1 The cleaning out of a water course to the east of Lower Lark Stoke produced some Romano-British pottery (Samian ware, which may indicate a high status site), and stone ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement. Fragments of pottery, including Samian ware, and roof slates have been found at the site, which is situated in the area of Lark Stoke.
1 Some observation has been done on the surviving earthworks in Lark Stoke away from the Medieval village site. In a number of places, such as Mapletree Hollow and the ...
Lynchets (ridges created by ploughing), that may be pre-Medieval in date, survive north of New Covert, Lark Stoke. The lynchets are visible as earthworks.
2 Ridge and furrow transcribed from air photographs.
Ridge and furrow cultivation in Admington Parish of Medieval and Post Medieval date. In some areas the ridge and furrow survives as an earthwork. In other areas it is visible on aerial photographs.
1 Earthworks of a possible fishpond are visible on air photographs.
3 The earthworks are also marked on the OS 1:10 000 sheet.
4 The lords ‘new fishpond’ appears in a 1379 ...
A possible fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish. It is visible as an earthwork. It is of unknown date, and it is situated 500m east of New Covert, Admington.
1 A large complex of earthworks indicating a shrunken settlement show on air photographs. These have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Admington Parish (PRN 6386).
3 ...
The Medieval shrunken village of Lower and Upper Admington. The remains are visible as earthworks on aerial photographs. The site is located on the south east side of Lower Admington.
1 An abundant scatter of flint found over an area of 600m by 600m, centred around Bog Mill Stalls. The bulk of the material is Mesolithic dating to around 8000 ...
The site of a flint scatter dating mainly to the Mesolithic period. It is located north west of Ilmington.
1 A possible Bronze Age scraper found during field survey.
Findspot - a Bronze Age scraper was found 500m north east of a Lark Stoke.
1 A good deal of flint found in fields to the W of Top Farm and S of the Dingle.
2 Evidence of prehistoric settlement of uncertain date comes from concentrations ...
The possible site of a Prehistoric settlement. The settlement is indicated by the presence of burnt stone and flint found in the area to the south of The Dingle.
1 A very dense scatter of Roman pottery c. 200m across suggests a farmstead site in Lark Stoke; this is the third found in the area.
The possible site of a Roman settlement is indicated by a dense scatter of pottery. The site is located in the area of Lark Stoke.
1 The two mills of Admington and Lark Stoke are both mentioned in the court rolls of the Winchcombe Abbey manor of Admington. The Lark Stoke mill was located ...
The site of two watermills dating to the Medieval period. The mills are known from documentary evidence. They are located 500m apart and north west of Ilmington.
1 Medieval pottery, mostly of the 12th-15th centuries, is abundant in the fields immediately to the W of the Hall.
2 Plan
3 There is a clearly defined moated site at the ...
The site of a Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. The moat survives as an earthwork at the southern end of Admington village.
1 The earthwork is a leat feeding the moat, running north-east from the Small Brook; the overflow ran across the road then through the village.
The remains of a Medieval leat survive as an earthwork at the southern end of Admington village. The leat fed water from the Small Brook in to a moat at this lcoation.
1 A depression and bank in an orchard to the south of the moat could be the site of a manorial complex of buildings. The Hall itself may stand ...
The remains of a Medieval manor house. The remains of the house and its associated buildings are visible as earthworks. The site is located at the southern end of Admington.
1 A hollow depression, 120m long and 40m wide, in a field to the south of Admington Hall. Presumably the site of a pond attached to the manor house, ...
A Medieval fishpond, used for breeding and storing fish, is indicated by earthworks surviving at the southern end of Admington.