The Grandest Sights Of Britain's Countryside | Treasure From The Air | Real Royalty

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[Music] across the world Britain is famed for its idyllic countryside an incredibly diverse landscape of natural beauty farmland and settlements the richness of rural Britain also lies in its countless historic treasures from castle ruins to lighthouses and the need to safeguard Britain's countryside and heritage for future generations has given rise to one of the biggest conservation organisations in the world the National Trust [Music] from its humble beginnings over a century ago the charity has grown to become Britain's second largest landowner in the United Kingdom covering lakes and mountains coastline ancient monuments and historic houses and gardens while it's a massive and complex task to look after such a vast area of the country the National Trust's mission has always been a simple one to preserve Britain's most valued places forever for everyone [Music] and what better way to experience the visual delights of this national institution than float through the air like a bird [Music] the birth of the National Trust is rooted in the extraordinary achievements of the 19th century social reformer Octavia Hill her early influence can still be seen in many parts of Britain Hampstead Heath one of London's best loved parks would quite likely be a mass of urban development were it not for Octavia Hills determination to preserve it for future generations it was part of her vision to improve the appalling living conditions of the poor in Victorian Britain by making wide-open spaces available to everyone she describes such places as open-air sitting rooms for city dwellers to have a place to breathe in 1894 she was joined by two other renowned philanthropists of the time Sir Robert hunter and cannon Hardwick warns Lee to form the National Trust relying on charitable donations of both money and property they set out to protect the nation's places of natural beauty and historic interest and within a year a plot of land on this picturesque hill overlooking barmouth in Wales became the first property to be handed in to the care of the National Trust the donor was a rich widow by the name of Fanny Talbot whose wish was for the public to forever enjoy the spectacular landscape this generosity proved an inspiration for others to support the trust and after well over a century of fundraising and acquiring land and property the Trust is now a national institution with 4 million members and 66 thousand volunteers synonymous with the nation's history and heritage the trust also has close ties with the National Trust for Scotland which was formed later in 1931 from the outset the National Trust was guided by its promise to preserve Britain's landscape and today the trust owns a staggering quarter of a million hectares of countryside visited by tens of millions of people each year it includes the men dip hills in Somerset one of 49 designated areas of outstanding natural beauty in England Wales and Northern Ireland a popular spot for long-distance walkers the limestone hills conceal the largest underground river system in Britain over time the flowing water created a vast system of caves many of which were discovered and explored as recently as the 20th century with the advent of breathing apparatus the biggest tourist attraction of the men dip hills is the spectacular cheddar gorge at 130 metres deep and running for almost 5 kilometres it's England's largest gorge it began to form about 1 million years ago join the last ice age when water from melting glaciers formed a river over time it started to carve into the limestone rock creating the steep cliffs we see today further north is one of the most visited national parks in the world the Peak District in 1951 it became England's first National Park within which the trust owns three vast estates the enchanting Dovedale is a limestone valley situated on the south Peak estate millions of years of erosion have created these distinctive rocky pinnacles that have lent themselves to whimsical names such as Lovers Leap lion's head rock and the Twelve Apostles the river dove which runs through Dovedale has been a famous trout fishing stream for centuries it was the inspiration for Isaac Waltons book The Compleat angler published in 1653 it's still considered the definitive masterpiece on the art and spirit of fishing the most dramatic landscape of the Peak District lies in the National Trust's high peak estate this is kinder scout the highest part of the Peak District it's a windswept gritstone plateau standing over 600 metres above sea level one of the highlights is kinder downfall where the kinder river literally flows off the plateau from the peat soaked bog that sits on the top even in dry weather the soft peaty ground makes it a challenging hike and the thousands of walkers who visit each year are well advised to stick to the paths [Music] the area has a deep historic association with workers rights since it was here that a mass trespass took place in 1932 [Music] 400 people confronted police in defiance of restricted rights to roam these moorlands they eventually succeeded when in 1949 legislation was passed to establish the national parks [Music] it also led to the creation of long-distance walking trails and one of the best-known and toughest is the Pennine way it starts here the lush Valley of Edale and continues for over 400 kilometers all the way up to the Scottish border nestled in the far northwest of England is the Lake District the land defined by these majestic mountains known locally as fells it's