know is there another one there's another one too that it has major surgery on it as well where is it now actually where's the other one is it it's in our front hall in Loreto convent in the convent I think it's been much admired and during the Second World War all our furniture was stored in one huge room and I think it was there that these vouchers became damaged right it's made in Japan in about the 1870s during the Meiji period and they have the decoration which is his wonderful blue very similar actually to really good 17th century Chinese can she blue this shows a more Chinese landscape actually which you see on Japanese spell paintings so-called Nanga school paintings done in very much in the Chinese landscape style and going from here we have this beautiful peacock on rocks with a poona's tree but this is you're probably wondering what all with what's going on here yes what happened was that very soon after its manufacture some was selected and decorated in lacquer because they were popular and they probably they look very good the gold lacquer on yes pairs in large large halls so what's happened what has happened is that somebody's decided to to reduce to take it off and seamless they're just left Lee that bit there so to take it off you've actually revealed all that well we wondered what happened that yes well in theory I suppose what one should do is have it carefully remove because there's no way when talking to replace it obviously anyway not the standing the damage it's it's it's they're quite very valuable really do you know how any thought prior stupid something of the order of fifteen hundred two thousand pounds a pair if the other one said in similar conditions something in the order of four thousand pounds well I'm actually very interested to know how something so unusual as these come to be in Gibraltar my great-grandfather because they come with engines yes they were made in 1825 by very well-known silversmith called john bridge and he had a very large company in London in bundle bridge and Randall and there are in addition to the hallmark which is here the maker's mark IB and the rely on the leopards head for London tainted okay and the duty money to do what that's the date letter and he also used to sign these things it says ramble bridge and Randall and in Latin Goldsmith's to the King in London and having said all that there are very unusual pair in design in the Gothic taste and that was popularized by papal Walpole who built a grave a Cossack revival house in the 1780s and then all sorts of nice design is about these little tiny frogs here and it's very very elaborate rocketing around here they're super quality because there's no loading sometimes some of these characteristics are loaded inside but these are really solid and heavy and these detach and they're also hallmark which is very important chosen to all original and always unscrew as well and I'm sure that those are all marked as as well they're really quite exceptional I sort of spotted them standing on there on that chest about 20 feet away I thought that's something really out of the usual I think that these ought to be insured for something around the eight or ten thousand pound 88888 this is a small chips anti-personnel gun that dates from around about 1490 1,500 but would have been in use quite a long period after that they're known as Perry A's because they often fired handfuls of gravel and not being a particularly good French scholar all playing attention at school I do remember that the word for stone was Pierre so that's where their name comes from they're also known as Hale shop pieces or rather attractively as murdering pieces because they were the sort of thing that would be used in the final clothes defense of a ship as people were swarming over the gunnels and they would be there to cut down as many of the attackers in one swathe as possible now to load it you would have got this thing that looks like a beer tankard and put your powder into there and then the projectile into the breech and the chamber as this was known as would then be placed into its housing there and this large wedge which was vitally important to the whole operation would be popped in there and then the whole piece was ready to fire and the chap who's detailed to do that would aim it and with a length of burning slow match pop it into the briefs there and it would discharge there's an interesting constructional aspect about this gun that relates to a tube or or the barrel now this would have been made by getting a series of strips of wrought iron and placing them around a central core and then shrinking on these rim the whole lot kept at red peak and as it cooled the Rings shrunken for their and contracted and held the whole Lots together in exactly the same way as a wooden cask or barrel is made by coopering and hence the term that's going to be known as barrels and it's a very interesting piece and certainly a thing like this appearing on the commercial market would generate quite a lot of excitement and interest and it would make somewhere eight hundred to a thousand pounds I think [Music] yes and on some unscrupulous person has painted possibly even painted a about the original run quick would have attracted a better income again in these were a teenager research maybe won't even pin down who did paint yeah