1 Archaeological evaluation found a small area of undisturbed features principally of early Roman date. Most of the site had been quarried for clay.
2 A small excavation was undertaken ...
Several ditches and gullies of Roman date were found during an excavation. They might represent the remains of a Roman field system. The features were found to the north west of Napton Hill.
1 Trial excavation in advance of housing development (AL11) revealed a gravel surface and a boundary or drainage ditch. The finds from these features were of the 2nd ...
A gravel surface and a ditch of Roman date were found during an excavation. Roman coins were also found at the site, which is situated on Evesham Street, Alcester.
1 An archaeological watching brief identified ditches thought to be of Roman date. Other features were identifed as Roman but their form and function was undetermined. It was concluded ...
Several Roman ditches were found during archaeological work. Roman pottery dating to the 2nd century AD was found in the ditches. They were situated 300m east of the church at Flecknoe.
1 A large quantity of unabraded Roman pottery, tile and mortaria was collected from a pit identified by a Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Building Control Officer during the course of ...
Findspot - sherds of pottery, tile and mortaria of Roman date were found west of Weddington Road, Weddington. A possible ditch was also recorded.
1 Three trenches were opened by the Coventry and District Archaeology Society. Two were archaeologically sterile, yielding only residual 2nd century pottery. The third trench revealed the possible traces of ...
A ditch, dating to the Roman period, was found during archaeological work. Fragments of Roman pottery were also found at the site, which lies 800m south west of Baginton.
1 The work of installing the gas main to the Almshouses involved excavating small trenches along the route to allow pipe insertion. Seven trenches were opened. Only in ...
A Roman ditch was recorded during an excavation. It was situated 50m west of Mancetter Road, Mancetter.
1 Following evaluation work done in 1992 for the Scout Hut rebuild, a watching brief was maintained in 1994 on the foundation trenches. It was possible to identify two ...
The site of a series of timber buildings, and an industiral site, with ovens, pits and wells was recorded during excavations at the site of the Scout Hut, Mill Lane, Mancetter. Further observation on the site recorded two ditches dating to the Roman period.
1 Cropmarks show on aerial photographs. These comprise a rectangular enclosure with faint internal features.
2 Site 4. During fieldwalking in 1977 a pottery scatter was found here (WA 7463). ...
An enclosure, with some internal features, is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. Excavation has dated it to the Roman period. It lies 450m south of Witherley Bridge.
1 Archaeological observation carried out during construction of a riding arena. The excavation uncovered a short ditch, 5m long and tapering off containing a Roman tile, a fragment of ...
A short ditch of Roman date which contained pottery sherds was recorded in Nuneaton Road, Mancetter.
1 Evaluation carried out during Jan-Mar 1988. 5 trenches were excavated by hand to a depth of 1.5-2m with trenches 2 & 4 fully emptied of archaeological deposits. ...
The remains part of the defensive ditch which protected the Roman town of Alcester were found during archaeological work. The site was located in Gas House Lane, Alcester.
1 Archaeological evaluation undertaken by Warwickshire Museum. Excavation of trench 1 revealed a steep-sided, flat-bottomed gully cut into the natural. It was aligned roughly WNW-ESE. In its base were three ...
A ditch, possible post holes and two pottery sherds dating to the Roman period were found during and excavation. It is possible that the ditch forms part of a known field system in the area. The site is located 200m north of Wellesbourne church.
1 Archaeological evaluation at Riversmeade, Wappenbury carried out by Warwickshire Museum. A ditch recorded in Trench 1, at the western end of the site, was thought likely to have been ...
An archaeological excavation revealed a ditch which is believed to date to the Roman period. It was found near Wappenbury.
1 Two trenches 5m wide, dug in 1989 and 1990 respectively, have located the southern defences and have suggested a revision of the overall shape as a rectangle. In 1989 ...
Excavations revealed the remains of a Roman fort and associated buildings. The fort is situated 300m north east of Bardon Manor Farm.
1 Archaeological evaluation in the grounds of Gramer House, Mancetter, revealed the remains of two pits, a gully and a ditch of Roman date. All of the features were ephemeral ...
An excavation revealed the remains of a pit, gully and a ditch which all dated to the Roman period. They were situated 150m east of Farm Road, Mancetter. Further fieldwork on the site located more Romano-British pits and gullies, potentially related to military structures.
1 Four foundation trenches were excavated. A ditch seen in trench A, and partially in trench C, runs parallel to the NW end of the defensive bank which encloses ...
The site of a ditch, which may be Roman in date, was recorded in Witherley Road, Mancetter
1 1964: Excavation of two small pits and the remains of a puddling-tank with traces of the timber lining and a water duct leading to it.
2 1969: Excavation of several ...
The site of an industrial area which was used for pottery production. Excavations revealed the remains of buildings, pits and a well. The features were Roman in date and were situated 450m north west of Crab Tree Farm, Mancetter.
1 1954-5: Construction of a sewage trench revealed traces of walling at fairly high levels connected apparently with 4th century pottery but these had been thoroughly wrecked by ridge and ...
The site of a building and other features dating to the Roman period. The site was located 400m south east of Witherley Bridge, Mancetter.
1 1954-5: Construction of a sewage trench revealed a section across Watling Street indicating an early road with a 3.96m interval between two ditches 0.61m wide and 1.2m deep from ...
The site of a section of the Roman road known as Watling Street which was excavated. The site is situated 400m south east of Witherley Bridge, Mancetter.
1 Trial trenching and the amount of pottery found suggest Roman occupation was not dense; pits and ditches are away from the Roman street area and are disturbed by Post ...
An excavation at Seggs Lane, Alcester, found traces of occupation of Roman date. The archaelogical features that were recorded included pits and ditches.
1 An archaeological observation of ground works for the construction of a bungalow, partly within Scheduled Ancient Monument WARKS 128, revealed Romano British features. These features included a ...
A ditch and a rubble surface of Roman date were found during archaeological work. Hypocaust tile and pottery was also found, suggesting that this area was settled during the Roman period. The site was situated in Tibbets Close, Alcester.
1 An archaeological excavation of three trial trenches prior to house construction identified features, ditches and hollows, containing Romano British pottery. It is most likely that this area fell ...
A Roman ditch was discovered during archaeological work in Tiddington Road, Stratford upon Avon. It is thought that this area may have been close to the edge of the Roman settlement.
1 1987. Small scale excavations in advance of road and housing construction failed to locate traces of the Roman Ryknild Street, which should have passed through this field. The field ...
The site of Ryknild Street Roman road was excavated. Although no evidence was found of the road itself, the road-side ditches were recorded. The site lies south east of Beauchamp Court, King's Coughton.
1 1987 A field 100 M S of the Lapworth tile kilns (PRN 1699) was systematically fieldwalked in advance of M40 construction. Over 30 Kg of tile and small quantities ...
The site of a pottery kiln dating to the Roman period, which is known from finds of pottery. The site is located 800m north west of Turner's Green.
1 Excavations in 1975 revealed a ditch and a number of pits which were probably of Roman date.
2 Fragments of Roman tile and 1 sherd found during excavation of another ...
A Roman ditch and pits were discovered during an archaeological excavation. They were found 150m north east of Bidford Bridge.