1 Found during the erection of the Infants School in the late 19th century.
2 This fragment is mounted on a bracket on the N side of the nave. One face ...
Find spot - a fragment of a cross dating to the Medieval period which was found 40m south of High Street, Polesworth.
1 A series of maps of 1610, 1711, 1788, 1851 and 1966 were examined. This indicated that the E part of the site, now level, concealed a steep slope climbed ...
The site of Medieval roads which are known from documentary sources and from historic maps. They are located to the north of Warwick Castle.
1 The mill was first recorded in Domesday but is not heard of after 1291. The site of the mill may be indicated by signs of interference in the course ...
The site of a possible watermill, which was recorded in the Domesday survey and later in the Medieval period, but for which there is subsequently no evidence. It was located 300m north west of Wasperton.
1 An approximately square building facing E. Externally it is mostly of 18th century brickwork but internally the back part retains the remains of a 15th century timber framed hall ...
The remains of a Medieval manor house have been observed within the fabric of an existing house. It was possibly a 14th century aisled hall which was reduced in size during the 15th century. It was faced with red brick in the Imperial period. It is situated in Wasperton.
1 Dugdale was not certain whether this had been a village. In his time it was a farm only. In 1545 only pasture was recorded, but there were five entries ...
The site of the deserted settlement of Heathcote dating to the Medieval period. It is known from documentary evidence and was located 1.5km north of the modern hamlet of Newbold Pacey.
1 This may have been one of the three mills at Offchurch mentioned in 1279. It is recorded in 1530 and 1561. The mill was still working in 1793. The ...
The remains of a watermill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval to the Imperial period. Only the Mill House still survives, 300m east of Butt Bridge.
1 In January 1974 the earth around the church was cleared in order to combat damp. The trenching operations were watched by B.B.A.C. Five sherds were recovered comprising ...
Findspot - pottery and tile dating to the Roman and the Medieval period were found 300m south east of The Grove, Offchurch.
1 A stone dovecote was part of the complex of Offchurch Bury in 1542.
2 It was presumably replaced by the brick dovecote (WA 2219), which still stands, in the 18th ...
The site of a Medieval dovecote, a building used for the breeding and housing of doves or pigeons. An eighteenth century brick replacement now stands on the site south west of the pond at Offchurch Bury.
1 One of two probable mill sites in Offchurch. Three mills are recorded in 1279. In 1585 two mills are mentioned but one of them had disappeared by 1702. Traces ...
Offchurch Bury Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period, and which was probably still in use in the Post Medieval period. A grooved sluice and traces of watercourses survive. The location is to the south of Floodgate Spinney.
1 Chapel dedicated to St Mary Magdalene near the site of a hermitage (PRN 2233). In 1423 Richard, Earl of Warwick, was licensed to found a chantry in honour of ...
The Chapel of St Mary Magdalene at Guy's Cliffe, Warwick. It was built in the Medieval period, possibly in the 13th century, and rebuilt in the 15th century.
1 A well, traditionally associated with Guy of Warwick.
2 A spring head at the base of a cliff enclosed in a fairly modern arched recess of ashlar sandstone.
3 Circa 1751-7 ...
Guy's Well, a Medieval holy well, associated with Guy of Warwick, can be found 215m south of The Saxon Mill public house.
1 The site now consists of a central 18th century house (PRN 223). Earlier maps show a complex of fishponds as well as a number of footpaths converging on this ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this was the site of a deserted settlement, abandoned during the Medieval period, on the site of Bramcote Hall.
1 A pilgrim’s ampulla of the period 1350-1550 reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - a Medieval ampulla found 100m north west of Nethercote.
1 Jetton found while digging in the garden of a cottage at the above grid reference.
2 A coin from Tournai in Flanders which could be early 16th century.
3 The same ...
Findspot - a jetton or counting piece, dating to the Medieval period, was found 700m north west of King John's Castle, Kineton.
1 Holywell Farm has cruck timbering and is of late Medieval build. Much of the house is enclosed in brick so hiding part of the timbering. Ownership ...
A timber framed cruck house build at the end of the Medieval period and into the Post Medieval period. It is situated at Holywell.
1 The house was the home of the Meysey family from about 1560 until the mid 17th century. In 1584 Edward Meysey died whilst ‘the newe howese’ (perhaps being ...
A timber framed house which dates to the late Medieval and early Post Medieval period. It is situated at Rookery, Rowington.
1 The moat may surround the site of the manor of Stockton. It encloses a rectangular area on three sides only, the SE side being open. There is ...
A moat, a wide ditch, which may have surrounded the manor house of Stockton. It is visible as an earthwork, though partly overgrown, and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is situated 100m south east of St Michael's Church.
1 An ‘L’ shaped house of timber frame and brick. The cross wing has curved braces and is probably early Tudor. In a ground floor room there is ...
A timber framed house which dates from the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. It is situated 600m north east of the Fleur de Lys Public House, Lowsonford.
1 The house which is of three storeys was enlarged c.1570s and incorporates part of the older house. The central chimney stack has diagonal brick shafts, and wouth of ...
A timber framed house parts of which may date back to the Medieval period, but it is mainly of Post Medieval date. There is also a timber framed barn infilled with brick. It is situated 700m north east of Lowsonford.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles, W tower, vestry and N porch. Except for the 14th century S wall of the chancel and the 15th century tower the church ...
The Church of St Michael in Stockton was restored during the Imperial period and only a few features remain of the original Medieval building.
1 Find made by metal detector in 1997: Jetton, obv. AVE MARIA GRACIA, heater-shield of France-modern within a granulated inner circle.
Findspot - a Medieval Jetton was found at the corner between Ambleside Road and Tarn Close, Bedworth.
1 Find made by metal detector in 1994: Copper alloy Medieval harness pendant. Probably late 13th – 14th Century.
Find made by metal detector in 1994: Lead cloth seal or alnage ...
Findspot - a harness pendant and a cloth seal were found at Donnative Farm, Polesworth.
1 A timber frame and brick house raised on a high brick footing. The property once formed part of the Baddesley Clinton estate and was probably altered considerably in ...
A timber framed house which may have been rebuilt in the late 1500s although one of the ceilings in a downstairs room dates to the early 1500s. It is situated at Kingswood.
1 A Manor House appears to have existed on the site of the present Rowington Hall at an early date and may have been built by Adeliza, wife of Roger ...
A manor house was first built on the site of the present Rowington Hall in the Medieval period, but documentary records suggest it was rebuilt in the early Post Medieval period. During the Imperial period it was altered and refaced in stone. It stands opposite Rowington church.