picture originally before it had interesting but still I mean it because it's a command three 300 pounds well [Music] with embroidered jet this my grandmother what you do with it now when our if it stays like that I'll put it away from my daughter how old is your daughter my daughter li chen she said she loves modeling and she loves dresses it won't be long before she's anything the great thing about dresses from this date is that they are exactly the right look for the young my daughter is 24 and she would get always only thing you have to watch out for is the beads coming here coming on I have to fill them back the an exactly the valuation of a dress like this is difficult because [Music] well it is a background way yeah it's a good it's a good backer our ways its background French factory which produce waste like this around the late 1840s early 1850s and this one is called a mille fury it's got a very clean lovely clean panes as they're called in it beast like this is it's very neat I would expect it to make two three maybe four hundred bands - very nice hats a little little way I've seen hundreds of Raffles in my time and never seen one quite like this it's made in the late 18th century about 1790 to 1800 and ate the most unusual feature which I've never seen before on the rattle it's just rather pretty cut amber body here and here the end typically has a bit of carved coral which was the teething stick the baby the baby stuck it in its mouth and it rattled well and because it is so unusual I think you should have that insured for 4000 pounds you've got two very nice early kilometers early surveying and on the top here we have the name Butterfield Italian and that is probably and although he says he was actually we went over to Paris and worked as a scientific instrument designer and courted lure the 14th and he was very busy between 1674 1722 so we can date this reasonably accurately to that people probably know the name Butterfield in a generic term because it's used to describe little pocket sundials often made of silver and those are called Butterfield few of them what I like about this is the quality not only of the manufacturer but some of the details and if you look here at the bracket the way that's being decorated and the the sort of oakley wreaths around the central campus roads it's a shame that it's the actual glass and this is very attractive too if anything I think it might be a just a little bit earlier I don't know the name here ruse alone not familiar to me at all but here you've got again the same system with a double circle of degrees around the outside the alidade that moves and look at me see that those lovely dolphins of which flanked the the compass point I'm taking all that that's what I spoke about this and he said to me and let me see them yeah and they offered me a pound all right well this one I would say is going to be worth about 1,500 pounds and this one because it's signed really I just have between two Aviva this clop is in the sort of condition that makes me think that you probably haven't used it for many years never by the way whereabouts did you put it in an attic room so you've never heard it [Music] right well let's just have a little look at it first of all let me tell you that the clock is English and this gentleman here in fact Ford and sons of Hastings they were the people that sold the clock originally it's a three train clock which means that it goes it strikes and it caught a chimes so when I said you just now you've never heard it you've never heard all the bells or something whenever I move it from to clean the place out from one side to another and now you hear the bill yeah so you'll never even wound it up never I've got a key here and well the spring has gone so we're not going to get it to work today for you sadly but let's just see what else it's got here it's got in the center a slow fast dial which makes the pendulum rise and fall to control the clocks timekeeping this one is a charm silent that switches on and off the chiming and this one it has eight bells or Westminster chimes so you can select which tune which selection of charms you're going to have on the quarter hour let's have a look inside the clock there we are the pendulums still there and we have a typical very good quality English movement of about 1865 to 1870 and up here we have a Carolyn of eight bells I'm just going to move the hammers and you can hear the sort of noise that it's going to make when it's all restored [Music] it'll be very pretty some of those bills are bit off tone because they're probably touching and not ringing what true at the moment but it'll it'll play nicely each quarter of an hour for you I'll use it if you think you get it out you get it repaired you use it and insure it for about two and a half thousand pounds don't leave it in the Attic anymore I live in a house here in which the senior naval officer has occupied in Gibraltar since 1797 I arrived in April 1992 and this table was in my dining right well in many ways it could indeed have arrived in rota in the early 19th century which is when it was made but of course it could have come in at any time subsequent to that I think the as card tables go of the period it is a very standard format if you like it swivels top swivels and opens up to a baseline this one isn't is a nice