1 During the excavation of a gravel pit in 1931, a workman came across a Beaker (which he unfortunately broke) with a “flint near its foot”: the former was found ...
Findspot - a Bronze Age beaker, a handleless drinking vessel, was found near Coventry Road, Baginton. The beaker was decorated with incised lines. Flint artefacts of the same date were also found in this location.
1 In Hall sand-pit, 200m SW of the find of an Early Bronze Age beaker (PRN 2678) and N of the E portion of the Saxon cemetery (PRN 2679) a ...
Findspot - fragments of pottery from a Bronze Age bucket urn were found in the area to the east of Coventry Road, Baginton.
1 The only reference to this find (apart from the OS Card which gives the above location) is by Edwards who, as an addendum to his reporting of the finds ...
Findspot - a Bronze Age flint arrowhead was found 300m east of the church at Baginton.
2 Linear features, possibly forming enclosures, show on aerial photographs as crop marks.
3 Linear crop marks showing on aerial photographs mapped as part of English Heritage (EH) National ...
Linear features, possibly forming enclosures, are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs. They are of unknown date and are situated 200m northwest of Bodymoor Heath Bridge.
1 Tumulus marked.
2 ?Barrow, now destroyed. On Lammas Hill.
3 Excavated 1950s, B Hobley, windmill.
4 This feature was excavated by Coventry Museum who concluded that it was a windmill mound.
5 Scheduling ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow would date to the Bronze Age. The site is located on Lammas Hill. The results of an excavation in the 1950s concluded that it was actually a windmill mound.
2 A system of subrectangular enclosures attached to a linear ditch shows on aerial photographs. This is overlain by a later deerpark.
3 Ditches described above mapped as part of English ...
Enclosures and linear features that are of unknown date. They are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs and are situated 700m north of Middleton Hall. Possibly part of a prehistoric field system.
Find of a Bronze Age axe.
1 Late Bronze Age bronze socketed axe, three ribs. In a private collection.
Find
2 A pit alignment, associated with linear features and an enclosure, shows on air photographs.
3 Dating to late Bronze Age to late Iron Age.
A pit alignment of Prehistoric date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 500m south east of Woodford Lodge.
1 Bronze socketed spearhead. Found in Browningcroft. Now in Birmingham Museum. Grid reference SP2196 given with no indication of source.
2 A bronze spearhead from Kingsbury, in Birmingham Museum (Acc No ...
Find spot - a bronze socketed spearhead dating to the Bronze Age. It was found 50m south east of Broomey Croft Farm.
1 Hill Farm, Finham. Neolithic/Bronze Age tumulus. This ploughed-out mound was found to be outside the land take of the Kenilworth Bypass. A drainage trench in 1932 produced a Bronze ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow probably would have dated to the Bronze Age. The site lies 200m west of Finham Green.
1 At SP4288 are two mounds which were first noted by their remarkable silhouette on an E-W hedgeline which crosses them. 1960: Both mounds have been spread by the plough. ...
The site of two possible round barrows, circular mounds of earth usually concealing a burial. They probably dated to the Bronze Age. The site is located 500m east of Shelford.
2 Probable pit alignment shows as a crop mark. On one photograph it appears as a continuous ditch, but on another individual pits can be distinguished in two fields.
3 Date ...
The site of a possible pit alignment is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The site lies 200m north of Hinckley Road.
1 A perforated whetstone found in 1976 on the surface of a ploughed field at Bramcote Hill. Length 6.8 cm, breadth 2.2 cm, maximum thickness 0.8 cm. Weight 24 grammes. ...
Findspot - a whetstone, thought to be of Bronze Age date, was found 400m south east of Bramcote Hospital.
1 There is an undoubted sepulchral mound. It has no encircling ditch.
2 The labourers employed missed the deposit and a few fragments only of ancient pottery were found. 1968: This ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound of earth that was usually built to conceal a burial. It probably dates to the Bronze Age and is situated 500m south west of Coton House. Alternatively, the mound may be a windmill mound.
1 Gibbet Hill was called ‘Loesby’s Gibbet’ in 1729 and is to be identified with Pelgrimslowe of c1350.
2 Bloxam quotes from a letter of E Ashmole to Dugdale (1657) which ...
The possible site of a Bronze Age round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The site is suggested by documentary evidence. It site is located 100m east of Gibbet Hill.
2 Pit alignment, probably of Prehistoric date, shows on air photographs.
4 Noted by Ordnance Survey.
5 Date narrowed down to between the late Bronze Age and the late Iron Age.
6 Aerial ...
A linear feature, possibly a pit alignment, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photogrpahs. It is situated 600m north of Bubbenhall.
4 Probable prehistoric pit alignment, which cuts off a bend in the Avon, shows on aerial photographs.
5 The field is flat and featureless, no surface material.
6 Dating revised to between ...
Aerial photographs suggest that this is probably the site of a Prehistoric pit alignment, pits set at intervals along a single line or parallel lines. It is situated 200m south of Rock Spinney at Bubbenhall.
1 Bronze Age Pygmy vessel – a small crude pot found by a workman engaged on digging a deep drain across a field at King’s Hill, Finham. Classified by British ...
Findspot - a Bronze Age miniature pot was found 300m south west of Finham Green.
Find of a Bronze Age gold object.
1 Bronze Age gold armlet. Obtained in Warwick 1868. Ends slightly expanded. In Evans Collection, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
2 Possibly of local provenance.
Find
2 It has been suggested that these marks indicate a large villa.
3 Enclosures and linear features show on aerial photographs. There is no evidence to support the suggestion made by ...
Cropmarks, visible on aerial photographs, show undated enclosures and linear features. They lie in fields 100m east of Warwick sewage works.
1 1953: Animal bones, pot boilers, Roman pottery and piles found in a marsh. The dating given to this pottery was purely tentative. The pottery and most of the other ...
The site of a possible settlement dating to the Roman period is situated 300m southeast of Bramcote Hall.
1 A ?Bronze Age flint was found in Cocksparrow Street, Warwick and kept by the finder.
Findspot - a flint artefact dating to the Bronze Age were found 600m north west of Warwick Castle.
1 Stone implement from Polesworth. Bartlett in 1791 described and figured (somewhat crudely) a barbed and tanged arrowhead.
2 Noted.
Find spot - a barbed and tanged arrowhead of Bronze Age date was found 60m west of Market Street, Polesworth.
1 Pit alignment running parallel to river.
3 Pit alignment shows on air photographs. The grid reference given by reference 1 is inaccurate.
4 Date narrowed down to late Bronze Age to ...
Cropmarks on aerial photographs show a pit alignment. It runs roughly north to south in a field 140m east from The Saxon Mill public house.