1 A possible moat in shown on a detailed estate survey map of 1806. The western and southern arms survive.
2 No moat survives on the First Edition Ordnance survey map ...
A detailed estate survey map of 1806 shows a western and southern arm of a moat.
12 Maxstoke Castle park/garden, Maxstoke.
Parkland with 2 lakes, boundary planting, pleasure grounds with planting and walks. Kitchen garden to NE.
3 A smaller park extent is indicated on Yates’ map of ...
Park with lakes, boundary planting, pleasure grounds, kitchen garden. More designed elements and formal planting than the original deer park.Recommended for inclusion in the Register by Lovie
1 The inner gatehouse was probably converted into the Prior’s House before the suppression and afterwards into the existing farmhouse, a two-storey building, the gateway arches blocked, with a C15 ...
The Prior's house at Maxtoke Priory. The house was converted from the gatehouse of Maxtoke Priory and dates to the Medieval period. It is situated 100m west of Priory Farm.
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.
2 Scheduled as Warwickshire Monument No 8.
4 The priory is, with the exception of minor intrusions by farm buildings, wholly enclosed. The precinct wall, standing to 2.5m high, is largely ...
The precinct wall of Maxstoke Priory, which is Medieval in date. It is situated at Maxstoke.
1 The inner gatehouse seems to have been converted into the Prior’s House. It is now a farmhouse of 2 storeys, the gateway arches blocked, with a C15 ...
The inner gatehouse of Maxstoke Priory, which was later converted into the Priors House. It is Medieval in date and is situated 150m east of the church at Maxtoke.