 I'm Helen Cuckall, the Governor's Office of the Society of Antiquaries of London, and if our Christmas was willing to bring me something for my stocking from the society's collections, I think I'd choose the Bodworth Cross. I first saw it probably in about 1987 when I first visited the Antiquaries, so I've been seeing it on and off for nearly 30 years. Now that I've worked for it, I actually pass it in the hall every day of my working life, and I pass it every time I go into a committee meeting in the council room, and it sets out all sorts of interesting trains of thought. Obviously at Christmas time, primarily because it's a, obviously, Christian symbolism, although that's really more appropriate to Easter, but nevertheless, it has a slight aspect of bling about it with the remains of the bronze gins underneath. It has all sorts of connections with the Antiquaries, not only the founding of it as an early archaeological artifact on the Bodworth field, but then that links in with the two paintings of Richard III in our meeting room, and then I think about the finding of Richard III's body in the carpark in Leicester in 2012, and then the display here of his reconstructed head at a press conference, and then the burial of Richard III's body in 2015, and that all brings together very new key, the historic nature of the society's collections, but they're still relevant to the conservation and research in the 19th century.