1 Field survey of the interior of Nadbury Camp was undertaken in 1981. 31 fragments of late Iron Age/early Roman pottery were found including one possible ‘Belgic’ vessel. In addition ...
Findspot - Many fragments of Late Iron Age and Roman pottery were found during the excavation of Nadbury Camp.
1 Roman pottery scatter at the above grid reference.
2 No record of this site could be found in Birmingham Museum Sites and Finds record.
Find spot - a scatter of Roman pottery sherds was found near Oakley Wood Road, Bishop's Tatchbrook.
1 A sherd of Romano British pottery has been brought in from Offchurch.
2 The piece of pottery came from ‘a ditch of some sort in the garden of the paddock’.
Findspot - a pottery sherd dating to the Roman period was found 300m south east of the church, Offchurch.
1 Meeting Lane Bowling Green. Roman pottery found.
2 Noted.
Findspot - Roman pottery was found at Meeting Lane, Alcester.
1 Shotteswell: a fragment of marble sarcophagus of late 2nd or early 3rd century date found during field walking. Whether this represents a Romano-British or a recent loss is not ...
Findspot - the fragment of a Roman marble sarcophagus was found 300m south east of Langcomb Covert.
1 A curious monument is built up in a wall adjoining the rectory, W of the church. This is a much mutilated torso, 1.06m long by 0.5m broad, with face ...
Findspot - a Roman statue, possibly of the god Mars, was found. The exact location of the findspot is unknown but it probably came from Alcester.
1 Skull of man aged 30-40 found when removing soil from front of Colbourne House. The soil was redeposited and the skull had possibly come from elsewhere.
Findspot - A human skull of unknown date was found 200m south of the church, Ufton, although it had probably been transported here from another location.
1 A lead object was found at the above grid reference. The object has possible impressions of grain of wooden mould.
2 Drawing.
Findspot - a lead object of unknown date was found 100m south west of Church Farm.
1 A stone coffin for a child, dug up in Ufton churchyard. This was made of local sandstone, 1m long and 0.33m wide. The exterior was roughly formed, somewhat D-shaped, ...
Findspot - a stone coffin of unknown date was found in Ufton churchyard.
By the 1960s Finn Shoes were producing some 10,000 pairs of these shoes a week from its factory in Nuneaton. According to accounts provided by the British Board of Trade, ...
Many of the thatched cottages in Polesworth burned down due to the nature of their construction including Little Jim’s cottage. The cottage on this page was near the Chetwynd Arms ...
Intelligence was received at Coventry on Monday morning about twenty minutes to eleven that Baginton Hall was on fire. All that the messenger, a groom named Everitt, could say, for ...
On 23 December 1911, the miners worked their last shift before the Christmas holidays. A small staff worked to feed the pit ponies and keep the ventilation fan and pumps ...
It’s Christmas Eve, 1906. Humber have long had a reputation for their cycles, being pioneers in the field and being renowned for their quality. Having moved into automobile manufacture in ...
Bonfire Night is one custom that has featured consistently over the centuries since the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. On occasion a focus for religious tension, and waxing and waning in ...
The bear has now been moved to his new place at the entrance to the museum, so that he can welcome all our visitors.
The first Original Levi Store in the UK opened at 51 the Parade (now the Vodaphone shop) Leamington in 1987. I was 17 at the time and had a Saturday ...
The said William Dilke hath been pleased to forbear any further Prosecution, upon his being become bound not to offend in ye like manner for ye future.
The bond dates from ...
1 The landscaping of the Hall (PRN 6196) included a rectangular fishpond, with a V-shaped feeder running down the hill side.
2 Plan.
A Post Medieval fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. It is visible as an earthwork, and is situated on the east side of Fenny Compton.
1 There is a waterfilled pond on the E side of the deserted settlement. Earthworks on the N and W side of the pond may suggest that it was once ...
A fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish which dates from the Medieval/Post Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated to the west of Watergall Bridge.
1 Pond marked.
2 This was restored in the 20th century and is now used for breeding carp. The weir to the fishpond is original.
3 Photographed in 1977.
A fishpond that originally dated from the Medieval period and survives as an earthwork. It would have been used for the breeding and storage of fish. The fishpond is situated 700m north west of Monwode Lea.
1 A pond marked.
2 The fishpond is thought to be of Post Medieval date.
A fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish, which dates to the Post Medieval period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and is visible as an earthwork. It is situated at Icehouse Spinney, Churchover.
1 Fishpond marked.
2 S of Butlers Marston Rectory. Dog-leg shaped. The main part is about 60m x 15m, is rectangular and runs roughly N-S. A sluice in the W bank ...
A Medieval fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish, and marked on an estate map of 1732. It survives as an earthwork, and is situated 200m south of the church at Butlers Marston.
1 A fishpond complex centred at the above grid reference.
3 1976: An exploratory excavation confirmed the existence of a moat under one of the ponds (PRN 5305).
Medieval fishponds used for the breeding and storage of fish. They are visible as earthworks and part excavation has shown that a moat lies beneath one of the ponds. They are situated 100m north east of the church at Ilmington.