The 16-inch porcelain vase, which dates back to the Qing dynasty, was originally brought onto the BBC's Going for a Song in the 1970s. The antiques expert at the time dismissed it as a "very ...
A rare Qing Dynasty porcelain vase, once dismissed as a cleverly crafted imitation, sold for £53 million after languishing for 40 years in a British family's attic. Crafted around 1740 ...
The porcelain vase dates back to the Qing dynasty in the mid-eighteenth century. But none of this rich history was discovered when it made an appearance on the 1970s BBC antique series ...
The exquisite piece, dating back to around 1740, was discovered to have been crafted for the fifth emperor of the Qing dynasty. The Qianlong Vase, which had been in the family for generations ...
Crafted circa 1740, the vase was made for the fifth emperor of China's Qing dynasty. It had come into the family's possession through an ancestor who had travelled extensively abroad. The Qianlong ...
The vase was crafted around 1740 for the fifth emperor of the Qing dynasty in China. It had been handed down through the family by a relative who travelled abroad. The item had likely been ...
A vase initially dismissed by a BBC antiques ... made for the fifth emperor of China's Qing dynasty and had been passed down through generations by a globe-trotting ancestor.
The vase crafted around 1740 for the Qing dynasty's fifth emperor in China, which had been passed down through a family by a globetrotting relative, was initially valued at about £1million ...
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