1 Fragment of Medieval decorated floor tile from here presented to Museum. This site square with trees around it, a raised area. ‘They always say there used to be an ...
The possible site of a Medieval building, the evidence for which is an earthwork. A Medieval floor tile was found at the site which lies 400m south west of Furlong Pit Spinney.
1 Pipewell Abbey held land at Newbold in 1291. In 1321 the monks leased a grange to John de Merynton. The hall at this time was in ruin, but there ...
The possible site of a Medieval grange, a farm or estate associated with a religious order. The site of the grange is suggested by documentary evidence. It was located 100m north of the church at Newbold on Avon.
2 Possible ring ditch shows on aerial photographs.
A ring ditch, possibly of Neolithic or Bronze Age date, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 1km north east of Clifford Chambers.
2 Probable ring ditch shows as cropmark. This could represent a round house, but appears to form a complete circle and is fairly regular.
3 Site no 69 in survey.
5 Scheduled ...
The site of a possible ring ditch dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is located 900m west of the church, Wellesbourne.
1 A corner and two sides of a triple ditched enclosure. The site is an enigma, for the inner ditch does not exhibit as large a radius as one would ...
The site of a possible Roman fort, comprising a triple ditched enclosure which is visible on aerial photographs. The site is located 1km north east of Clifford Chambers. Alternative interpretations of the site suggest that this was a Roman settlement.
1 A corner and two sides of a triple ditched enclosure. The site is an enigma, for the inner ditch does not exhibit as large a radius as one would ...
The site of a possible Roman settlement, comprising a triple ditched enclosure which is visible on aerial photographs. The site is located 1km north east of Clifford Chambers. Alternative interpretations of the site suggest that this was a Roman fort.
1 Site on S bank of the River Dene in a small field. A scatter of stone in the S field is about 20m by 10m in diameter. Finds of ...
The site of a possible villa dating to the Roman period where pottery, animal bone, brick and tile have been found. It was situated 900m north west of Butlers Marston.
1 Rous and Dugdale indicate shrinkage but there has been resettlement.
2 Examination of aerial photographs shows the modern village to be bounded by ridge and furrow.
The site of a possible shrunken settlement at Little Wolford dating to the Medieval period. Aerial photographs show the modern village is surrounded by Medieval ridge and furrow.
1 ‘Brick Kiln Spinney’ marked.
2 The site retains the same name on current maps. There are no surface indications.
The site of brickworks and tile works dating to the Imperial period. They are marked on a map of 1766. No surface evidence remains, and the location is immediately south of Hares Parlour, Stoneleigh.
1 W of Newbold on Avon church and churchyard are the remains of earthworks, hardly discernible unless specially pointed out, being the site, as it is supposed, of one of ...
The possible site of a Medieval castle. The site is located 100m west of the church at Newbold on Avon.
1 The S boundary of the parish at this point is the long ridge called Grove Hill. Near a spring called Caldwell in Grove Hill was the Hermitage which Ralph ...
The possible site of a Medieval hermitage is suggested by documentary evidence. The site is located 500m south of Alcock's Arbour.
Possible site of holy well.
1 ‘Holy Well Field’.
2 ‘Holy Well Field’, ‘Further Holy Well Field’, ‘Lower Holy Well Field’.
3 The present owner states that he has never come across ...
The site of a possible holy well of unknown date which is known from documentary evidence. Two maps from 1672 and 1840 refer to Holy Well Field. It was located 650m south of the church, Ufton.
1 A long extract from an alleged court roll of 1527 is included in Dugdale. It asserts that St John’s Well was a place of pilgrimage, ‘St John’s Bath’ and ...
The possible site of St Johns Well, a holy well, used for healing people during the Medieval period. The site is located 100m north of the church at Honiley.
1 Grass field between the church and stream is very uneven. Mounds indicate one large house and a number of smaller ones. On the Ladbroke map of 1638 the field ...
The site of a possible manor house dating to the Post Medieval period which survives as an earthwork. The Ladbroke map of 1638 marks the site as a 'Farm Yard' with a farm house. It is situated 100m south east of the church, Ladbroke.
1 Ryton Bridge is modern but there was an earlier bridge on the same site although the name given to that seen by Leland and mentioned by Dugdale was ‘Finford’ ...
The possible site of a Medieval bridge. The bridge may have stood on the site of the modern Ryton Bridge, 500m south east of Toll Bar End.
1 At the SE corner of Curdworth churchyard was a Medieval cross-shaft with a modern head and set in a modern base. In 1953 the rector recalled that this ...
The site of a cross which was situated 20m south of the Church of St. Peter and St. Nicholas, Curdworth. The cross shaft is Medieval in date but the base and head are modern.
1 At the foot of the hill on which King John’s Castle (PRN 1183) stood, there is a well called King John’s Well, and a little way from it is ...
The site of 'King John's Well', a well dating from the Medieval period. It was marked on an Ordnance Survey map of 1955, but can no longer be seen. The location is 150m north west of King John's Castle.
1 There was a mill at Hampton in 1086. It is also recorded in 1182 and 1299. Four mills are mentioned in a conveyance of the manor in 1678; these ...
A watermill was recorded at Hampton Lucy in the Domesday survey, and later documents refer to up to four mills. The present mill on a site, which may date back to the Medieval period, is still in use and is situated just above the bridge.
1 Site of possible minster church, Ufton.
At time of Domesday, the church was recorded as having 2 priests, often a key indicator of minster status.
Site of possible minster church, on or near the site of the present day church of St Michael.
1 Moat marked.
2 Described as a fishpond. Osier and reed-filled, it attains a maximum depth of 0.9m.
3 The pond has been entirely filled in by the present owner to build ...
The site of a possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building. It is no longer visible as an earthwork but was situated 100m north west of St John the Baptist's Church at Honiley.
1 A probable moat is visible at the above grid reference on aerial photographs. The site was under crop and could not be investigated.
2 No reference could be found on ...
The site of a possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building. The moat is visible on aerial photographs. A geophysical survey and trial trenching have taken place at the site, which is located 200m west of the Police Headquarters at Leek Wootton
1 Earthworks indicative of a moated site appear on air photographs. 1968: The area has been completely flattened and no remains were seen. Examination of aerial photographs suggests this to ...
The site of a moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. Aerial photographs and excavation prior to earth tipping suggested a Medieval date. It was situated at the south east end of the Recreation Ground at Stratford on Avon.
1 Moat Farm marked.
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the possible site of a Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It is situated 200m south of Hillmorton Village Cross.
1 Possible minster church, Stoneleigh.
Bassett suggests that Stoneleigh’s church, St. Mary’s, may have been an old minster, and says that there were at least two priests serving it in 1086 ...
Site of possible old minster church pre-Conquest on or close to the present church of St Mary's.
2 Two probable ring ditches show as cropmarks.
3 Cropmarks associated with the settlement at Tiddington include a small circular ditch to the east of the present Tiddington village, and a ...
The site of two possible ring ditches dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age period, which show up as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site is 400m east of New Street, Tiddington.