1 The butt end of a shaft-hole adze dating to 1650-1250 BC was found at this location.
2 Illustration in FI file.
3 Dating given as Middle Bronze Age.
Find spot - a Bronze Age adze, a cutting tool, was found to the south of Lower Heathcote Farm.
1 Small socketed spearhead with loops. (See J.Evans, Ancient British Implements, p.322). Found about 1961 on Medieval earthwork known locally as ‘The Butts’. Loops were ‘squashed’ in antiquity ...
Findspot - a Bronze Age spearhead was found at Fillongley Castle Yard, 400m south east of Fillongley.
1 A significant number of ditches and gullies were found which were stratigraphically early but were essentially undated. No firm dating material was found, but they are probably of comparable ...
A significant number of ditches and gullies were found which were stratigraphically early but were essentially undated. They are probably of comparable age to archaeological finds on neighbouring properties, later prehistoric or Roman.
Find of an undated bronze object.
1 Small bronze object found by Mr L Fretwell and brought into Museum as an enquiry.
2 Drawing.
Find of unidentified bronze object near Corley Camp.
1 The Liberty of Pathlow had the title of a Hundred and is recorded in 1086. The place which gives it its name is a tumulus, or heap of earth, ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow probably dates to the Bronze Age period. It is situated 500m east of Pathlow.
2 Undated settlement site, consisting of penannular gullies, enclosures and linear features, shows on air photographs. On morphological grounds the site is probably of Iron Age and Roman date.
2 At ...
The site of settlement which is visible as a cropmarks on aerial photographs. It includes enclosures, ring ditches and linear features which have been interpreted as possible boundary ditches. The date of the settlement is unknown but it is likely to span from the Bronze Age to possibly the Roman period. It is situated 1km south west of Rushington.
1 Six barbed and tanged arrowheads have been found on Odibourne Allotments during recent years. The finder is now dead and the arrowheads have been dispersed.
Findspot - six arrowheads dating to the Bronze Age were found at Lower Ladyes Hills.
1 is said to have been found inside the hillfort.
2 Dating given as Middle Bronze Age.
Findspot - a socketed Bronze Age chisel believed to have been found on Meon Hill.
1 Excavations undertaken between 1980 and 1985 in advance of gravel extraction. Two ring ditches were examined in Field 3. The first was in the NW corner of the field ...
Ring ditches, which were visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs, were excavated in advance of gravel extraction. They were dated to the Bronze Age. Flint flakes and tools were recovered. The site is to the south west of Wasperton.
1 A ‘territorial boundary’ excavated between 1980 and 1985 in advance of gravel extraction. This boundary was traced from the SW corner of Field 1 to the NE corner of ...
Archaeological excavation discovered the line of a ditch which was visible as a linear feature on aerial photographs. The ditch appears to date to the Iron Age, from finds of pottery, and possibly marks the line of a boundary. It is located to the east of the River Avon.
1 Two beorg features, probably barrows rather than hills, are recorded on the W boundary of Oldberrow in a pre-Conquest charter (see also PRN 5171). Each is described as Stanbeorge ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound usually built to conceal a burial. It probably dates to the Bronze Age. The barrow is visible as an earthwork and is situated 300m east of Poole's Wood.
2 Adjacent to the cursus (MWA1921) is an oval or D-shaped enclosure which has a W entrance and appears to enclose two penannular gullies. This may, on morphological grounds, be ...
The site of a possible settlement dating to the Iron Age. Enclosures are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. It is located 1km north east of the church, Sherbourne.
1 1981: A number of objects found on the NW slope of Alcock’s Arbour with a metal detector. These finds included a Bronze Age socketed gouge (c900-700 BC).
Findspot - a socketed gouge dating to the Bronze Age date was found at Alcock's Arbour.
1 An evaluation carried out by the Warwickshire Museum at Glebe Farm, Long Itchington in May 1992 located part of a possible Bronze Age cremation cemetery. Various features and ...
A possible Bronze Age cremation cemetery was found during an archaeological excavation. It was situated to the west of Southam Road, Long Itchington.
1 A sherd of possibly either Collared Urn or Food Vessel was recovered during an archaeological evaluation carried out by the Warwickshire Museum on land at Kisses Barn Farm, Polesworth, ...
Findspot - a sherd of pottery dating to the Bronze Age was recovered 50m southwest of Kisses Barn Farm.
1 An Early Bronze Age barbed and tanged arrowhead was found on the rugby field at Glasshouse Lane ,Kenilworth.
Findspot - a Bronze Age barbed and tanged arrowhead was found in the area of Glasshouse Lane, Kenilworth.
1 Tumulus.
2 Small tumulus about 1.2m high in grassland of deerpark. Scheduled as an Ancient Monument.
3 The mound may actually be the remains of a gazebo associated with the ...
The site of a mound. It may possibly be Bronze Age round barrow, a mound of earth built to conceal a burial. It is situated 300m south west of Combe Abbey.
1 Small round mound which has recently been disturbed by a tree being uprooted in its centre. Nothing visible to indicate its date or function.
2 As with Combe Abbey ...
The site of a possible Bronze Age round barrow, a mound of earth built to conceal a burial. Alternatively, it might be a mound on which a gazebo stood. It is situated 300m south west of Combe Abbey.
1 A small round mound with no surface indication of date or function.
2 This is similar to Combe Abbey ‘Tumulus’ (PRN 3723) and is more likely to represent a Post ...
The site of a possible Bronze Age round barrow, a mound of earth built to conceal a burial. Alternatively, it might be a mound on which a gazebo stood. It is situated 300m south of Combe Abbey.
1 The remains of a settlement dating to the later Bronze Age were located during an evaluation.
2 Dating given as late Bronze Age – Iron Age.
The remains of a settlement from the later Bronze Age were found during an excavation. The remains included pits and ditches. The site lies 600m east of the church at Ryton-on Dunsmore.
1 Tumulus marked.
2 The site has been totally destroyed by gravel extraction and other industrial usage.
3 Dating given as Bronze Age.
The site of a possible round barrow, a circular mound of earth usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow probably dates to the Bronze Age. It was situated 900m north west of Dow Bridge.
1 In cutting through some high ground to form the London-Birmingham railway in 1837 a burial place was found. A sepulchural urn ornamented with diagonal lines and three ‘drinking ...
Three Bronze Age burials are recorded as being found 600m north west of Brandon Castle. The burials may have been concealed within a round barrow.
1 AP.
2 Large subrectangular enclosure with subdivisions shows on aerial photographs.
3 A geophysical survey carried out during 1992 identified the cropmark complex seen on APs. The complex comprises an ...
A Prehistoric enclosure, linear features and a possible ring ditch are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. These features may represent the remains of a settlement. The site is located 300m north of Lime Tree Avenue, Rugby.
1 AP.
2 Undated subrectangular enclosure with subdivisions shows on aerial photographs.
3 A geophysical survey carried out during 1992 confirmed the presence of a sub-rectangular enclosure with a small sub-rectangular enclosure ...
Several Prehistoric enclosures are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They might represent the remains of a farmstead. The enclosures are situated 200m west of Lawford Lane, Rugby.