the largest national park in England and Wales [Music] this rugged landscape has an ancient history it was mainly formed in the last ice age about 15,000 years ago as glaciers carved out u-shaped valleys many of which filmed with water the Lake District was made a national park in 1951 but the National Trust had started acquiring parts since the early 1900's and today owns a quarter of this mountainous region which covers over 2,000 square kilometers in the 18th century Daniel Defoe the writer of Robinson Crusoe did a tour of the lakes didn't much like what he saw the country is some of the wildest most barren and frightful that I have passed over in England or even Wales the west side is bounded by a chain of almost impenetrable mountains today opinion is very different partly due to the man who lived here in Kendall his name was Alfred Wainwright and he devoted his life to publishing his handwritten descriptions of walks on 214 fells these were sold as small books which could fit in the pocket of a jacket and are widely used today the lakes are now one of the premier tourist destinations in England and Lake Windermere is seen by many as the focal point the largest natural lake in England it's what's called a ribbon lake thin and long it stretches for 17 kilometers and reaches a depth of 65 meters in fact it's so big that it even has a small but noticeable tide halfway up the lake other towns of Windermere and bonus an opposite in the middle of the lake is Belle Isle and it's beautiful temple lake house built in the 18th century for the Cohen family the island is now owned and cared for by the National crust there's a 16 kilometer an hour speed limit for boats which goes to add to the peaceful tranquility of this spot al's water is the second-largest of the lakes it has a couple of kinks in it providing ever-changing views of this most beautiful of places it's thought that the name may have come from the Norse God owl it also inspired the renowned poem by Wordsworth daffodils that famously begins with I wandered lonely as a cloud [Music] it's very popular for sailing and there are several watersports centers where craft can be hired [Music] among all the fells listed by Wainwright the only one under 300 meters in height Castle crag set alongside the National Trust's stunning Borradaile valley he described as Hill as being unashamed of its lack of inches referring to its impressive and rugged appearance and from the shortest to the tourists this is the highest mountain in England Scoville pike at 978 meters [Music] it's stature compelled Alfred Wainwright to describe it as every inch a mountain scarf L is quite often in cloud and can be an eerie and desolate place where walkers can easily lose that way the only feature up here is the huge can at the very top but on a glorious summer's day it can be a busy place the ultimate goal for hikers tackling England's biggest climb the summit itself was donated to the National Trust in 1919 by Lord Lucan field in memory of the men of the Lake District who fell in the First World War [Music] Britain's heritage goes back thousands of years and the activities of the Ancients have left an extraordinary legacy on the country's landscape and with over 73,000 archaeological sites the National Trust has the largest privately owned collection in England Wales and Northern Ireland Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire is known for its rich prehistoric archaeology its greatest treasure are these solitary four thousand-year-old standing stones the world heritage site of Stonehenge to this day no one really knows why Stonehenge was constructed and by whom an enigma that draws around a million visitors each year the monument had been in private hands right up until 1918 when a local landowner gifted stonehenge to the nation destined to become a major attraction concern grew among conservationists that the whole area would succumb to all the trappings of a holiday resort and so in 1927 the National Trust led the way for a massive public appeal to save the landscape from development the campaign was a success and while the monument itself belongs to the crown the National Trust now owns over eight square kilometers of the surrounding grass fields and farland the roads on the other hand are a different matter but there's no denying the lonely setting of Stonehenge has been preserved for future generations to behold its mystery and Wonder and only thirty kilometers north is another World Heritage Site of immense importance it starts here a long standing stones forming a processional way to a huge earth work and the largest stone circle in Europe the Avebury ring estimated to be over four and a half thousand years old and like its neighbor Stonehenge the riddle of who used it and how has never been solved these stones suggestive of pagan rites worried the Catholic Church which felt they might encourage worship of primitive gods and so had been felled in the Middle Ages one member of the demolition crew was crushed when one of these megaliths fell on him and his body together with the tools of his barber surgeon trade was found some six hundred years later most of the stones were reacted in the 1930s before Avebury became part of the National crust in 1943 carved into these dramatic white chalk hills of Oxfordshire in southern England is a giant figure the Upington white horse it's said to go back 3,000 years making it the oldest dated chalk figure in the country but as with so many of these ancient monuments its original purpose has been lost in the mists of time [Music] the highly stylized lines have been recognized as a horse since the