1 Anecdotal evidence of a Bronze Age Bracelet. The finder was playing as a child in fields near Wolston when a beaten gold object was discovered. The bracelet was broken ...
A Bracelet which possibly dates to the Bronze Age was found by children playing in 1966. The site lies in a field 220m north-east of Wolston School.
1 Six pottery sherds, two rim and four body, hand made, organic tempering, possilby Bronze Age were found.
Findspot - a number of pottery sherds was found at Waddon Hill.
1A pit of Early/Middle Bronze Age date was recorded during trial trenching at Old Farm Road, Mancetter. This represented the first evidence for activity of this date in this ...
A pit of Early/Middle Bronze Age date, recorded during evaluation trial trenching between 32 and 46 Old Farm Road, Mancetter.
1 Pit-alignment (approx N-S).
2 Air photograph.
3 No sign of this pit alignment is evident on air photographs in Warwick Museum.
4 Re-examination of the air photographs in Warwick Museum confirmed that ...
A pit alignment is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is probably of Prehistoric date. It is located 300m east of Mount Pleasant.
1 The possible site of a burnt mound. Burnt stone was observed coming out of the river bank.
2 Evidence for a burnt mound consists of numerous pot boiler-tyoe “burnt” quartzite ...
The possible site of a burnt mound situated to the northeast of Ryon Hill House.
1 Find of a partially worked barbed and tanged arrowhead from the early Bronze Age. Method of recovery unrecorded. The grid reference given was SP43456930, which is in Bourton and ...
Find of a partially worked barbed and tanged arrowhead from the Bronze Age. The exact location is unclear.
1 Th is is a slighly raised mound of earth around 25 metres in diameter, which is much darker and has a much higher concentration of stones than the surrounds. ...
Slighly raised mound of earth with high concentration of broken or cracked stones
1 Area of ground round 19 metres in diameter which is much darker and has a much higher concentration of stones than the surrounds. Most of these stones are ...
A possible burnt mound was observed near Baddesley Clinton. It has been ploughed flat with much higher concentration of stones than the surrounding area.
2 Probable prehistoric pit alignment shows on aerial photographs.
3 An evaluation undertaken in 1988 confirmed the location and extent of a series of pit and ditch alignments identified from aerial ...
A pit alignment of Prehistoric date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. Iron Age pottery was found in one of the pits during archaeological work. The pit alignment lies 500m east of Coalpit Lane.
1 Barrow, site only, near the site of a demolished church at Newnham Regis. Finds included inhumation burial of unusually large size…in upright position.
2 Authors refer to a tumulus near ...
The possible site of a round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The round barrow was probably of Bronze Age date and contained a human burial. It was located at King's Newnham.
2 Probable Prehistoric multiple alignment shows on aerial photograph. This possible pit alignment cuts across a peninsula of land formed by the River Avon.
3 Linear features will be BA to ...
A linear feature, probably a pit alignment, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is probably of Prehistoric date. The feature is located 700m south east of King's Newnham.
1 Medium-sized, slightly double-expanded axe-hammer with countersunk perforation. Located during ‘excavations’ at Lower Hillmorton, Rugby in 1939.
2 Found in Bronze Age barrow at Lower Hillmorton in 1939. Early Bronze Age ...
Findspot - a stone axe dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age period was found in the area of Lower Hillmorton.
1 Bloxam records a ‘British spearhead of bronze, of late type’ about the year 1825, near the site of Gibbet Hill tumulus (PRN 2783).
3 The OS was unable to located ...
Findspot - a spearhead dating to the Bronze Age was found 100m east of Gibbet Hill.
1 At above grid reference – barbed and tanged flint arrowhead (Bronze Age). Surface find from field W of Limestone Hall.
2 Reported found 14:10:71.
Findspot - a Bronze Age flint barbed and tanged arrowhead was found 600m north west of Limestone Hall.
2 An undated subrectangular enclosure shows on aerial photographs.
3 This site was examined during an archaeological evaluation in 1990 (WA 3961). It appears to date to the later Bronze ...
The site of an enclosure which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The enclosure was partially excavated and was found to be of Bronze Age or Iron Age date. It was situated 800m west of Wolston.
2 Undated but probably Prehistoric pit alignment shows on aerial photographs.
3 Linear features will be Bronze Age to Romano-British.
4 Mapped as part of National Mapping Programme. The north-south pit alignment ...
A Prehistoric linear feature, possibly a pit alignment, is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The feature is located 1km south of Bretford.
1 A Bronze palstave discovered at Burton Green shortly before the 1914-18 war in Arden. Now in Birmingham Museum. A typical palstave. The stop-ridge and loop are well developed but ...
Findspot - a Bronze Age palstave, a type of stone axe, was found in the area to the south west of Burton Green.
1 Mr N.E.Baguley has found what is probably an occupation site at Long Meadow Farm, 300yards S of Burton Green Post Office. These discoveries are not yet abundant enough for ...
Findspot - a flint scatter, comprising flint artefacts dating to the Bronze Age, was found to the south west of Burton Green.
1 A labourer from Long Lawford was digging a piece of ground at New Bilton on 31/12/1867 and discovered a brass leaf-shaped dagger at a depth of two spades. The ...
Findspot - a dagger dating to the Middle Bronze Age was found in the area of New Bilton.
1 Barrow at Smockington. This ‘barrow’ is shown on OS 1904 6″map as a depression. The site is under plough and there are no surface signs.
2 Barrow, now disappeared.
3 The ...
The possible site of a Bronze Age round barrow, a circular mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The site of the barrow is suggested by documentary evidence. It is situated 100m south of Smockington.
1 Barrow. From the area many flints, including a barbed and tanged arrowhead. May fall in Wolvey parish. Grid reference approximate.
2 This probably actually relates the Abbey Farm barrow 0.5km ...
The possible site of a round barrow, a mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. It is of Bronze Age date. The site is located 200m east of Gipsy Lane.
1 Bronze celt in the Bloxam collection resembling in form that figured in Sir John Evans’ Bronze Implements. Also bronze palstaves.
2 The two objects referred to above are almost certainly ...
Findspot - a Bronze Age axehead or palstave was found in the area north east of Wolvey.
2 Possible Neolithic/Bronze Age ring ditch shows on aerial photographs. This appears to have a central pit.
The site of a possible ring ditch of Bronze Age or Iron Age date. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The site is located 300m north of Smockington Lane.