example because it still has its brass string around the top there which is a detail that you sometimes lose when they're they're repaired and rebased and it also has a rope molding which i think is rather nice being able that's a little bit of rope building there for me I think what gets more exciting is as you go down they at the table itself but this quite restrained geometrical inlay and that's repeated as you go down onto the rosewood base again now what do you think of these legs well I think they're the things that catch my eye when I look at the table absolutely meet me too because in a way what's happened is that the conventional scrolls you get on a Regency table here has been elongated and so it's very very stylized scroll but I like the way particularly that the inlay follows the line of the leg so you get this quite sharp angle thing all the way around into the brass casters and caps here and is interesting that again you've got a little variation on the norm Regency Castle which is square yeah so you've got the little bit of band and little at campus leave there now I don't know what the situation is with a house like this in terms of valuation I imagine he wouldn't go down too well if he went off and sold this well I think a table like this in the auction rooms is likely to fetch around two and a half to three and a half thousand pounds Henry West was stationed here with the 12th infantry here in Gibraltar and like most people in the army of his time he could draw they didn't have cameras or anything like that so they learnt at military training school to draw and he produced two sets of six views of Gibraltar you have the two sets here bound together in one volume and extremely good they are to their lithographs and they're printed on India paper and the India paper has been laid onto the paper that you see them in here this is the this is the town now isn't it all up here and this is all completely buildings now I'm not completely covered in buildings now yes like Hong Kong what about this this is the oh there's the that's the castle - Moorish castle there and these are the mystic seed this is the where the ships with more that's correct yeah now this is from high up from the upper footpath between O'Hara's folly and the signal house I would imagine that's very much the same as it is there's not a lot of things to see now this is an interesting view this is a view of the airport I believe isn't it because all this piece here which is all water and this is why you call Gibraltar an island isn't it because in the past there was only the strand of lamb connected to the mainland pain you can take connecting it to Algeciras which is all over all over here but the root the the runway now runs I believe straight across this bit here doesn't it yes absolutely terrify as we're coming into land I thought if they didn't bring out a runway soon we would end up in the water now this is the final view I win in central hall yes shunt should be around this area so we're actually recording this around here yes somewhere yeah which is rather lovely but altogether a very very nice piece I didn't know what it would fetch here in Gibraltar but I do know that something like this in London between a 1200 pounds well now we've been very fortunate since we've been here in securing the services of several local experts and one has just joined me - listen now we're all interested in obviously the military history of Gibraltar because it's all around you when you're on the rock and I gathered that in the 18th century in particular there are a lot of military inventions that stem from Gibraltar indeed very much by necessity the last seas the great cedar - brought the last circle close to four years and the garrison was virtually in prison besieged by French and Spanish one particular problem was the enemy was below you at health of people earlier we were firing from some of a large cliff now the guns of the day most of the fire horizontally or upwards but never done was says the enemy could get below you so this was a model of it's called the curler gun after the land who were invented it and this was designed I mean it looks like a conventional cannon that it was designed to fire down to fire down in the enemy who would get in close to you and what happened was if we can put it together yes is is you had this kind of effect ingenuity was in fact in the carriage and not the gun itself so what color design was this Depression characters I was born which allowed to fire down the enemies may seem a naive question but why didn't a cannonball Braille out at the end of the bound right the carriage was brought down and the cannonballs were loaded in the horizontal position and then what it was put in and then the Kennedy barrel was elevated so by the time it was in that angle was firmly what I didn't and the other interesting feature about it was that the barrage itself would absorb would take the recoil so that when you fired the whole carriage wouldn't go back so that in itself was very much a unique invention as a result of the need okay um follow meant a sin sin causes in Vellore as part a 80 pounds okay okay problem is [Music] no its director how do you ever have one of those on before I dunno they I know his entire he's like a fishing rod nothing now he used to have a second home he was