Middle Ages though some legends tell us it may represent the dragon slain on these very hills bison gorge patron saint in England but a hundred and ten metres in length it can only be fully seen from high up in the air suggesting it may well have been a symbol of worship to pagan gods and alongside the relics from prehistory are the remains of the first great civilization to have settled in Britain 2,000 years ago the Romans and here in the northeast of England is what's considered to be the most important monument built by the Romans in Britain Hadrian's Wall protected by the National Trust since 1930 and declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987 spanning the entire width of northern England this formidable stone barrier ran for a hundred and twenty kilometres and at points was up to six metres high it's job was to keep out the Troublesome Scots at the height of the Roman occupation about twelve thousand troops were needed to guard the wall they were housed in large forts and one of the best-preserved which was built on a steep rocky outcrop his house dense it was home to hundreds of men many of whom would come from warm Mediterranean lands and now found themselves in this cold damp and distant outpost with so much rain there was always plenty of water which they were able to store they even had flushing toilets a luxury not to be found on these islands again until the 1800s but the real height of Roman luxury was to be enjoyed by the privileged few these other rodents of Chad worth villa acquired by the National Trust in 1924 it's one of the largest Roman villas of its kind as well as a fine example of Britain's first great architectural age the size of Chad Wirth villa would have meant that it belonged to a rich and powerful romano-british family the house once had two floors and the inventory reads like a modern property spec there were bathrooms with hot and cold running water the main rooms had central heating from hot air circulated under raised floors there was even a sauna nothing like this had ever been seen by the Britons who mostly lived in fact round houses they must have thought the places like Chad worth had come from another world [Music] this is done stabber Castle a romantic ruin looking out over the beautiful Northumberland coastline the National Trust started acquiring castles as early as 1900 and today it owns no less than 40 nothing captures the imagination like the castles of Britain and their appeal is timeless steeped in history stories and legends they're forbidding walls and towers are a lasting testament to a brutal and violent age one of the most evocative of castle life as it may have been his podium near the south coast of England this 14th century moated fortress was built to defend southern Britain in the event of a French invasion though it also served as a grand residence the moat is considered an ornamental rather than a defensive feature and was intended to make the castle appear larger and more imposing podium has been described by archaeologists as being one of the best examples of landscaping to emphasise a castle by the mid 17th century the castle like so many others was just a picturesque ruin but in 1916 beaudion was bought by lord kurzon who then restored it and gave it to the National Trust in 1925 there can be few castles for the more dramatic location than the medieval structure on some Michaels mount the rocky Cornish Island accessible by foot at low tide originally a monastery the structure was rebuilt as a fortress in the 1500s prayer and pilgrimage was followed by 250 years of battles of bloodshed until it was finally converted into a magnificent home for the st. Alban family in the 17th century the National Trust was handed the castle in 1954 and it's now open to the public however part of the castle remains after 300 years the family home of the Centaurs under a 999 year lease [Music] Kafkaesque and Dorset lies in ruins not through age and decay but because it was demolished in 1645 by the victorious parliamentarian forces during the English Civil War until its surrender Korff had been a bleed offended by lady mary banks whose husband was absent fighting for the king betrayed by one of her own soldiers the castle was finally taken and destroyed deep holes packed with gunpowder brought the towers and ramparts crashing down that done it was later returned to the banks family the castle remained with them for over 300 years until it was finally handed to the National Trust in 1982 Korff castles demolition symbolically marked the end of the age of the great strongholds but castle design was to re-emerge centuries later as a fashion among rich and powerful Victorian industrialists Penryn castle in North Wales was built by the pennant family whose slate quarry in a nearby valley had earned them a vast fortune built in the style of a Norman fortress with its square towers this grand manor house was not only a clear statement of wealth but it even suggested self-proclaimed nobility it's one of many such castles built in the 1800s and Penryn is one of the most admired in 1951 the castle and it's a hundred and sixty square kilometres of land was handed to the government in exchange for death taxes today it's cared for by the National Trust and is open to the public of the 25,000 buildings the National Trust owns more than 5,000 our houses and cottages many of these were acquired as part of larger estates and often included villages which had historically provided homes for estate workers one such village in the care of the National Trust since 1944 is Leacock in Wiltshire today it has around 350 tenants mentioned in