1 In the village of Fleckenho is a decayed chapel.
2 An agreement was made in 1404 that the inhabitants of Wolfhampcote living near Flecknoe could have a chaplain of their ...
Documentary evidence records that there was a chapel at Flecknoe during the Medieval period.
1 The parish church was rebuilt on a new site in 1866 (PRN 696). The church at Radway was first recorded in 1291.
2 The site is marked by a pile ...
The site of the Medieval Church of St Peter which was the parish church in Radway. It was rebuilt on a different site in 1886. The remains of the Medieval church are still visible, as are some grave stones and a memorial. The site is located to the south of the present church.
1 Chancel and N vestry, nave, S porch and W tower, of 14th century origin, but almost completely rebuilt except for the 16th century tower.
2 Church first attested in 1280.
3 ...
The Parish Church of St. Giles, whose origins are in the Medieval period. It is situated in Nether Whitacre.
1 Chancel, nave, N vestry, S porch and W tower. The building is of early-to-mid 13th century origin, but of this period only the W tower remains. The chancel was ...
The Church of St Mary which was originally built during the Medieval period. Alterations were made to the church during the 19th and 20th centuries. It is situated at Church End, Priors Hardwick.
1 An appraisal was carried out of the undercroft of Warwick Castle. In the medieval period the undercroft was of fairly high status, but later it was used as a ...
An archaeological survey of the domestic range undercroft at Warwick Castle noted its architectural history. The domestic range undercroft was built in the Medieval period and has largely escaped alteration and retains many original features.
1 Chancel with N vestry, nave, N and S aisles, S porch, and W tower. The building is of mid C12 origin, as indicated by the angles of ...
The Parish Church of St. Chad which was originally built during the Medieval period. It is situated in Bishop's Tachbrook.
1 In 1336 John Mallory set aside land to support a chaplain to celebrate in the chapel of St James. The chantry had evidently fallen out of use ...
The remains of the Medieval Chapel of St. James which have been incorporated in a later farmhouse. The site is located at Tachbrook Mallory.
1 Chancel, N vestry, nave, N aisle, S porch and W tower. The earliest material is a late 13th century north arcade, indicating an aisle of that period added to ...
The Church of St Leonard which was originally built during the Medieval period. Alterations to the building were carried out during the Medieval period. The church is situated on Shuckburgh Road, Priors Marston.
1 Chancel, N transeptal organ chamber and vestry, nave, N and S aisles, S porch, and W tower. The tower dates from the end of the 14th century; ...
The Church of St Peter dates to the Medieval period but was largely rebuilt in 1844. It stands in Barford.
1 This is the more likely location for the site of the Church of St Helena than the grid reference given by WA 1954. The site is clearly shown ...
One of two possible sites for the church of St Helena which stood in the Medieval period. This site is believed to be the more likely because Speed's map of 1610 marks it as standing quite far from the river. The site is located in Castle Park.
1 Chancel with N aisle, nave with N and S aisles, W tower with spire, N and S porches and vestry. 14th century, altered in the 15th century when the ...
The Church of St James, built in the Medieval period, with modifications in the Imperial period. The church is situated 50m south west of the Southam war memorial.
1 The chancel is 14th century or 15th century but is probably on the foundations of the 12th century chapel of the alien Abbey of Bec. The priory was refounded ...
A church associated with Atherstone Friary which had its origins in the Medieval period. It is situated 50m south of Florence Close, Atherstone.
1 The name Chapel Green can be traced back to 1595.
2 This could suggest a shrunken settlement with a chapel and green. There are no traces of the exact location ...
The possible site of a Medieval chapel situated 200m north of Old Fillongley Hall.
1 The Ward collection made c 1815 claims that the central gatehouse ‘used to be the chapel’ and shows a drawing drastically different from the building standing today. ...
The site of a possible chapel dating from the Post Medieval period to the Imperial period. It is situated 700m north east of Cracknut Hill.
1 Astley parish church was completely rebuilt by Sir Thomas Astley in 1343 as a collegiate establishment. This was a cruciform building, the plan of which has been reconstructed ...
The Church of the College of the Blessed Virgin Mary which was built during the Medieval period. The chancel is the only part of the building remaining and has been incorporated into the later church. It is situated 100m south of Astley Castle.
1 Chancel, nave, N aisle with a small sacristy E of it, and a N porch, S aisle and W tower with spire. Presumably an early small church existed before ...
The Church of St Lawrence which was built during the Medieval period. Parts of the church have been restored in more recent times. It is situated at the southern end of Shotteswell.
1 The remains of Studley Priory have been built up and form the gable of a modern farmhouse called ‘The Priory’.
2 The farmhouse, now much modernised, embodies a few fragmentary ...
The possible site of the priory church dating to the Medieval period. It is located 750m north west of St Mary's church, Studley.
1 The earliest village at Burton Dassett belongs to the Anglo Saxon period. A cemetery of this date was found during quarrying on the Burton Hills in 1908, probably ...
The remains of a Post Medieval window inserted into the Medieval Chapel at Dassett Southend for the purpose of Roman Catholic Mass in the Post Medieval period.
1 ‘There hath anciently been a chapel here, dedicated to S.Leonard, but now it is ruinous’.
2 The site of the chapel and deserted village was probably between Owlington and Marlborough ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of the Medieval Chapel of St Leonard, associated with the deserted settlement at Hardwick. It is located 1km south west of Temple Herdewyke.
1 Chancel, nave, S porch and NW tower. The S wall of the nave is late 13th century, the porch is 15th century. The remainder was completely rebuilt ...
The parish church of St John the Baptist, which has its origins in the Medieval period. It is situated 600m south of Lea Marston.
1 At Little Dassett is an ancient stone chapel, long since disused, now a store-shed with a thatched roof. The E part, about 8.9 by 6.6m outside, has ...
The remains of a Medieval Chapel. The west end of the building was removed during the Second World War. It is situated at Little Dassett.
1 Stands on a hillside which rises considerably from W to E. Chancel, nave, N and S transepts and aisles, N porch and W tower. This is one ...
The parish church of All Saints, Dassett. This is one of the finest churches in South Warwickshire. It was built in the Medieval period, with alterations in the 13th Century, with the west tower added in the 14th. The church is situated on the slopes of Church Hill.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles, N porch, and W tower with spire. The earliest features are the chancel arch and part of the N arcading, dating ...
The church of St Peter and St Clare was built during the Medieval period and was restored in 1879. It is situated in Fenny Compton.
1 Chancel, N vestry, nave, N and S aisles, S porch and W tower. The building dates from the end of the 11th century or beginning of the 12th century, ...
The Church of St Mary which was originally built during the Medieval period. The church was restored during the Imperial period. It is situated on Main Street, Middle Tysoe.