1 ‘Stepping stones’ marked.
2 Also recorded with three stones drawn on a sketch map of Wappenbury dated 1830.
3 No stones now visible, though there may be when the water level ...
The site of a ford of uncertain date but the spot is marked as 'Stepping Stones' on the Ordnance Survey map of 1906. Traces of the track leading down to the ford are still visible on both sides of the river. It was situated 200m south east of the church, Wappenbury.
1 At Hunningham at least two different constructions of the Fosse Way are known, the earlier road laid out at original ground level, and the latter on an agger. Excavation ...
A section of the Fosse Way, a Roman road. Archaeological excavation has revealed at least two phases of construction in Hunningham Parish.
1 Copper alloy pin found in 1992. No grid reference given and method of recovery unrecorded.
A pin brooch from the Migration period found in Hunningham
1 Find of post medieval potsherds at Hunningham House Farm in 1997. Grid reference given as SP391672. Method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of post medieval potsherds in the area of Hunningham House Farm.
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 The probable extent of medieval settlement based on the OS map of 1886, 34NW.
2 Domesday lists Hunningham in Marton Hundred. The Phillimore ed. Has a grid ref of 3768.
Ref ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement of Hunningham based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, and including the two known shrunken areas.
1 Hunningham lighting decoy site in the QL programme for the Coventry area. It was set up to simulate the lights of a marshalling yard (parallel railway sidings) and so ...
The site of a lighting bombing decoy installation from the Second World War designed to confuse the enemy into dropping their bombs in the wrong place. Documentary evidence places it 800m southwest of Hunningham.
1 Worked flint of uncertain function found in ?September 1985. Side notch and overall pressure flaking on dorsal surface/ shallow retouch around notch on dorsal surface. Lustrous grey flint, no ...
Findspot - a piece of worked flint dating to between the Mesolithic and the Bronze Age was found 250m south of the church, Hunningham.
1 The resident reported that in digging in the garden of the recently built vicarage several pieces of pottery were found. One or two pieces were possibly Roman, the rest ...
Findspot - pottery and a quern dating to the Roman period were found 250m south of the church, Hunningham.
1 Coins from the 13th and 14th century reported by metal detectorists as found in 1991.
Findspot - coins dating to the Medieval period were found in Hunningham.
1 A coin of the 3rd century reported by metal detectorists as found in 1991.
Findspot - a coin dating to the Roman period was found 200m west of Hunningham.
1 Two coins from the 3rd and 4th century reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - two coins dating to the Roman period were found in Hunningham parish.
1 A small 14th or 15th century bronze horse, possibly a child’s toy, reported by metal detectorists.
2 Illustration and detailed description in FI File.
Findspot - a small bronze horse, possibly a child's toy, dating to the Medieval period, was found near Hunningham.
1 A coin from the 4th century reported by metal detectorists as found in 1990.
2 A Roman bronze fitting was found near Hunningham in 1994/5. No gid reference was given ...
Findspot - items dating to the Roman period was found around Hunningham.
1 A small area of the buried topsoil under the platform of the moated site yielded a Neolithic leaf-shaped arrowhead and another struck flake.
Findspot - flint dating to the Neolithic period was found 200m south west of the church, Hunningham.
1 A small area of the buried topsoil under the platform of the moated site yielded one grey Roman sherd.
Findspot - a pottery sherd dating to the Roman period was found 200m south west of the church, Hunningham.
1 Features show faintly on aerial photographs.
2 Cropmarks of linear features, possible enclosures and pits show on aerial photographs. This probably represents a settlement of uncertain date.
Aerial photographs showing pits, linear features and possible enclosures, suggest that this is the site of a settlement of uncertain date. It is 600m east of Hunningham Bridge.
2 Undated linear cropmarks show on aerial photographs.
Linear features, of unknown date, are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 900m north east of Marton Junction.
2 Probable ring ditch with clear entrance break shows on aerial photographs.
A probable ring ditch, dating to the Neolithic or Bronze Age, is visible on aerial photographs. It is located 1km south of Parker's Hill Brake.
1 A quern was found in a field boundary, presumably having been thrown out from the field to the SW. The quern is of an unknown bluish stone with coarse ...
Findspot - an undated quern stone was found 200m south of the church, Hunningham.
1 Two flints found October 1987. One is an end scraper on a flake of grey flint and the other is a struck blade with no obvious wear marks ...
Findspot - flint dating to between the Mesolithic and the Bronze Ages was found 450m south east of the church, Hunningham.
1 Gun flint 15 by 15 mm. 18th or 19th century, for muzzle loader. Found in September 1987.
Findspot - a gunflint dating to the Imperial period was found 400m south east of the church, Hunningham.
1 A late Medieval gold fitting, perhaps a saddle ornament, reported by metal detectorists as found in 1991.
2 Bronze mount, possibly Saxon, in the form of a horse’s head, found ...
Findspot - a metal object dating to the Medieval period and a mount in the shape of a horse's head dating between the Migration and Early Medieval period were found near Hunningham.
1 The Fosse Way probably originated as the link road along a temporary frontier line and was in existence by AD 47. Between Cirencester and High Cross it runs remarkably ...
The Fosse Way, a Roman road of mid 1st century origin, running from Cirencester to Leicester, partly along a temporary frontier line. The road runs to the south east of Stretton on Fosse.