the 11th century Doomsday Book Leacock has remained virtually unchanged since the 1700s making it a film directors dream for period and fantasy dramas including Pride and Prejudice and Harry Potter [Music] from a much later period is the style estate founded in 1784 for the workers at Quarry Bank mill it's one of Britain's greatest industrial heritage sites showing how a complete industrial community lived the estate and mill were donated to the National Trust in 1939 but the mill continued commercial production until 1959 [Music] the National Trust's 200-odd parks and gardens spans centuries of history and a some of its most visited sites [Music] this is Croom landscape park in Worcestershire it was the first complete landscape to be built by the famous designer Lancelot Brown in 1751 and it made his reputation he was better known as capability Brown for his want of saying about a new Commission there was great capability of improvement the park at Croom established a new style of garden design one that looked entirely natural but in fact was man-made including the Magnificent lake this approach became so popular that it was universally adopted for decades to come but the grounds thought by many to be capability Browns finest achievement is a Petworth Park in West Sussex the great landscape designer was hired in 1751 and he left hardly a square metre of the gardens untouched the extensive formal gardens surrounding the house were swept away and replaced with a lake and carefully sited trees and Hills if the result looks impressively natural the amount of work involved in creating this effect is astounding capability Brown's records showed that around 70,000 tons of soil and clay was shifted to create the perfect Vista especially from Petworth house itself Petworth was donated to the National Trust in 1947 and today it is 283 hectare Park is home to the largest herd of fallow deer in England for the 18th century owners of country houses and estates landscaping became the height of fashion and this can be seen on an epic scale at Star Head in Wiltshire and though capability Brian wasn't involved in its creation his influence is unmistakable [Music] the artificial lake was formed by damming a river rare and exotic trees were brought here from around the world including a giant redwood from California star head was built by an eminent banker to show off his wealth and taste to his cultured friends the path around the lake is even themed to tell the story of a mythological Trojan hero's descent into the underworld classical temples are scattered around the thousand hectare grounds creating as the diarist Hugh Walpole put it one of the most picturesque scenes in the world for visitors today the highlight of star ahead is the climb up to the top of King Alfred's Tower to enjoy spectacular views over three counties [Music] one formal garden that did survive the onslaught of landscaping was Powis Castle garden in Mid Wales nestled against the medieval fortresses steep rocky ridge it's one of the few remaining the rock gardens in Britain laid out in Italian and French styles it retains its original ledge statues and Orangery the terraces themselves were quite likely carved out of the rock as far back as the 1670s a great deal of work to restore and improve the gardens was undertaken from 1911 by violet the wife of the fourth urn of Paris before being handed over to the National Trust in 1952 from a later movement in garden design is incurred in Gloucestershire it's one of the best-known and most influential of the Arts and Crafts gardens from the early 1900s one of the first of its kind in Europe it could was conceived as a series of linked rooms each has its own theme and character separated by you Holly and beech hedges however this very English garden was in fact created by an American owner Lawrence Johnston and have it plant collector he went on numerous plant hunting expeditions around the world to secure rare and exotic species for this widely admired and imitated garden today hid kits additional attraction is its three hectare maze each year a new pattern is cut into a maze crop hence its name the maze maze with around five kilometres of PARs it's one of the biggest mazes in Britain another garden whose owners had a deep passion for horticulture is abundant in North Wales begun in 1875 for successive generations of the aberconway family created this garden from seeds and cuttings collected from expeditions in China North America Europe and Japan the upper part around the house consists of the splendid Italian style terraces and lawns laid out in the early 1900's the lower part is formed by River Valley and contains the wild garden in 1949 the National Trust took on the owners task of caring for these one of the most important gardens in Britain the house however remains with the aberconway family who still live here one of the most unusual gardens in the ownership of the National Trust lies on the picturesque shores of Strangford Lough in Northern Ireland mounts dirt what we see today is the inspiration of Edith vane tempest Stewart Marchioness of Londonderry who was dismayed by the plain lawns which once surrounded the house in the 1920s she set out to transform the estate sparing no expense and the result was one of the finest gardens in Europe taking advice from the foremost horticulturalists of the day she assembled an unrivaled collection of rare and exotic plants that still thrive in this mild microclimate the extravagant gardens are mainly Mediterranean in style but the best-known is distinctly Irish the Shamrock garden with his topiaries and red hand an ancient Gaelic symbol