1 Amorphous earthworks, possibly indicative of a shrunken settlement.
2 This site requires a site visit.
3 Area of site extended using evidence from air photographs.
4 In the Domesday survey Fullready named ...
The possible site of the Medieval shrunken village of Fullready. The remains of the village are visible as earthworks. They surround the west and north sides of the present settlement.
1 The village appears in Rous’ list. A church and one or two other buildings survive, but the air photograph shows that it was once much more extensive. William Willington, ...
The site of the shrunken settlement of Barcheston, dating to the Medieval period, has been identified on aerial photographs, documentary evidence and through Medieval finds, including a buckle, roof tile and whetstone.
1 Rous lists depopulation here, but although the parish village of Barcheston suffered at the hands of William Willington, Willington does not appear in the 1517 Inquiry. It is still ...
The site of a possible shrunken village, at Willington, dating to the Medieval period. The remains of the village are visible as earthworks on aerial photographs. The village is also mentioned in documentary evidence.
1 Possible depopulated village of Idlicote. Listed as Utlicote by Rous. There is a large house and park, but there is a modern village.
2 Site resettled pre-Industrial revolution, period of ...
The possible site of a shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. The site is suggested by pottery scatters found in this area. It is located 100m east of Idlicote.
1 At Halford Bridge is a small enclosure with a slight mound and a ditch, at one time, no doubt, filled with water by the river. It is known as ...
The possible site of a Medieval motte and bailey castle. The motte is still visible as an earthwork. Documentary evidence mentions a castle at Halford in the Medieval period. The site lies 100m north west of the church.
1 At a height of nearly 152m in the village of Upper Brailes, is a detached artificial mount, surrounded by entrenchments, called ‘Castle Hill’. The site is commanding. The present ...
Castle Hill, a Medieval motte and bailey castle. The remains of the castle motte are visible as an earthwork. The site is located 200m west of Castle Hill Lane, Upper Brailes.
1 A hamlet in Brailes parish. Rous lists it, and there appear to have been a number of successive partial enclosures. These are recorded in 1430, 1509, 1549 and 1598. ...
The Medieval deserted settlement of Chelmscote. Hollow ways, house platforms and enclosures are visible as earthworks. The site is located 1km north west of Compton Wynyates.
1 Brailes was a village whose fields lay open in the traditional Midland pattern until William Brown was granted, in 1485, the offices of bailiff of the lordship and keeper ...
The site of the Medieval shrunken village of Lower Brailes. The site is visible as an earthwork. It is situated 300m south of the church at Lower Brailes.
1 Linear earthworks marking out plots show on aerial photographs. This may mark out an area of shrunken Medieval settlement at Brailes.
2 Additional aerial photographs taken in January 1992 have ...
The site of a Medieval shrunken village at Upper Brailes. Evidence for the shrunken village is visible in some areas as earthworks.
2 Aerial photographs show earthworks including a possible hollow way and ditched enclosures. This is probably a deserted Medieval settlement.
A possible deserted settlement dating to the Medieval period that is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs. It is situated 1km north east of the Rollright Stones.
Earthworks of a fishpond.
1 In Fishpond Coppice in Weston Park is one of the original eight fishponds in the Park.
2 This is the only one to show surface indications today, ...
A Medieval fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish. It survives as an earthwork as the last remaining one of an original eight. It is situated at Fishpond Coppice, Long Compton.
1 Stands in a commanding position. Fortified in the time of Henry I (1100-35) as a motte and bailey castle (PRN 241), possibly by Hugh de Hardreshull. Only the earthworks ...
The remains of Hartshill Castle, which was originally built during the Medieval period. It is situated on the east side of Hartshill Hayes Country Park.
1 Rev A K Collin reported that in digging in the garden of the recently built vicarage several pieces of pottery were found. Some of this was Roman (PRN 5272). ...
The site of an area of shrunken village dating to the Medieval period at Hunningham. It is known from finds of pottery dating to the same period.
1 Rescue excavation in advance of the construction of a housing estate on part of the deserted settlement. Surface indications included a hollow way running E-W along the S of ...
The site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Leek Wootton. An excavation of the site showed Medieval period activity including a hollow way, house platform and enclosures. The site lies under houses on Tidmarsh Road and The Hamlet.
1 A probable mill-bay. Up to 2.3m high on both sides with roughly squared blocks visible where the dam has been breached.
2 Fishpond marked on a map of 1845.
3 The ...
The remains of a dam associated with a probable mill pond. The dam and the pond survive as earthworks. They date to the Medieval/Post Medieval period and are situated 350m south west of Fox Covert, Leek Wootton.
1 These two fishponds have man-made banks along the W side which appear to coincide with the Wedgnock Park boundary.
2 Marked as ‘Quarry Site’ on map of Wedgnock Park in ...
The site of fishponds, which were used for the breeding and storing of fish. Their date of origin is unknown, but they are still visible as earthworks. It is likely that they were used during the Medieval period. They are situated 300m south west of Gostee Spinney, Leek Wootton.
1 Ashow, Thickthorn Wood. Linear earthwork. Excavation revealed this to be a Medieval boundary bank. Documentary evidence associated the earthwork with a monastic grange at Chesford Bridge.
A Medieval boundary bank survives as an earthwork. It is situated to the north east edge of Thickthorn Wood. Documentary evidence suggests that it was associated with a monastic grange at Chesford Bridge.
1 A hollow feature was noted during an archaeological observation at the church. No dating evidence was recovered from it but it could have been a former pond or ...
Possibly a former boundary ditch or pond. Uncertain hollow feature found in an excavated trench.
1 A medieval enclosure with several phases of ditches was identified. A single oven was found near the south-west corner. Within the enclosure were a series of ditches, pits and ...
A sequence of medieval enclosure ditches aligned broadly parallel to Gypsy Lane, with a return at the south-west corner to form the southern boundary. A single oven was uncovered near the south-west corner of the enclosure.
1 Feature 105 comprised an east-west aligned shallow/truncated profile ditch, filled by two deposits consisting of a primary silting deposit and a secondary deposit. The latter contained a sherd ...
A medieval burgage plot that runs in an easterly direction and is approximately 80cm in width
1 2Two medieval gullies were found during archaeological work. Any associated building was likely to have been truncated when the site was terraced in the early 20th century.
Two medieval gullies probably associated with a medieval building plot were found during archaeological work.
1 A series of features were identified during evaluation off Church Lane, Middleton. They suggest settlement in the 12th-13th centuries, away from the focus of the original settlement. A large ...
A series of features were identified during evaluation off Church Lane, Middleton. They suggest settlement in the 12th-13th centuries, away from the focus of the original settlement.
12 A set of settlement earthworks were identified, from Google Earth satellite imagery, by the AOC Assessment of Local Services Villages for Stratford-on-Avon District Council in 2012.
34 These features are ...
A set of earthworks visible on LiDAR imagery; these features are related to the former extent of medieval settlement at Napton-on-the-Hill.
12 A set of settlement earthworks were identified, from Google Earth satellite imagery, by the AOC Assessment of Local Services Villages for Stratford-on-Avon District Council in 2012.
34 These features are ...
A set of earthworks visible on LiDAR imagery; these features are related to the former extent of medieval settlement at Napton-on-the-Hill.