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28/06
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29/06
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30/06
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01/07
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02/07
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03/07
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04/07
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05/07
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06/07
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07/07
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08/07
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09/07
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10/07
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11/07
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12/07
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15/07
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16/07
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19/07
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22/07
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25/07
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26/07
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27/07
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28/07
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29/07
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31/07
19 Jul
When new evidence comes to light, Jennifer and paranormal medium Stephanie Bingham head to Massachusetts to investigate one of America's most infamous cold cases - the Lizzie Borden murders.
19 Jul
The ancient city of Petra, hidden in the barren desert of southern Jordan, has captured the global imagination; what could have led such a grand and elaborate city to be abandoned?
19 Jul
The Mughals created the most dazzling empire India had ever seen - from the Taj Mahal to intricate miniatures of court life - but did they bring civilisation to India, or tear it apart in the process?
19 Jul
There are few places with as much of an outsize influence as the small British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar; Bettany explores its caves, the Garrison Library, and its underground pleasure gardens.
19 Jul
Christopher Clark travels through Jordan, via Persepolis, to Isfahan in Iran; he follows the trails of the Persians, Greeks, Romans and Nabateans up to the great Islamic colonisation.
19 Jul
Don Wildman examines a scorecard connected to a figure skating rivalry, an underwater microphone which detected an unlikely WWII enemy and the skull of a tiny animal behind a decades-old canine curse.
19 Jul
Like it or not, warfare, conflict and the need to explore the unknown is the catalyst for human progress in technology. The fact is that mankind is at its most inventive when it's being destructive.
19 Jul
Established within a 19th-century palace, the museum features artefacts from excavations carried out throughout Tunisia dating from the nation's Carthaginian, Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman periods.
19 Jul
The Mughals created the most dazzling empire India had ever seen - from the Taj Mahal to intricate miniatures of court life - but did they bring civilisation to India, or tear it apart in the process?
19 Jul
Christopher Clark visits some of the diverse and historic UNESCO World Heritage Sites in India and tries to answer the question as to what unites the 1.4 billion people on the subcontinent.
19 Jul
Jennifer and ufologist Ryan Sprague investigate an unexplained crash in Roswell in the summer of 1947; the investigation could reveal one of the greatest government cover-ups of the 20th century.
19 Jul
See the origins of the Celts in the Alps of Central Europe, and relive the moment of first contact with the Romans in a pitched battle just north of Rome, that left the Imperial City devastated.
19 Jul
Angkor Wat is a 900-year-old temple covering more than 400 acres across the Cambodian jungle; it was completed in just 30 years. How did an early society with little technology build this monument?
19 Jul
The Tower of Babel is one of the most famous stories in the Bible, but was the structure that incurred the wrath of God and spawned a multitude of languages that exist around the world actually real?
19 Jul
Built on the shores of the Nile, Luxor is home to the greatest monuments of the New Kingdom: the Karnak complex, the temple of Denderah, and the million-year-old castle of Ramesses II.
19 Jul
Ortis finds out about powerful hurricanes and how they carve a deadly path through the Triangle, and Rick investigates stalagmites in Bermuda's caves that could predict hurricanes in the future.
19 Jul
In Turkey, investigators are unlocking remarkable new secrets that are transforming our understanding of the past; they're excavating the ruins of a city that many believe to be Troy itself.
19 Jul
Christopher Clark travels through Jordan, via Persepolis, to Isfahan in Iran; he follows the trails of the Persians, Greeks, Romans and Nabateans up to the great Islamic colonisation.
19 Jul
When new evidence comes to light, Jennifer and paranormal medium Stephanie Bingham head to Massachusetts to investigate one of America's most infamous cold cases - the Lizzie Borden murders.
19 Jul
During the first century BC, how did the Gallic warrior Vercingetorix unite the Celtic front and challenge Julius Caesar in an epic battle that would shape the future of Europe?
19 Jul
New York consumes one billion gallons of water a day; ensuring a constant flow of clean water has always been an engineering challenge. A great leap in human ingenuity allowed civilisations to expand.
19 Jul
The ancient city of Petra, hidden in the barren desert of southern Jordan, has captured the global imagination; what could have led such a grand and elaborate city to be abandoned?
19 Jul
The Mughals created the most dazzling empire India had ever seen - from the Taj Mahal to intricate miniatures of court life - but did they bring civilisation to India, or tear it apart in the process?
19 Jul
There are few places with as much of an outsize influence as the small British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar; Bettany explores its caves, the Garrison Library, and its underground pleasure gardens.
19 Jul
Christopher Clark explores the cultural wealth of Southeast Asia - the temple complex of Angkor Wat in Cambodia and the old royal cities of Hue in Vietnam and Luang Prabang in Laos.
19 Jul
Christopher Clark travels through Jordan, via Persepolis, to Isfahan in Iran; he follows the trails of the Persians, Greeks, Romans and Nabateans up to the great Islamic colonisation.
Brings history to life with captivating documentaries that take a fresh, modern look into history. We take our viewers on a powerful journey through time with intelligent, well researched programmes that entertain and challenge their minds. The focus is on european history, revealing the secrets of the past and how it defines us today.
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