for this province of Ulster the Martian nest nurtured her green fairy land as she called it right up until the 1950s when she gave it to the trust for future generations to enjoy her beloved gardens are also her final resting place here in the family burial grounds beside the artificial lake [Music] today man Stewart is one of the most visited gardens in Northern Ireland and has been nominated as a world heritage site and garden still come to the trust to be protected in 1990 they took over the stunning grounds around Stowe school this is one of the most important landscape gardens in Europe and full of classical temples and other architectural Follies [Music] from the grand and ostentatious to the humble and understated the National Trust cares for a diverse range of houses these treasures tell the remarkable story of domestic architecture through the ages from any evil times up to the 19th century [Music] Batz Lee Clinton in warwickshire is one of the earliest of the Trust's houses it was built sometime in the 12 hundreds when rich and powerful families began moving away from cold dank castles the preference was for a new style of fortified manor house with a moat and gatehouse to discourage attackers like many early houses bats Lee Clinton has been rebuilt and modified at various times over the centuries [Music] but at item Moton Kent we see a manor house his importance lies in the fact that it's changed very little since it was built in the 13 20s and today it stands as a superb example of how such houses might have looked in the Middle Ages it was bequeathed to the National Trust in 1985 by an American businessman who had bought it about 30 years earlier [Music] the house is now a grade 1 listed building and parts of it are a scheduled ancient monument another country house that survived over five centuries is great Chalfie old manor in Wiltshire it appears much as it did in the 14 seventies when he was commissioned for the wealthy clothier Thomas droppin all the arts and crafts garden was introduced in the early 1900s and has since been restored by the National Trust to complement the restful and unpretentious quality of the house [Music] this is lower Brock Hampton Hall part of a farmed estate in Herefordshire built in the 14th century by successful wool producer it's a house that epitomizes the classic vision of an Old English country house complete with black-and-white half-timbered walls and quirky angles the house is now only partially surrounded by a moat and is entered by our charming timber-framed gatehouse built around the 1530s but perhaps the most glorious timber-framed shooter house is in Cheshire little Morton Hall as the fortunes of the Morton family grew so too did the size of the house and the final flourish was the amazing gatehouse and the third storey gallery it looks as though it's about to topple over but has stood for well over 400 years later in the 16th century Tudor England saw a new level of sophistication in house design influenced by the Italian Renaissance and this can be seen in the symmetrical layout of Melford Hall in Suffolk [Music] each half of the house is a mirror image of the other this symmetrical style reflected the wish of the Tudor family for order and harmony in their own lives as well as for the design of the house brick-making was also back last seen with the Romans hundreds of years earlier the bricks would have been made on-site and the works closed down after the house was finished the relative peace during Elizabeth the first reign also meant that no fortification was needed on the house but there are still small towers and turrets that seem a reminder of an earlier age of castles by the small village of walls thought by Col Stewart in Lincolnshire is a 17th century farmhouse whose reputation has been forever enhanced by one man Wallis Thorpe Manor is certainly a fine building but the National Trust may not have taken such an interest in it had it not been the childhood home of Sir Isaac Newton one of the greatest scientists who ever lived he was born in Woolsthorpe in 1642 and later spent time living and working here in the late 1660s when his usual workplace Cambridge University was closed as a precaution against the plague it said that the apple tree in the garden today is a descendant of the original under which Newton is supposed to a slept when an apple dropped on his head inspiring his groundbreaking theory of gravity the trust now owns houses from all architectural periods this is a park house on the South Downs built at the end of the 17th century in a Dutch style much favored by the great English architect Sir Christopher Wren here in the English county of Suffolk is one of the most unusual Georgian houses in the country it worth this is a property with eccentricities to match the family who lived here for so long built in 1795 it worth became the legacy of Frederick Harvey fourth Earl of Bristol the curved wings are a hundred and eighty meters wide but they're utterly dominated by the 30 meter high rotunda this unique house was built by a couple of English architects but inspired by the designs of the Italian Mario asparagi the Earl had spent much time traveling in Europe and wished his new home to be a suitable place to show off some of his collected treasures including paintings by velázquez and Titian sadly frederick harvey only lived until 1803 with a house still unfinished but his dream did live on and today the house is owned and administered by the National Trust from the 19th century his tins field in Somerset this striking house complete with its own Chapel was acquired by the National Trust in 2002 after