1 Find of an 8th century pin fragment in the Stratford Road. No grid reference given and method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of a pin fragment from the early medieval period in the Stratford Road Shipston on Stour.
1 Silver penny of Aethelred II (978-1016) found with a metal detector in 1983. Coin acquired by Warwickshire Museum.
Find of silver penny of Aethelred II one kilometer south of Water Orton.
1 A penny of King Offa (757-796) was found in November 1988. Details of the location and method of recovery were unrecorded.
Find of a penny of King Offa near Bidford on Avon
1 Find of a strapend. Method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of an Early Medieval strap end in the Tower Hill area of Bidford on Avon
1Bronze mount found in 1994 and brought to the Museum for identification. Method of recovery unrecorded. A note was added to this record in 2013 by Dr Tony Martin. The ...
Find of a bronze mount or more likely a fragment of a cruciform brooch in the shape of a horse's head dated typologically to the early sixth century.The findspot was 400m southeast of Hunningham Bridge.
1 Find of a Saxon brooch fragment by means of a metal detector. Brought in to Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery for identification. Said to have been found in the ...
Metal detector find of part of a Saxon brooch
1 Findspot of two Anglo Saxon items. Method of recovery unrecorded. The area given was the Camden Road and the grid reference was SP24354045.
Stray find of two fragments from the Migration period 1,400m west of Shipston on Stour.
1 Fragment of Anglo Saxon brooch found, according to the source, in Wasperton, but the grid reference given (SP285565) is in Wellesbourne. Perhaps it should be SP265565. Method of recovery ...
Find of Anglo Saxon brooch fragment in either Wasperton or Wellesbourne.
1 Disc brooch found in 1987 in backfill. Method of recovery unrecorded. Grid reference given of SP265585 approx.
Find of a disc brooch dating from the Anglo Saxon period 250m south of the church at Wasperton.
1 Alveston ford was the ‘Doddanford’ of the charters and was a continuation of the trackway on the E side of Alveston Pasture called ‘Hryaveg’ (Ridgeway) in the bounds of ...
The second of two possible sites for the Early Medieval Dodda's Ford, a shallow part of the river where animals, people and vehicles would have crossed. It is referred to in a 10th century charter. The site lies 500 m north of Alveston.
1 An Anglo-Saxon inhumation was excavated from one of the defunct (Romano-British) corndryers. Analysis of the skeleton is accompanied by a description of the iron grave goods, which include a ...
A Migration period burial was found during excavations of a Romano-British Settlement near Billesley. The site lies m NW of Drayton Barn Cottages.
1 Various air photographs.
2 Possible Saxon palace site of 2-3 ha in extent on the S end of a spur overlooking the Avon. Two charters of 781 exist. Information on ...
Linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Subsequent excavation and radiocarbon dating have confirmed that this is an Anglo Saxon settlement, possibly a palace, dating to the Migration period. It is situated 500m north east of Boscobel.
1 Archaeological observation of the excavation of foundation trenches recorded a large ditch sealed by a medieval ground surface containing 12th/13th century pottery. No dating evidence was found within ...
A large undated ditch, sealed by a medieval ground surface containing 12th/13th century pottery, was recorded during the excavation of foundation trenches at Tredington House, Tredington.
1 A stamped gold foil was found by a metal detectorist c. 4″ below ground. It is circular and one edge is torn and damaged. The border is ...
Gold foil item, probably from the Migration period found in Nether Whitacre.
1 F Cottrill reported that in 1935 a fragment of pre-Norman cross-shaft was preserved in Rugby Museum. It formerly stood in the garden in Horton Crescent, Rugby, and according to ...
Findspot - a fragment of a carved stone cross shaft of Early Medieval date, probably pre-Viking. It may have come from Rugby church. The fragment is now in Warwick Museum.
Two Gold links possibly from necklace, Rugby.
1 Two gold links found near Rugby. On loan from the Bloxam Collection, in Warwick Museum.
2 Catalogue entry.
Find
1 A sepulchral urn was discovered a few years ago on the glebe land in Brinklow parish, within half a mile of the Fosse Way and the Brinklow earthwork. A ...
The site of a possible Anglo-Saxon cremation burial dating to the Migration or Early Medieval period. It was found in the area of Brinklow.
1 Gold jewel said to have been found near Wibtoft before 1862.
2 In 1862 Bloxam exhibited, from Wibtoft, an isolated find. A small gold ornament of conical form set with ...
A gold object, probably from a scabbard, and dating to the Migration period was found in the area of Wibtoft.
1 Find of a small Anglo Saxon dress fitting in August 1995 in Grange Lane at SP105518. The method of recovery was unrecorded.
Find of a plaque, probably a dress fitting from the Migration period in Grange Lane, Bidford on Avon.
1 Find of an Anglo Saxon stirrup mount in the 1990s. The location given was the area of SP325955. No method of recovery was described.
Find of a stirrup mount from the early medieval period 1km southeast of Mancetter.
1 Find of a cruciform brooch reported in West Midlands Archaeology. Only a general grid reference of SP3397 was given, and the method of recovery was not recorded.
Find of a cruciform brooch from the Migration period in the area east of Mancetter.
1 Find of an Anglo Saxon brooch somewhere in Nuneaton. The grid reference was not given, nor was the method of recovery recorded.
Find of a cruciform brooch from the Migration period in Nuneaton. The exact location is unknown.
1 A cruciform brooch, broken into two pieces, probably from the early 6th century AD.
Find of a cruciform brooch from the Migration period to the north east of Brandon Grange.
1 There is an Anglo Saxon charter reference to the Herpath which crosses the river at Cliff Ford.
2 Clifforda referred to in charter of AD 922. The name probably means ...
The site of a ford across the River Stour which was probably in use from the Early Medieval period. It is situated at Clifford Chambers bridge.