actually an advertisement for several and each had a little side window this is also 18th century it's made of quite fine led plays pottery of a type which is associated with well the name willed and Thomas Wilden working in Staffordshire as well in the third quarter of the attention run about 1760 1770 they're embarrassed answer these things of countless casters I mean they made quite a lot of models of cats or dogs as one is particularly a nice little example I mean I thought this is probably worth the region of thousand maybe 12 1500 pounds this little fuzzy can it looks insignificant doesn't think he was one of seven each one a different type of power anyway made of papier mâché which was then been painted over the top the first garden gnome appeared in the 18th century and was actually used in a house in Northamptonshire to garnish a wonderful waterfall grotto area like that as this guy is wearing but I think he's not gonna be worth a huge amount but he is by way of being a proper novelty to have a nice history to himself and thing is that he's an indoor gnome rather than being an elastic well what a magnificent picture this is so enormous great Harbor seen not to broader sadly but but actually I'm Dutch I think that's probably I guess Rotterdam that's right here because it is in fact by the very fine dutch impressionist painter johann heinrich Mastan brook and it's signed Unger also dated 1908 and I think I think it's a really wonderful picture it's really him at his best this it's a great example it's got um all this bustling life of the harbor and what he's particularly good at I think his framework very well succeeded with its this effects of smoke and steam coming out of the out of the boats really very well handle that's very atmospheric picture isn't it that's right again there's been unusual thing to find here in here in Gibraltar I have to confess I don't know how to put this I'm I'm terribly worried about one thing to do with this picture that there is this label on the back which says in German that it is the property of the National Gallery in Berlin I'd hoped that Interpol aren't following I did check up on that this morning because I was a bit worried myself and I ran around who gave us this picture and she said that her husband bought it during the war in Tangier from the German embassy in Tangier the German Embassy in Tangier in the war sea of intrigue was in Tangier in the war obviously it was once in the National Gallery in Berlin and I think it's probably one of those pictures which were in the reserve collection which would have been lent out to at German embassies throughout the world and that's how it ended up in Tangier a Dutch picture coming from the German national gallery which he bought in Tangier and has ended up in Gibraltar it's the most wonderful thing absolutely amazing now the value the value I mean it's also rather rather interesting question that Mastan Brook has become quite sought-after in recent years he's one of the best of that group of Dutch impressionist painters so I suppose that certainly for insurance you should be thinking in terms of well ensuring it for say 20,000 parts we normally associate Winchester rifles with the Wild West Cowboys and Indians but in this particular case this one has a very different association and it's one that was built by the Winchester factory in America a special order for the English market and we can tell that it was made by a special order we start at the stock end if we look at the stock it's got this lovely drop down what's called a half pistol grip which is very very favourite by English sportsmen at the time and also the stock itself is made of very very high quality wood the action is color hardened which is a process of putting the steel into all manner of stuff like charcoal bone dust old boot soles and then baking it for a very long period to harden the top of the metal so that it doesn't wear but as well as being practical it also produces this lovely sort of mottled effect it's almost like a sky that's full of thunder beautiful blues and browns and the last feature that we know makes it rather special is the fact that it's only got a very very short barrel most twin sisters have barrels that are probably four or five inches longer than this and also they have the magazine which is a tube which runs up there which holds five cartridges they normally run to the length of the barrel but in this case they've only put a short barrel on it and a half length magazine now the reason is that it was intended for use on big game in Africa now it's chambered for a 50 caliber cartridge which is a really large cartridge it's er the cartridge itself is probably about that long and it the bullet is half an inch in diameter so it's a sizable thing it will knock over virtually any large or dangerous game and the reason that it's got this half length magazine and the short barrel is to make it very handy so if you're shooting in close country and brush or thorn and they were saying a lion close by you would be able to move the gun for more easily than we've had great long barrels but you can actually cut that shoulder and get work the action very quickly and it would give you an immediate second shot as well if you didn't quite do the job properly with the the first one do you have any idea from your own