1 Tumulus marked.
2 ?Barrow, now destroyed. On Lammas Hill.
3 Excavated 1950s, B Hobley, windmill.
4 This feature was excavated by Coventry Museum who concluded that it was a windmill mound.
5 Scheduling ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow would date to the Bronze Age. The site is located on Lammas Hill. The results of an excavation in the 1950s concluded that it was actually a windmill mound.
1 Series of about twenty burials with late Iron Age pottery, dug 1949; pair of bronze bracelets on wrists of one inhumation. The Iron Age metalwork of greatest interest is ...
A cemetery containing burials of Late Iron Age and Roman date. The site is located south of Stretton on Fosse.
Find of a Bronze Age axe.
1 Late Bronze Age bronze socketed axe, three ribs. In a private collection.
Find
2 A pit alignment, associated with linear features and an enclosure, shows on air photographs.
3 Dating to late Bronze Age to late Iron Age.
A pit alignment of Prehistoric date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 500m south east of Woodford Lodge.
1 A silver coin of the Dobunni was found in Motslowhill Spinney. Whereabouts of find not known.
2 No traces of occupation found on ground when site was visited.
3 This is ...
Findspot - an Iron Age coin was found 100m north west of Motslowhill Spinney.
2 Probable pit alignment shows as a crop mark. On one photograph it appears as a continuous ditch, but on another individual pits can be distinguished in two fields.
3 Date ...
The site of a possible pit alignment is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The site lies 200m north of Hinckley Road.
1 There is an undoubted sepulchral mound. It has no encircling ditch.
2 The labourers employed missed the deposit and a few fragments only of ancient pottery were found. 1968: This ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound of earth that was usually built to conceal a burial. It probably dates to the Bronze Age and is situated 500m south west of Coton House. Alternatively, the mound may be a windmill mound.
1 Gibbet Hill was called ‘Loesby’s Gibbet’ in 1729 and is to be identified with Pelgrimslowe of c1350.
2 Bloxam quotes from a letter of E Ashmole to Dugdale (1657) which ...
The possible site of a Bronze Age round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The site is suggested by documentary evidence. It site is located 100m east of Gibbet Hill.
2 Pit alignment, probably of Prehistoric date, shows on air photographs.
4 Noted by Ordnance Survey.
5 Date narrowed down to between the late Bronze Age and the late Iron Age.
6 Aerial ...
A linear feature, possibly a pit alignment, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photogrpahs. It is situated 600m north of Bubbenhall.
4 Probable prehistoric pit alignment, which cuts off a bend in the Avon, shows on aerial photographs.
5 The field is flat and featureless, no surface material.
6 Dating revised to between ...
Aerial photographs suggest that this is probably the site of a Prehistoric pit alignment, pits set at intervals along a single line or parallel lines. It is situated 200m south of Rock Spinney at Bubbenhall.
1 British coin from Stoneleigh.
2 Iron Age coin found at Stoneleigh. Evans type 1:6 AV stater of the Dobunni, inscribed CORIO.
3 Coin lost.
4 Noted by Ordnance Survey.
Findspot - an Iron Age coin known as a stater was found near Church Lane, Stoneleigh.
Find of a Bronze Age gold object.
1 Bronze Age gold armlet. Obtained in Warwick 1868. Ends slightly expanded. In Evans Collection, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
2 Possibly of local provenance.
Find
1 A ?Bronze Age flint was found in Cocksparrow Street, Warwick and kept by the finder.
Findspot - a flint artefact dating to the Bronze Age were found 600m north west of Warwick Castle.
1 Stone implement from Polesworth. Bartlett in 1791 described and figured (somewhat crudely) a barbed and tanged arrowhead.
2 Noted.
Find spot - a barbed and tanged arrowhead of Bronze Age date was found 60m west of Market Street, Polesworth.
1 Pit alignment running parallel to river.
3 Pit alignment shows on air photographs. The grid reference given by reference 1 is inaccurate.
4 Date narrowed down to late Bronze Age to ...
Cropmarks on aerial photographs show a pit alignment. It runs roughly north to south in a field 140m east from The Saxon Mill public house.
1 Six pottery sherds, two rim and four body, hand made, organic tempering, possilby Bronze Age were found.
Findspot - a number of pottery sherds was found at Waddon Hill.
1 Stray find of a knobbed terret ring in 1988-9. Method of recovery unrecorded. Grid reference given of SP38178727
Find of an Iron Age terret ring, or chariot fitting, to the northwest of Weston in Arden
1 A Celtic stater found in 1997 at the Cherry Trees Motel site. Method of recovery unstated; probably metal detector.
The chance find of a Celtic coin at Oversley Green
1 Find of an Iron Age coin in January 1995. Method of recovery undocumented.
Find of a silver unit of the Dobunni 500m southeast of Marlcliff.
1 In Barnmoor Wood are the remains of a small oval camp, situated upon the S edge of a slight elevation, with extensive views all round. The entrenchment appears to ...
Barnmoor Wood Camp, a hillfort dating to the Iron Age. The remains survive as earthworks. The site is located 500m west of Barnmoor Green.
1 Complex cropmark site.
4 Air photographs show a complex of enclosures including at least three rectangular/subrectangular enclosures, a number of scatters of pits, penannular gullies, other possible enclosures and linear ...
Aerial photographs show a complex of various enclosures, pits, gullies and linear features. Their date is uncertain, but they may be Iron Age or Roman and they may represent the remains of a settlement. They are located at Hatton Rock.
1 Pit-alignment (approx N-S).
2 Air photograph.
3 No sign of this pit alignment is evident on air photographs in Warwick Museum.
4 Re-examination of the air photographs in Warwick Museum confirmed that ...
A pit alignment is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is probably of Prehistoric date. It is located 300m east of Mount Pleasant.
1 Various small enclosures and pits.
3 Air photographs show a complex of enclosures including four or more rectangular/subrectangular enclosures, a number of scatters of pits, penannular gullies, other possible enclosures ...
Aerial photographs show enclosures, pits, gullies and linear features at this site. Partial excavation has suggested a Later Prehistoric to Romano-British date, confirmed by radiocarbon dating. The location is in the area of Grove Field Farm, Wasperton.
1 There is a record that a number of Iron Age staters have been found at this location.
The findspot of a scatter of Iron Age staters in the area of Crackley Wood.
The site includes areas of Burton Green, Kenilworth and Stoneleigh parishes