1 A field centered on the above NGR on the 1841 tithe map was labelled “Quarry Close and buildings incl. the Rock Cottage Yard Garden etc”.
2 Although no further documentary ...
The site of a quarry and a house dating back to at least the Imperial period. They are marked on a tithe map of 1841. The quarry is visible as an earthwork. The site is located at Rock Spinney, 1km north of Bubbenhall.
1 Site 2. Opposite side of main road from the Home Farm. Site has now been almost entirely removed by gravel extraction. The site was very rich in scattered pieces, ...
The site of a Roman settlement. Two wells and numerous fragments of pottery were found at the site which is located 400m east of Baginton.
1 18. Baginton (3m 600yds, S 10 degrees E) Quarter mile N of Chantry Wood. Eight flakes.
2 No further information was forthcoming, and the area now (depending which ...
A flint scatter, comprising flint artefacts of Prehistoric date, was found 500m north of Chantry Heath Wood.
1 During renovation of the porch of a house called ‘The Sheriffs’ in the centre of Baginton in 1982, a hurried excavation revealed a rubbish pit containing Roman pottery dateable ...
During an archaeological excavation, a pit was uncovered containing Roman pottery of the first century AD. The site is west of Holly Walk at Baginton.
1 One of the two fields in Baginton containing ridge and furrow (the other is WA 2956) is centred on the above NGR. The two fields are some 200 ...
An area of ridge and furrow cultivation of Medieval or Post Medieval date. It is visible as an earthwork. The area of ridge and furrow is situated north of Coventry Road, Baginton.
1 Apart from to the E of Lunt Cottages (WA 2955), the other field in Baginton containing evidence of ridge and furrow is at the above location. This field ...
An area of ridge and furrow cultivation of Medieval or Post Medieval date. The ridge and furrow survives as an earthwork. It is situated 300m east of the church at Baginton.
1 In 1983 the excavation was still in process, although nearing completion, ahead of renovation work on Home Farm and its outbuildings. The E half of the area has produced ...
The site of a Roman settlement. Numerous ditches, pits and slots were uncovered during an excavation. The site is 200m northeast of the chuch at Baginton.
1 During excavations in 1983 (PRN 2957) the circular platform of a horse engine was uncovered c0.2m below ground level. This was originally connected to a wheel on the adjacent ...
The site of a horse engine, a horse-driven wheel which provided power to drive a threshing machine. The horse engine was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated 200m north east of the church at Baginton.
1 Footbridge across the River Sowe marked.
2 Footbridge not marked.
3 There is nothing left of it now.
The site of a footbridge from the Imperial period which was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It crossed the River Sowe 300m west of the church at Baginton.
1 In 1787 there was apparently a larger house (called “The Lunt House”) on this site, which was still there in 1831, and the present Lunt Cottages are supposed to ...
The results of archaeological work at The Lunt Cottages, Baginton, suggest that they were once part of a larger building, possibly dating back to the Medieval period.
1 Storage jar of Wappenbury Ware: Large piece missing, height 15 cm. Provenance – site of new Vicarage (Rectory). 1.5m down in sand.
2 There is no finder’s name or date ...
Findspot - a storage jar of Roman date was found 300m south east of Baginton Castle.
1 Core chisel found at this location.
2 Coventry Museum reference A885/25/1.
Findspot - a flint core for a Prehistoric tool was found in the area of Baginton.
1 Collection of finds found at this location comprising a black burnished ware dish found, a ceramic charm pendant and a small bronze vessel dated as late 18th century to ...
Findspot - several objects, including a Roman dish, a pendant and a bronze vessel from the Imperial period, were found to the east of Edinburgh Villas, Baginton.
1 One miscellaneous worked flint fragment recorded from ‘the village pit’ at about this location.
2 Part of a well-rounded flint pebble which is humanly worked has been discovered (not in ...
Findspot - a flint flake, probably a waste product that was produced when a flint tool was being made during the Palaeolithic period. It was found on the west side of Coventry Road, Baginton.
1 206 sherds (1482g) of Roman pottery, all dating to the first century AD, were recovered during the excavation of a single 3.8m by 2.0m trial trench. These may ...
206 Roman pottery sherds, all dating to the first century AD, recovered during the excavation of a single trial trench within the Lunt Roman Fort car park, south of Lunt Fort Cottages, Baginton.
1 32 sherds (459g) of medieval pottery, dating from the fourteenth through to the sixteenth centuries, were recovered during the excavation of a single 3.8m by 2.0m trial trench. ...
32 medieval pottery sherds, dating from the fourteenth through to the sixteenth centuries, recovered during the excavation of a single trial trench within the Lunt Roman Fort car park, south of Lunt Fort Cottages, Baginton.
1 The probable extent of medieval settlement based on the first edition Ordnance Survey 6″ map of 1886, 26NE.
2 Baginton is listed in Domesday in Stoneleigh Hundred. The Phillimore edition ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement at Baginton based on the Ordnance Survey 6" map of 1886.
1 A single trial trench was excavated prior to the construction of an extension.
Two undated pits recorded during trial trenching at the Rear of 2 Lunt Cottages, Coventry Road, Baginton.
1 One Palaeolithic hand-axe from bed of River Sowe at around this grid reference.
2 Exceptionally small cordate hand-axe from the bed of River Sowe adjoining Coventry golf course. Found in ...
Findspot - a Palaeolithic handaxe was found on the bed of the River Sowe, 1km west of Baginton.
1 1968: Rescue excavation of a ring ditch (PRN 6079) in advance of bypass construction revealed traces of a Post Medieval barn. The site is on a gently rising hillock ...
The site of a Post Medieval barn. The remains of the barn were found during an archaeological excavation, 300m north east of Baginton Mill.
1 Excavation in 1966-7 indicated a second period of occupation within the late Neronian-early Flavian period (cAD 60-79). Period 2 is c70-90. Evidence was found for the W, E and ...
The Lunt, a fort that was rebuilt several times throughout the Roman period. During an excavation the remains of the defences, ovens, a gatehouse, granary and barracks were found from the second phase of occupation. It is situated north of Coventry Road, Baginton.
2 Excavation in 1968-71 demonstrated a Period 3 at the fort dating to cAD70-74. Proven structural evidence is confined to a twin-ditch system and a twin-portalled gateway at the S. ...
The Lunt, a fort that was rebuilt several times throughout the Roman period. During an excavation the remains of defensive ramparts, a gatehouse and other buildings were found from the third phase of the fort's occupation. It is situated north of Coventry Road, Baginton.
3 Excavation after 1971 revealed a further Period, Period 4, which consisted of a ditched fort on a similar alignment but slightly larger than that of Period 2. A coin ...
The Lunt, a fort that was rebuilt several times throughout the Roman period. During an excavation the remains of defensive ramparts from the fourth phase of the fort's occupation were found. It is situated north of Coventry Road, Baginton.
1 Work started on an unoccupied garden site behind the school house. Results up to date are a complex of small post holes with later pits. Among other pits found ...
Part excavation at this site uncovered evidence of occupation, possibly a Medieval shrunken village. The site is at Baginton, 50m east of the church.