personal knowledge of it whether or not so that theory holds any water probably I know it's bought in 1904 grandfather was [Music] so that's sort of all falls into place yes I think that it is worth somewhere between a thousand to twelve hundred pounds perhaps fifteen hundred to the right buyer it's a very rare thing and it's very special and it it's amazing to see it here well the one little thing about being interpreter is that it acts as a sort of melting pot for things from all over the Empire and all over the world right yes what we have here are two Italian blackamoor figures now this habit of having wonderful standing figures at the bottom of your staircase you can just imagine how good it looks Indian big Italian palazzi would have been splendid on each side and of course this idea of having an exotic creature from the Far East or from Africa in your household goes way back to the days of King Charles the first when it was quite normal for a highborn lady to have a little boy carrying her jewels on a velvet cushion it was considered to be very much one-upmanship to have an african page in your house and that's where these wonderful figures come from it's a design that goes right back to actuality at that time and that's really what was happening with these figures they were showing us how very exotic life could be we have a sort of Turkish emblem up here we have almost Japanese designs working in the brigade of the fabrics and at the bottom is something which you only really ever find it it is this little cartouche here and so we can be pretty certain they came from Italy because that's where most of these figures were carved and made particularly in Venice and of course initially these were made out of carved wood probably they're softwood like mine coated with gesso which is like a thin plaster material and then gilded and painted on top so it's really quite a performance to get them completed it's really quite complicated we can be fairly sir because of the decoration they're wearing what date they are and the way we do that is to look at their jewelry that bangle is very particularly something that you would have found in 1880 to 1900 so I think we'll we'll we'll settle their date round about the turn-of-the-century about 1900 yeah I think probably not a great deal and I could see these making at auction somewhere around about 1,500 to 2,000 parts where you would holy water there and we make the sign of the Cross every morning this is in the bedroom this is yours yes yes come to the family I gave it to me and that was wearing in Italy yes in Florence in Florence in Italy they gave it to her as a wedding present it's wonderfully exciting luster splash luster and where do you think it came from points it made them for sure well I don't think so I think this is English big dismay for the Italian market made up in Sunderland up in the northeast of England where they where they made this splash cluster particularly this very very attractive splashes of luster we're even underneath that's a very exciting area I think this is English with with lusto all over and copper luster at the top and superb little lamb those are English laughs but I think they're thinking and very exciting I can't remember sees a piece like that addictive perhaps it'll pay for the Italian market maybe yes I suppose it's very Italian well what do you think it's fairly I had no idea no idea very very difficult to say but I would reckon somewhere over the thousand pound mark I stink twelve hundred pounds something like that perhaps even a bit more that's even a bit more than twelve hundred pounds [Music] because of these two hinges in the seat it obviously suggests that something else happens to this term and we have the hook on the side when you go down and unhook side it becomes a pair of library steps absolutely spending them fix it so you don't come a cropper when you're going up there you are extremely neat piece of metamorphic furniture much less elaborate than some of the 19th century a big scroll arms and this looks really quite like a stepladder when you see thanks right but when it's folded up a good strong little gothic revival church can I ask how much you paid for and you remember I think it was just a couple of hundred pounds right I think you you probably paid the right kind of money for it at the time but this sword furniture is going up they're getting more and more collectible now and you might well have to pay between five and seven hundred pounds per pair of these Gothic steps very interesting this this is a Remington Rolling Rock you've come to the right man because I collect these alright I'll get a better doesn't it's the Egyptian model produced for the Egyptian government literally thousands of the dumplings because the Egyptians defaulted on the payments consequently they were sold off all around and how he's got here is he managed to get it could do with a good clean because it is essentially it's in very good condition somebody has varnished it which has really done it quite a good favor because it stopped any further corrosion it's worth a couple Underpants they're quite desirable [Music] well this is an extremely fine piece of Spanish calligraphy it is a grant of arms and the Kings seal is placed here Phillip by the grace of God his Spanier rex king of spain and this lovely