Victorian Warwick and Warwickshire was dominated by coal and wood burning, and was a rather sooty and dirty place. Jon Radley tells us more #ClimateMatters
Here at Warwickshire Museum and Heritage & Culture Warwickshire, we are putting a spotlight on the special objects in our collections. #ClimateMatters
The importance of bees as insect pollinators is being increasingly recognised. Meanwhile, have you wondered what constituted a medieval status symbol? Jon Radley tells us more #ClimateMatters
How often do we even notice stones or pebbles around us? Find out what momentous secrets they hold. Jon Radley tells us more. #ClimateMatters
1 Scheduled as Warwickshire Monument No 8.
4 The cloisters were N of the Church and did not adjoin the walls of the transept and choir as usual, there being an ...
Cloisters and other domestic buildings of Maxstoke Priory which are Medieval in date. The priory is situated 100m north of Church End Farm, Maxtoke.
1 Leland records a ‘poore bridge of tymber’ which was replaced by Sir Hugh of Clopton (d 1497) by this great and sumptuous bridge. It has fourteen great arches of ...
Clopton Bridge, which dates back to the Medieval period. It was built in the 15th century to replace the earlier timber bridge. This bridge was made of stone with 14 segmental pointed arches. It was widened in 1814. It crosses the Avon at Stratford on Avon.
1 Cloptongrove appeared in deeds dated to c.1279-80 as an area which included messuages, land, meadows and pastures but reference in 1604 to a grove called Clopton Grove suggests that ...
Site of a medieval wood called Clopton Grove.
1 16th/17th century house renovated late 17th and early 19th century. Split into flats in 1982.
2 Attractive house with mid 17th century facade concealing an older structure, possibly built when ...
Clopton House, which was originally built during Post Medieval period. The house is 250m north east of Gilbert Close, Stratford-upon-Avon.