The Country House Revealed
The families of six of Britain's greatest, private country houses throw open their doors and release their secrets to historian Dan Cruickshank. No hat-box or trunk is left unturned as Dan teases out each home's story.

South Wraxall
South Wraxall Manor was built by a family with a fascinating history - the Longs. From lowly origins as descendants of a livestock rustler, they rose through the Tudor period to become one of the most powerful dynasties in England.

Kincross
Dan explores the stunning late 17th-century property, Kinross House. Dan is granted privileged access into the world of architect Sir William Bruce, who changed the Scottish landscape by building the first fully classical house in the country.

Easton Neston
Easton Neston's construction is just one of the secrets hidden behind its elegant facade - the building has had a colorful history. In modern times, it has hosted a Formula One racing team and it is now the headquarters of a global fashion brand

Wentworth Woodhouse
Wentworth Woodhouse was once one of the most powerful places on earth. But today Wentworth Woodhouse is something of a mystery. Few people know the house, and fewer still have witnessed its palatial grandeur at firsthand.

Clandeboye
Clandeboye House and estate was, like the empire itself, an epic creation - but unlike the empire, it still endures, a vignette of a now almost forgotten age and surprisingly little altered since Lord Dufferin died in 1902.

Marshcourt
Marshcourt is one of the most extraordinary buildings in Britain. Built as an Edwardian pleasure palace, with its interior still miraculously intact, it evokes the decadence of that vanished age, like no other.
