1 Scheduling revised.
The site of an enclosure dating to the Post Medieval period which is visible as an earthwork. It is located 500m north of the modern hamlet of Wormleighton.
1 Naspis ‘which hath not now above four houses in it, but anciently it was more populous.’
2 Rous names this village as destroyed. I identify this village as ‘The Aspes’, ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Post Medieval period. It is known from documentary evidence. Encloures and trackways are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site is located 600m south east of Nursery Wood.
1 Earthworks indicate a small settlement with a hollow way, house platforms, enclosures for cultivation and/or stock, and ponds and drainage channels. Recently parts of Lower Green were ploughed for ...
The site of a Post Medieval deserted settlement. House platforms, enclosures, ponds, drainage channels, and a hollow way are visible as earthworks. Ploughing has uncovered some Medieval and Post Medieval pottery. It is situated at Lower Green, Old Milverton.
1 An area of ridge and furrow and allotment boundaries in St Nicholas Park was surveyed before destruction by construction of a swimming pool. The ridge and furrow appears to ...
The site of ridge and furrow cultivation and allotment boundaries dating to the Post Medieval Period. The remains were located in St Nicholas Park, Warwick.
1 The small stream issuing from the dammed pool above the church has been diverted into a pond of similar construction to PRN 3752, before reaching the Morton-Oldberrow road. A ...
An undated pond, possibly used as a fish breeding tank, which is still visible and contains water. It is situated 100m north of the church at Morton Bagot.
1 Greenhill Green lay at the junction of roads from Spernall, Shelfield/Great Alne and Oldberrow, the roads to Shelfield and Great Alne having now fallen into decay. Settlement does not ...
The site of shrunken village at Greenhill Green, dating to the Imperial period. and known from documentary evidence and earthworks. It is situated 600m north east of Spernall Park.
1 Woodward’s Green is a small area of former common-land. Two houses stood beside it in 1807 and 1820, one remaining today. A third building is noted in 1863. There ...
The site of shrunken village dating to the Imperial period. It is known from documentary evidence. The site is located at Woodwards Green.
1 c1695 there were at least three separate farms at Upper Spernall. All of these had outbuildings and several other cottages appear to be shown at that date. The largest ...
The site of an area shrunken village at Upper Spernall. Dwellings and farm buildings existed here during the Post Medieval or Imperial periods. The settlement is known from documentary evidence.
1 Abandoned house sites and tofts are revealed by earthworks in the field in front of Coughton Court. Their removal was probably connected with the landscaping of parkland adjoining the ...
The site of a shrunken village at Coughton dating to the Post Medieval period. The remains of the settlement are visible as earthworks.
Disused canal.
1 This is a section of the Oxford Canal abandoned in 1830 when the line was straightened.
The site of a disused canal, a waterway used for transporting goods. It dated to the Imperial period, was part of the Oxford Canal, and was located 1200m north of Willoughby.
1 Eastwood refers to iron stone smelting with charcoal in Monk’s Park Wood, and ‘slag heaps from these old furnaces may be seen at the site of the old ponds ...
The site of ponds and a dam dating to the Post Medieval period. The features survive as earthworks and are situated 400m west of Outwoods Farm.
1 Eastwood records iron smelting in this area.
2 The stream was followed through the woods but no slag or furnace remains were found. There were, however, a number of dams ...
The site of ponds and a dam dating to the Post Medieval period. The features survive as earthworks and lie 600m south west of Outwoods Farm.
1 Eastwood records iron smelting in this area.
2 The stream was followed through the woods but no signs of furnace remains were found. There were, however, a number of dams ...
A series of ponds and dam which survive as earthworks and date to the Post Medieval period. They are situated 800m south east of Bentley Common.
1 ‘Though I have not met with any direct mention of this place before E I time, yet do I conclude it to have been a village long before… There ...
The possible site of a shrunken village of Post Medieval date. The site is located at Barton.
1 Two large reservoirs to the W of and adjacent to the Warwick and Napton canal near Napton Junction. “The company
decided to build a reservoir at Napton instead of buying ...
Napton Reservoirs, constructed in the Imperial period to serve the Warwick and Napton Canal.
1 A fishpond which may have been the ‘Newenton Ponde’ recorded in a perambulation of 1608 has been surveyed by a University of Warwick extramural class. The pool lay beside ...
A fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish, which dates to the Medieval/Post Medieval period. An associated dam is also visible as an earthwork. The site has been fully surveyed, and is situated to the south of Hunger Hill, Wootton Wawen.
2 Possible linear crop marks and possible enclosure show on aerial photographs.
3 The small enclosure is marked as a (?) quarry on a map at the Sern corner of a ...
The site of an enclosure and linear features of unknown date. The features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Documentary evidence suggests that the features may be associated with a quarry and field boundaries. The site is located 500m east of Hinckley Road.
1 Aerial photographs.
2 Earthworks of linear features and enclosures show on aerial photographs. The area is one of the few in the parish free of ridge and furrow and is ...
The possible site of a Post Medieval deserted settlement. Enclosures and linear features survive as earthworks at the site, which is located 300m south west of Crimscote.
1 Rectilinear feature to the west of Curdwoth Bottom Lock seen as crop marks on aerial photographs mapped as part of English Heritage (EH) National Mapping Project (NMP) ...
Rectilinear feature to the south west of Curdwoth Bottom Lock seen as crop marks on aerial photographs.
1 A network of ditches, 500m to the north west of Cock Bevington Farm, seen on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The ...
A network of ditches, 500m to the north west of Cock Bevington Farm, can be seen on aerial photographs.
1 Post-medieval features were identified by archaeological investigations. They included remains of possible ditches, pits and gullies. Pottery dating from the 17th – 19th centuries was recovered from ...
Several post-medieval features, including the surviving remains of possible ditches and pits may relate to post-medieval property boundaries, gardening or rubbish disposal activities within those properties.
1 A complex of ditches, which appear to have been engineered to manage water flow across a large area defined by a loop of the River Tame are evident on ...
A complex of ditches, which appear to have been engineered to manage water flow across a large area defined by a loop of the River Tame are evident on aerial photographs.
1 Aerial photographs of a field, partially defined by a loop in the river Avon, shows numberous interconnecting drainage channels. Mapped as part of the English Heritage (EH) ...
Aerial photographs of a field partialy defined by a loop in the river Avon show numerous interconnecting drainage channels.
1, 2 Aerial photographs of a field on the eastern side of the river Avon, shows interconnecting drainage channels. Mapped as part of the English Heritage (EH) National Mapping ...
Aerial photographs of fields on the eastern side of the river Avon from south of the Coventry airport to Bubbenhall show evidence of interconnecting drainage channels.