Tony Robinson and the Team visit Chenies Manor in Buckinghamshire to discover what the house would have looked like when Henry VIII stayed there around 1530.
Tony Robinson and the Team travel to Alfoldean in Sussex to uncover a mansio, an official Roman coaching inn, located on Stane Street, which these days is better known as the A29.
The Team have been invited to Applecross in north-west Scotland to excavate a broch; a monumental stone tower that is one of the largest Iron Age structures in Britain.
The Team visit the sleepy Oxfordshire village of Islip in search of a medieval chapel dedicated to Edward the Confessor. The dig results surprise even the most seasoned archaeologists... [S]
The Team travels to the South Downs in Sussex to investigate a Stone Age landscape that includes 6000-year-old flint mines and a possible Neolithic settlement. [S]
The Team travel to the Isle of Sheppey in Kent to investigate the remains of Queenborough Castle, the last royal castle to be built in the medieval period. [S]
The Team travels to the Yorkshire Dales to meet Chris and Barbara Bradley on their farm and try to solve a challenging archaeological jigsaw puzzle that dates back more than 900 years. [S]
Tony Robinson and the Team descend on the orchards of Kent to search for the lost Anglo-Saxon palace of Eastry, and discover not one but two likely contenders. [S]
The Team have been invited by Dutch archaeologists to help rescue a 35-metre-long, perfectly preserved Roman barge that once sailed the river Rhine. [S]
In Surrey's stockbroker belt stands Wayneflete Tower, all that remains of a grand early Tudor palace. Can the Team uncover enough to tell the story of the whole site? [S]
The Team visits a Manchester car park to uncover the city's first cotton mill, built by one of the fathers of the Industrial Revolution, Richard Arkwright. [S]
A colony of moles keeps unearthing pieces of mosaic floor in a Cotswold field. Could these excavations be linked to an important nearby Roman villa? [S]
Tony Robinson and the Team undertake one of their most challenging digs, investigating extensive Roman remains discovered in the thick undergrowth of Cambridgeshire's Bedford Purlieus Wood. [S]
Tony Robinson and the Team climb a remote Herefordshire hill to investigate a huge prehistoric site. Was Dinmore Hill once a vast Iron Age hill fort? [S]
A quiet Cambridgeshire village gets the full Time Team treatment as Tony Robinson and the digging team hunt for remains of what is believed to be one of Britain's biggest Roman villas. [S]
Tony Robinson and the Team visit the picture-postcard-perfect Oxfordshire town of Burford to investigate the location of a medieval hospital in the stunning grounds of Burford Priory. [S]
A park behind Portsmouth's Tudor naval defences is the site of a hospital built by monks in 1212, but just a small part of it remains. The Team try to find out where the rest of it was.
Tony Robinson and the Team find themselves lost in the mists of a Welsh forest as they investigate the remains of Tregruk, one of the biggest castles ever built in Britain.
Time Team investigate Cunetio, a lost Roman town in Wiltshire, where, in the 1970s, the Team's Phil Harding was one of the archaeologists who investigated a find of 55,000 coins.
Tony Robinson and the Team piece together a blow-by-blow account of the bloody history of Hopton Castle, where a Royalist force laid siege to a Parliamentarian garrison in the Civil War.
In Sutton Courtenay, Tony Robinson and the Team investigate a set of buildings once occupied by Anglo-Saxon royalty, and uncover the biggest Saxon building ever discovered in Britain.
Tony and the Team examine the remains of the world's first purpose-built prisoner of war camp, at Norman Cross in Cambridgeshire, built in 1797 to incarcerate 7000 Napoleonic troops.
Tony Robinson and the Team squeeze into wetsuits as they examine the discovery of more than 2000 high-quality Roman finds, many of them right in the middle of the fast-flowing River Tees. [S]
Tony and the Team travel to the Scottish island of Mull, to investigate what they hope are the remains of a chapel set up by St Columba when he brought Christianity to the north of Britain. [S]
Tony Robinson and the Team search for a lost sacristy in Westminster Abbey. It's a dig complicated by centuries of later building work, and one that throws up major surprises. [S]
Tony and the Team celebrate their 200th dig by unearthing the first stone henge to be discovered in Britain for a century, as they visit a remote valley on Dartmoor. [S]
Tony and the Team investigate what appears to be a high-status Anglo-Saxon burial ground, explore the unique way the Anglo-Saxons celebrated their dead, and find some very fine jewellery. [S]
Tony and the Team probe the earliest days of the Industrial Revolution, investigating a complex that produced iron and steel in the unlikely surroundings of tranquil County Durham woodland. [S]
The Team examine an ancient moat that may have surrounded an early Welsh chapel, a Roman fort, a fortified cattle enclosure or the ancestral home of one of Wales's most important families. [S]
The Team carefully dig through the graveyard at the historic St Kyneburgha's church in Castor, Cambridgeshire, in search of one of the largest Roman structures ever built in Britain. [S]
Tony Robinson and the Team investigate a German anti-aircraft battery built during the Nazis' five-year occupation of Jersey, revealing a shocking story of slave labour and starvation. [S]
Tony Robinson and the Team visit Jersey to investigate the origins of Mont Orgueil Castle, a fortress that came to symbolise the Channel Islands' bond with Britain. [S]
Tony Robinson and the Team investigate the site of a Somerset watermill, which may have milled flour since Domesday. The Team find many millstreams, and make a surprise discovery. [S]
Groby Old Hall in Leicestershire may appear run down now but it once belonged to one of the most powerful families in Britain. The Team help its new owners to discover its history. [S]
The Team dig at High Ham in Somerset to uncover a series of mosaics. First found 150 years ago, the mosaics have been out of bounds because the land has been in constant use by the army.
Tony Robinson adjudicates the debate to find Time Team's greatest discovery in an episode featuring fine jewellery, gold coins, intricate mosaics, and extraordinary archaeological fakery. [S]
Tony and the Team head for the fringes of Sherwood Forest, where residents believe some impressive ruins may have played a part in the ancient tales of Robin Hood and Bad King John. [S]
The Team rip up the pristine lawns of Paul Whight's stately Essex home, searching for the secrets of its illustrious former owners: the De Veres, who included the dissolute Earl of Oxford.
A family of Somerset farmers invite Tony and the Team to answer a question that's been puzzling them for generations: was there ever a castle on top of the hill they call Castle Hill?
Tony and the Team help archaeologists from Cardiff University to examine a discovery at Caerleon Roman legionary fort in Wales. Did this military outpost also serve another purpose?
Swansea led the world in copper smelting 200 years ago, but today there's almost nothing to be seen of this unique heritage. So Tony and the Team investigate one of the first copper works.
Tony Robinson and the Team explore an unusual promontory on a beautiful stretch of the Northumbrian coast, where mysterious fragments of human bone have been found.
Tony Robinson and the Team dig in the heart of historic Newmarket, in search of the remains of King Charles II's racing stables, arguably the first in the world dedicated to the sport.
Tony and the Team search for the remains of Kenfig, a thriving town in south Wales that disappeared 500 years ago. Can they find it beneath 10 metres of sand and reveal what happened to it?
Coastal erosion has eaten away most of the Suffolk village of Dunwich. Tony Robinson and the Team examine Dunwich's origins, including using sonar to find out what lies beneath the sea.
South Shields is well known for its Roman fort at the end of Hadrian's Wall, but the Team are there in an attempt to uncover the large Roman military cemetery that must be nearby. [S]
Time Team fan Frances Davies may have led the Team to an amazing discovery in her field in Skipsea, East Yorkshire: an entire Norman village that's lost to the records. [S]