lovely title page shows the actual grant of arms that was going to be given to a particular nobleman when he was a noble and going through the work it tells us it's true this particular document who he was related to and why his family is honored in this way and it continues through in this wonderful wonderful hand which is very typical of Spanish manuscripts of this period are you Spanish yourselves or Gibraltarians so how did you come by yes my father gave me this book before he passed away he said to keep it as you keep this book and I kept it well I think it was a very nice thing you don't know how he no no no no idea but he must have comes at some time from Spain maybe he got it added oh he bought it or something somebody gave it to me I don't know I know it's mine well I think it's a jolly nice thing to have let's turn right to the end you notice this is all on this lovely lovely vellum which is the fellow vellum is is a sort of a skin that is made from an animal and it is prepared it is scraped down and it is absolutely wonderful for writing on we turn right at the end and we find his extremely elaborate signature king of arms and his seal his little papered seal here and the date the 23rd of April 17:43 it's bound very simply in a piece of vellum which has obviously had quite a bit of wear from time to time attempt is rather reverently on the back here is a ship that has been penciled in but it is absolutely fabulous do you think the eye sweeps into the buckle well I hope you will insure it something like this would I think at auction sell for on two to two-and-a-half thousand pounds so it's well worth it depicts a famous Napoleonic battle of Austerlitz which happened in 1805 and I know that because it is dated here right 1805 I'm not going to every clever and also I must let you in to seek they did sneak a little view at the Lydia right and there we have a faceless right all right we turn it round here and it has of course manufacture my eldest heir right say we know it's Sarah it's actually made in about much much later than than the battle took place and about in the second they're doing the second Empire when 1865 1870 perhaps it's a very rich looking piece and I think enhanced my is fantastic gilding the painting is is is quite fine I must say but the gilding is marvelous one tends to forget that you'll be very very rich you can see that another Napoleonic emblem of the bees install a specialization that's right that's right did you get a form from Blair you will see wonderful hangings they're embroidered with bees which shows Napoleon's insignia for industry now as far as the piece is concerned it has a crack jaws crashed it yeah that was actually caused just out of Second World War and an ammunition ship exploded and the bay in Gibraltar and killed nine people in fact bits of the ship actually went right over the other side of the rock and every single window and report was broken there was a famous then someone from Europe one of the few major incidents of the further particular that actually came off its plinth and broke its lucky I didn't you haven't yeah I mentioned it was one of perhaps a set one of a pair most certainly none would have been painted one run one of Napoleon's other battles using and it's I suppose it's worth some Sun where the order in that state a few thousand pounds really but I think it would be worth somewhat more if word be properly and professionally restored right but there's one other easy thing which I can do and that is simply to clean someone's don't off am I right in thinking that this farce has been in there in a smoke-filled room for many generations I'm sure my grandfather's in fact a pipe in pipes because it's very heavy pipes me it is extremely Brown you know let's just see what happens if it's not water color well there we are and he's coming up beautifully action splendor as Napoleon I'm very excited it is as the front well we end our visit to Gibraltar now with another local treasure from the garrison library it's a bound edition of the Gibraltar Chronicle from 1805 including a first-hand account of the Battle of Trafalgar and the death of Nelson when Burke returned into the cockpit with captain Hardy Lord Nelson told the latter to come near him kiss me hardy he exclaimed captain Hardy kissed his cheek I hope your lordship he said will still live to enjoy your triumph never Hardy he exclaimed I'm dying I'm a dead man all over Beatty the doctor will tell you so bring the fleet to an anchor you've all done your duty god bless you and soon afterwards the a panel expired a bit battered looking perhaps but for all historians of irreplaceable value blow-by-blow account of the Battle of Trafalgar well with that now we say goodbye to Gibraltar our warm thanks to everyone here on the rock and indeed from the coasters many people came across the Spanish border to be with us here today I very much hope that you'll join us next week at the same time when we're back home we take the roadshow
Info
Channel: UK VHS Archive
Views: 44,094
Rating: 4.6458335 out of 5
Keywords: Antiques Roadshow Series 16, Antiques Roadshow, Antiques Roadshow UK, VHS, Gibraltar, BBC 1, BBC
Id: 4NiyaIIAiE0
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 42min 46sec (2566 seconds)
Published: Mon Dec 03 2018
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