1 Trench produced evidence for a Medieval house with a wall of sandstone and pebbles and a floor of beaten clay. Quantities of coarse and green-glazed pottery of 11th – ...
The site of a shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. It was excavated and revealed a house, a wall and pottery. It was situated 500m north east of Dean's Green.
1 A grotto, or gazebo, probably dating from the first half of the 19th century.
2 Some of the masonry in the grotto may be Medieval. This masonry includes two carved ...
A gazebo which was built during the Imperial period. It contains masonry dating to the Medieval period. It is situated on Croft Road, Atherstone.
1 The original site of Spernall manor house has not yet been accurately located, but the name Spernall Hall Farm may indicate that it lay to the N of the ...
The possible site of a manor house dating to the Medieval period. The site lies 300m north of Spernall.
1 Possible site of Medieval manor house associated with Hillborough deserted settlement.
2 In the garden of Hillborough Manor are two pieces of masonry and several squared slabs of building stone.
3 ...
The possible site of a Medieval manor house situated at Hillborough.
1 Middleton Hall. Some remains of the original 12th century house survive; there is one small round-headed window surviving in the 0.9m W wall towards the courtyard. It is impossible ...
Middleton Hall, a manor house which was built during the Medieval period. It is situated 300m south of Kennels Wood.
1 The timber cross-frame of a cottage was exposed during removal of rendering from the western face of the Nurse’s House of Bedworth Almshouses. This was photographically recorded and a ...
The timber cross-frame of a cottage was exposed during removal of rendering from the western face of the Nurse's House of Bedworth Almshouses. It is suggested, by comparison with comparable timber cross frames recorded in the Midlands, that the structure may date to somewhere between the 16th century and mid-17th century.
1 The Water Tower at Kenilworth Castle, built in perhaps the early 14th century by Thomas of Lancaster. The Queen’s Chamber was situated on the top floor, and an associated ...
The Water Tower at Kenilworth Castle, built in perhaps the early 14th century by Thomas of Lancaster. The Queen's Chamber was situated on the top floor, and an associated culvert is shown on maps running from here to North of Mortimer's Tower.
12 Cruck framed house forming three bays and an open hall. Dendrochronoligical analysis identified a date of 1475 for some of the timbers although several cruck blades (not dated) were ...
House at Binton 150m north west of St Peter's Church. Listed building with cruck framed timbers dated by dendrochronology to 1475, elements from the 16th century, alterations in the 19th century, restored in 1984.
1 A number of cut features and a wall, indicating Medieval burgage plot boundaries, together with evidence of back-plot activity, were recorded during evaluation at Coten End. Two northwest-southeast aligned ...
A number of cut features and a wall, indicating Medieval burgage plot boundaries, together with evidence of back-plot activity, were recorded during evaluation at Coten End.
1 The remains of possible wall foundations, floor surfaces and a stone-lined pit or trough with 13th-century pottery. Several pits and ditches were also recorded, potentially associated with 15th or ...
The remains of possible wall foundations, floor surfaces and a stone-lined pit or trough with 13th-century pottery. Several pits and ditches were also recorded, potentially associated with 15th or 16th-century activity on the site.
1 A possible gully or beam slot associated with earlier occupation of extension to the Churchyard St Nicholas Church found during a archaeological observation in 2009/2010 for a soakaway and ...
A possible 19th century or earlier gully or beam slot associated with occupation of southern extension to the Churchyard of St Nicholas Church, Nuneaton
1 The house appears to have a 16th century origin but has been considerably altered.
2 Incorporated in the front a blocked twin 13th century opening with a round arch, and ...
Burmington Manor House, a building which dates from the Medieval period. Alterations were made to the building in the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is located 50m south west of the Church.
Granary.
1 East of the Church and south of Burmington Farm stands a traditional type of granary. It is brick built aand timber-framed, standing on staddle stones. A ball ...
The site of a brick-built and timber framed granary dating from the Medieval period. It is situated 200m south east of the church at Burmington.
1 Dugdale records a Manor House with 80 acres of land at some date between 1500 and 1517.
2 The Manor House was presumably on the site of Weston village (PRN ...
The site of a Medieval manor house is suggested by documentary evidence. The site is located 400m west of Fish Pond Coppice.
1 Excavation inside the moat revealed the foundations of a number of walls, usually about 0.23m below the surface. Several of these were followed, but insufficient work was done to ...
The site of Goodrest Lodge, a Medieval/Post Medieval manor house with double moat, bridge, fishponds and well. Remains of these features are visible as earthworks. On excavating the site, walls and floors were revealed. It is situated at Leek Wootton.
1 S of the church was the refectory or dining hall, a rather noble room, constructed in the 14th century. It was entered near the W end through the N ...
Remains of a building thought to be the refectory of Merevale Abbey, a dining hall where the monks would have eaten their meals. It is Medieval in origin and is located on the south side of Abbey Farm.
1 1958. Stonework and late Medieval pottery.
2 House built by 15th century weaver.
The site of a house dating to the Medieval period and known from finds of stonework and pottery. It is situated 550m west of Weston on Avon.
1 Archaeological desk-based assessment was carried out as the first stage of modern work at this site, undertaken between 2009 and 2012. The timber-framed building was constructed c. 1483 as ...
The site of New Place, as recorded in documentary sources. Constructed c.1483, it was purchased by Shakespeare in 1597 and he lived there until his death in 1616. The origi nal timber-framed house was pulled down and rebuilt in 1702 in brick, only to be razed to the ground in 1759. The site has been the subsequently of antiquarian, archaeological and literary interest throughout the 19th century.
1 Longbridge Manor was the former home of the Staunton family. In 1616 an inventory of the goods of Humphrey Staunton showed the manor house to comprise a hall, parlour ...
Longbridge Manor, a manor house first built during the Medieval period but altered during the Post Medieval period. A fishpond associated with the house is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is situated 1km north east of Sherbourne.
1 Roger, Earl of Warwick (1119-53) granted a small manor beyond the bridge on the S side of Warwick to the Knights Templars. This was eventually transferred to the Knights ...
The site of a preceptory of the Knight Templar during the Medieval period. Documentary evidence notes that a manor house surrounded by a moat was given to the Order in the 1100s. The house had been demolished by 1786 and it stood in Castle Park, Warwick.
1 A moated manor house. The building is mostly C18 and modernised, but goes back to at least 1535.
2 The moat is complete and waterfilled.
3 The moat varies from about ...
Exhall Hall, a manor house originally built during the Medieval period with later additions. The manor house is surrounded by a Medieval moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building, and is situated on the east side of Bowling Green Lane at Exhall Hall Green.
1 Plans and elevations of the house are shown in Sharpe’s (or Shape’s) survey.
2 The house was altered extensively and enlarged on two occasions in the 19th century. The site ...
Moxhull Old Hall, a house which was built during the Medieval period and which later became an inn. It is situated 900m to the west of Cuttle Mill Farm.
1 The fortification of Warwick was complicated by the building of a town wall, possibly placed near Ethelfleda’s rampart (PRN 2191). The earth rampart was located during excavation in 1964. ...
Warwick defences, consisting of a Town Wall and Ditch. Documentary evidence has suggested the line for the Medieval Defences, which has been subject to excavation; in places it survives a a rock-cut ditch with eroded bedrock backfill.
1 A medieval pit with 13th-16th century pottery as well as a possible medieval wall was discovered at the rear of nos. 28-30 Smith Street from an evaluation in ...
A medieval pit with 13th-16th century pottery as well as a possible medieval wall discovered at the rear of nos. 28-30 Smith Street.