Cemetery with shrubbery, topiary yews, clipped hollies and a number of funerary monuments. Recommendation for inclusion in theLocal List by Lovie.
An Anglo Saxon cemetery dating to the Migration period was discovered during an archaeological excavation. It contained at least 116 burials and 24 cremations. Finds included spears, knives, brooches and beads. The site is located south of Wasperton.
The remains of a rare 'pipe' burial, dating to the Roman period, were found 300m south west of Barn Farm.
A cemetery dating from the Imperial period which is located on Brunswick Street, Whitnash.Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
Gravestone fragments of Post Medieval date were found during archaeological work. Fragments of carved stone from the Medieval period were also found. The finds were made at the cemetery of the church in Tredington.
Late 19th century, greatly extended. Lodge, double chaped, curved paths.Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie
A mortuary chapel dating to the Imperial period. It was built on the site of a Medieval chapel, and is situated 300m south east of Little Spring Coppice.
The site of an Anglo Saxon cemetery dating to the Migration period which was discovered in 1872. Many finds including brooches, amber beads, a sword and shield bosses were found with the human remains. It was located 500m west of Leafield Bridge.
The site of a cemetery containing Anglo Saxon cremation burials and inhumations dating to the Migration or Early Medieval periods. Brooches, tweezers, and buckles were amongst the objects found with the burials. The cemetery was situated to the east of Baginton.
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.