1 The excavation of two trial trenches to the south-west of the Roman town recorded four sherds of Romano-British pottery but no evidence for the Romano-British burial ground or any ...
Four sherds of Romano-British pottery recovered during evaluation trenching. The site is located at Orchard Rise, Evesham Street, Alcester.
1 A brick-built well and wall foundations of 19th century date were recored during archaeoloigicla observation and evaluation work associated with the construction of new houses.
A brick-built well and wall foundations of 19th cenutry date were recorded during archaeological observation and evaluation work at 4-6 Evesham Street, Alcester.
1 A series of 2m square stanchion holes was observed in 1980. ?Roman gravel surfaces, and some ?Medieval stonework as well as quantities of Roman pottery and a C4 coin ...
During an excavation Roman features and a Medieval wall were recorded. Finds included Roman coins. The site was located on Evesham Street, Alcester.
1 A watching brief on a foundation trench for a rear extension here revealed a Romano British rubbish pit with some C2 pottery.
2 Listed as site no 64.
A Roman pit was found during archaeological work. It was located on Birmingham Road, Alcester.
1 A watching brief on a site to the S of existing No 38 revealed no evidence of Romano British occupation, but Medieval finds included a large part of a ...
Find spot - sherds of Medieval pottery were found west of Birmingham Road, Alcester.
1 Found 1978 in St Faith Street, Alcester. It consists of three circular loops, showing traces of wear, arranged in an inverted triangle. At its centre is a projecting human ...
Find spot - a bronze object of Roman date was found St. Faith Street, Alcester.
1 A card form the old SMR marked RB10 – 18/8/71 – Alcester records possible Roman pottery and coins and the site is given as `Grammar School and Smallwood’s Almshouses’.
2 ...
Findspot - Roman pottery and coins were found on Birmingham Road, Alcester.
1 Two brooches. Large and clumsy examples of a fairly rare type. The two really distinctive features are a ‘plate’ on either side of the head of the brooch which ...
Find spot - two brooches of Roman date were found to the east of Bleachfield Street, Alcester.
1 An old SMR card records a Dupondius (Orichalcum) Domitian (AD 86). It was found in 1970, but the find spot is given only as Alcester.
2 The reference requires checking.
Findspot - a coin dating to the Roman period was found in Alcester.
1 To the west of Bleachfield Street. Clay floors with post holes having a 2.1m spacing were found together with dry stone walling. Below this were traces of C1 ...
During an excavation to the west of Bleachfield Street, Alcester, the remains of a Roman building were found.
1 Site E, the S most plot of Bleachfield Street Allotments, was brought to notice by the poverty of the crops on a broad strip running obliquely across the plot. ...
The remains of a Roman building were found at the Bleachfield Street Allotments, Alcester, during an excavation.
1 A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School. It was probably a drainage ditch or field boundary similar ...
A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School.
1 Find of a Roman brooch of the Polden Hill type in 1995 by a metal detectorist during construction of the Norton- Lenchwick bypass.
Find of a Roman brooch during major road construction 200m south of Oversley Mill.
1 An small assemblage of Beaker pottery was found within a posthole.
2Beaker pottery and flintwork came from a pit in area G. This, together with other Beaker material from a ...
Two Early Bronze Age pits were found during excavations prior to the construction of the A46 Norton Lenchwick Bypass
1 Four Romano British potsherds were found in unstratified contexts during a watching brief in advance of construction work. They included three Severn Valley jar sherds and part of a ...
A small number of Romano British potsherds, including one piece of Samian ware, were found in Bleachfield Street, Alcester.
1 A lead cloth seal was found during building work in an unstratifed context. It had been stamped with the initials WA.
Find of post medieval cloth seal during fieldwork in Bleachfield Street, Alcester.
1 Ditch 1001 probably represented a field boundary ditch, and another ditch may have been part of the same Romano British field system.
2There was a scatter of residual Roman pottery ...
Romano-British field boundaries found during excavation in the outer enclosure of Boteler's Castle. These were possibly part of a larger field system aligned on Ryknild Street.
1 The 1993 excavations produced 24 worked flint fragments, eight from one of the early Bronze Age features, the rest residual or from topsoil contexts. Further groups of 22 fragments ...
Flintwork from the outer enclosure of Boteler's Castle. It was mostly residual or from topsoil contexts.
1 3 bay timber framed structure, altered, dating from early 16th century (or possibly late 15th). Open hall north end.
2 Number 3, Butter Street appears to date from at ...
Survey identified this as a three bay timber framed building dating to the early 16th or possibly late 15th century. New evidence suggests that the house is from the early 15th century possibly from the year 1444.
1 Over 30 sherds of pottery from the garden of 13 Butter Street. Almost all Rb including Severn Valley, Samian, Black Buirnished, Grey and Rusticated wares.
Pottery recovered from the garden of 13 Butter Street. Almost all RB (a few post-med (or possibly med) sherds also).
1 Further work in 1926 at the site of an old sawpit produced evidence for another stone building with fragments of wall, concrete floor, flue tiles, tesserae and painted plaster. ...
Evidence for a high status RB building recorded by Davies. Location not certain but thought to be N of Meeting Lane.
1 “Further excavation on nearby Allotments found more of a wall discovered in 1958 and the concrete floor found in 1928, all aligned with the known road system.”
2 Listed as ...
More of previously excavated wall and floor discovered in excavation from Bleachfield Street Allotments, Alcester.
1 In 1983, the householder recovered a quantity of medieval pottery and a collection of fire bars whilst digging in his garden. Subsequent excavation by Warwickshire Museum revealed an extensive ...
A dump of medieval kiln debris was excavated at Grafton house, School Road, Alcester. The kiln itself is assumed to lie to the south.
1 The lower of two peatlayers seen in trenches I, II, and III was up to 0.4m thick. The upper part of the deposits produced two RB sherds and ...
The lower of two peat layers seen in trenching S of Moorfield Road, Alcester containd a little RB material.