a fundraising campaign to prevent private ownership and ensure it was open to the public tins field is one of the many fantasy houses created in the wake of the Industrial Revolution the vast fortunes that were being made led to an explosion in building and also a confusion of styles we're passed ideas were dusted off and reinterpreted by Victorian architects [Music] the medieval look of Tim's field known as Gothic Revival was one of a number of styles reinvented in a flamboyant manner and in the Buckinghamshire countryside it's possible to see a Victorian recreation of a 16th century French chateau [Music] this is WOD Stern Manor built in a neo-renaissance style for the Rothschild family it's built on top of a hill and a railway line was constructed to get building material up from the nearest road no expense was spared the last member of the rostra family to live at WOD stone was James - Rothschild since 1957 the house in its contents have been cared for by the National Trust today WOD stone manor is one of the Trust's most popular paid entry houses with almost 400,000 visitors each year and finally we end this aerial spectacle over the dramatic shores that shape the British Isles the National Trust cares for an amazing 10% of the coastline of England Wales and Northern Ireland that's over a thousand kilometres sadly many of these beautiful beaches rocks and cliffs that are so bound with Britain's history and heritage are at risk of erosion since 1965 the trust has pursued an unrelenting campaign to raise funds to buy endangered coastline and protected forever and today much of the proceeds are focused on daily maintenance and management of at-risk coastal sites Blakeney Point in Norfolk was the first stretch of coastline to be acquired by the trust as far back as 1912 it's a six kilometre spit of shingle that has slowly built up over centuries and its effect is to shelter one of the great unspoiled habitats of Britain the Blakeney National Nature Reserve covering some 1,200 hectares of broad sandy beaches mud flats and salt marshes much of the coast has been designated an area of outstanding natural beauty it's the breeding ground for large colonies of seabirds at a great place for spotting common and gray seals along the south coast of England is a hundred and fifty kilometer stretch known as the Jurassic Coast it's the only place where a hundred and eighty-five million years of the Earth's history are revealed in the cliff faces making one of the most important earth science sites in the world the Jurassic Coast was awarded World Heritage status in 2001 ranking it alongside other natural wonders such as the Great Barrier Reef and the Grand Canyon layers of rock that make up the cliffs contained countless fossils belonging to long extinct species of plants and animals from tropical sea creatures such as ammonites to spawn well in dinosaurs ahead is Golden Cap the tour is cliff on the south coast of England it's almost 200 meters high and gets its name from a sandstone color of the rock from the top walkers can enjoy spectacular views of the Jurassic Coast without doubt this is the most iconic natural stretch of coastline in England these dazzling white cliffs are the so-called Seven Sisters for the seven cliff peaks they've been in the care of the National Trust since 1931 the chalk was formed up to a hundred million years ago when like it's made by the Jurassic Coast it was submerged in a tropical sea it was gradually pushed up and rising sea levels cut into the chalk forming the English Channel and creating this stunning range of undulating cliffs and on the northeast corner of Northern Ireland is a natural monument whose wonder has been drawing visitors for centuries the Giant's Causeway these dark stone steps were formed 60 million years ago when molten lava from a volcanic eruption cooled and fractured into these 40 thousand odd columns of basalt rock but here in the land of myth and legend most people find an alternative version of events altogether more entertaining legend has it that the giant's causway once extended all the way to Scotland but was torn up by a panicked giant as he fled from a fight such stories have always added extra charm to this magical place and recognising the uniqueness of the area the National Trust took over the site in 1961 and it has ever since done what it does best to put people in touch with nature and the heritage of Northern Ireland Wales and England each year the National Trust's wide open spaces are visited over a hundred million times and its houses gardens and castles almost 50 million times it's a great testament to the inspiration of its three founding members over a hundred years ago they believed in the human need for beauty for places to escape to and reconnect with nature and history to bring everlasting delight forever and for everyone [Music] [Music]
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Channel: Real Royalty
Views: 557,944
Rating: 4.8707595 out of 5
Keywords: real royalty, real royalty channel, british royalty, royalty around the world, royal history, full documentary, documentaries, full length documentaries, tv shows - topic, bbc documentary, channel 4 documentary, documentary history, british history, kings and queens, princes and princesses, dukes and duchesses, murder, politics, execution, crown, england, prince andrew interview, prince william and prince harry, princess diana, the queen, the crown, the crown season 3
Id: RMywrmI1GFM
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Length: 51min 51sec (3111 seconds)
Published: Sun Apr 26 2020
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