1 1984. An area 9m x 10m was excavated prior to the construction of a house. A number of features belonged to the early Roman fort sequence. These included at ...
A defensive ditch and features that suggest buildings stood on this site in the Roman period, and were recorded during an excavation. The site lies 50m west of Quarry Lane, Mancetter.
1 1975: An area of c200 square metres was examined in the garden of Lloyds Bank. There seems to have been activity throughout the Roman period but its precise nature ...
Ditches and a well of Roman date were found during an excavation. Burials were later put in the ditches. The site was located at the corner of Seggs Lane and Priory Road, Alcester.
1 1965. Beside Guillaume’s Factory, S of the Stratford Road, some machine cut trenches showed traces of timber buildings in alignment with a N-S V-shaped ditch, the filling of which ...
During an excavation timber buildings and a ditch of Roman date were found. A later Roman stone building and a hypocaust were also found at this site, south of Stratford Road, Alcester.
1 1966: Excavation across Hobditch Causeway produced large quantities of Romano British pottery, particularly from the S ditch. The pottery dates from the early 2nd to 4th century. Building material ...
The site of a settlement dating to the Roman period. The remains of several buildings and a ditch were discovered during an excavation. The site is located 500m north east of Blunt's Green.
1 1965: Excavation in advance of bypass construction. One ditch proved to be V-shaped and the few scraps of pottery found were Roman. Further ditches also produced Roman pottery. The ...
During an excavation Roman features and finds were uncovered. A number of ditches may represent the remains of a field system. Three pits were also found and at least one of these was probably a well. The site was 800m east of the M40 Avon Bridge at Barford.
2 The side ditches of Ryknild Street and other linear boundaries show as crop marks.
3 A further stretch of roadside ditch was found in an evaluation trench at 7 Roman ...
The ditches which would have run on either side of a Roman road are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 100m east of Birmingham Road, Alcester.
2 Slight traces of possible rectilinear enclosure show on aerial photographs.
3 Roman pot and a La Tene III brooch were found on the surface, exact location uncertain. Site 97 in ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement. An enclosure is visible on aerial photographs and the remains of a ditch were found during an excavation. Fragments of pottery and a brooch have been found on the site which lies 1km east of Bubbenhall.
1 The following are recorded in this area: A linear ditch with Roman pot at SP3772; the corner of an enclosure with a ditch producing Roman pot, bone and charcoal ...
Features and finds recorded from this area suggest that it was possibly the site of a Roman settlement. It is 1km southeast of the church at Bubbenhall.
1 Area of Roman settlement identified during field survey. The occupation scatter included much Roman pottery, some tile, animal bone, iron objects, one quern fragment and two coins were found ...
The site of a Roman settlement. Fragments of Roman pottery, tile, animal bone have been found here. Post holes, a ditch and two hearths were found during an excavation. The site is located 200m south of Princethorpe.
2 Possible ring ditch or enclosure, other enclosures and linear features show on air photographs. Some of these marks are probably natural. The crop marks are impossible to plot because ...
The site of a Roman settlement. During partial excavation of the site, enclosures, ditches, houses and a possible corn drying kiln were found. The site was located 1km east of Bidford on Avon.
1 Excavations carried out in 1967 on site threatened by gravel extraction. The site shows on aerial photographs as a series of intersecting rectangular enclosures covering about 3.7 ha. An ...
Enclosures are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site was excavated prior to development. Ditches, pits, a semi-circular feature, and some occupational debris were found, suggesting a rural settlement of Roman date. It was situated 300m east of Hail End Bridge.
1 A large U-shaped pit or ditch was recorded during a watching brief at 5 Orchard Drive, Alcester. This indicated the survival of deposits not directly affected by previous excavation ...
A large U-shaped pit or ditch was recorded during a watching brief at 5 Orchard Drive, Alcester. This indicated the survival of deposits not directly affected by previous excavation or by the 1960s housing development.
1 Romano-British ditch running east-west, found in small trench for a new drainage culvert inspection chamber. A fragment of tegula was recovered from its fill.
Romano - British ditch partially revealed in a trench for drainage culvert inspection chamber. The ditch ran East-west and a tegula fragment was recovered from it.
1 Settlement features from the 1st/2nd centuries AD were found. A later 4th century ditch also contained stone which may have come from a building.
Four pits and a post hole dating from the late 1st or 2nd century were found. One pit was cut by a 4th century ditch. Possible building stone was also found. The site forms part of the Romano-British settlement of Tiddington.
1 Three small trenches were excavated in the garden of Witherley Lodge by Atherstone Archaeology and History Society under the direction of Keith Scott. The site, published posthumously, provided evidence ...
Occupation evidence spanning the 1st-4th century was recorded in excavations to the north of Watling Street.
1 An evaluation of land to the south of known Romano British settlement uncovered evidence of activity including a large pit or ditch, other rubbish pits with fill containing pottery ...
The site of Romano British roadside settlement in the Ennersdale Road area of Coleshill.
1 Ditches and features which may have been associated with them were uncovered during an excavation following a previous evaluation. There were two phases of activity, and pottery was found ...
Possible Romano British field boundaries uncovered during an excavation to the west of Chapel Street, Long Lawford.
1 Ditch and part of Romano British road seen in section by Chris Dyer on 23rd June 1956 in excavation for basement of J C Smith’s shop, Wood Street. Section ...
The remains of a Roman road. Part of a road surface and a ditch were discovered during archaeological work in Wood Street, Stratford upon Avon.
1 To the E of the quarry two large ditches and several pits were observed in 1975-6. Only a very partial plan of the area was recovered ahead of quarrying, ...
Roman features, including ditches and several pits, were excavated prior to quarrying work. The site is 400m south west of the church at Stretton on Fosse.
1 Features excavated 1971-2. A small area 5.5 by 12m at the extreme E of the quarry revealed a series of shallow intersecting ditches and one inhumation. No overall structure ...
Several ditches and a single Roman burial were found during an excavation. The site was located south west of Stretton on Fosse.
1 Identified during excavation these features were the only evidence of early activity. Probably associated with known Prehistoric and early Roman activity to the north, particulary an early Roman enclosure ...
Gullies, a ditch and a hollow, dating from the late Iron Age to early Roman period were found during an excavation. The site was located 800m south east of Bubbenhall.
1 During observation of foundations trenches two ditches and a pit were recorded. One residual human bone fragment, one of animal bone and a piece of 2nd/4th century pottery were ...
Two Roman ditches and a pit, containing two bone fragments and a piece of 2nd/4th century pottery, were found during archaeological work. Previous work on the site had recorded 1st-4th century settlement activity, with ditches, interpreted as property boundaries, layers, pits and a possible gravel pit.
1 The edges of two conjoined pits were uncovered together with a possible ditch that crossed the trench (E) east-west before apparently turning south. Roman pottery was associated with ...
Roman features and finds recovered during excavations at Coughton Court included two pits, a ditch and substantial amounts of pottery.
1 Archaeological recording ahead of gas pipe laying revealed evidence for Roman occupation including probable ditch and pit features. Roman pottery was also recovered. This may indicate rural settlement on ...
A possible Roman settlement, including a probable ditch and pits. Roman pottery was found in topsoil and ditches. The settlement site lies south east of Long Marston.