1 141 sherds of Roman date brought into Warwick Museum. This pottery seems to have a 2nd century to 4th century date range. This scatter has also produced tile, suggesting ...
The site of a Roman settlement known from finds of pottery and tiles. The site is located 600m north east of the church, Ilmington.
1 A scatter of Roman pottery and tile included one Medieval sherd.
Findspot - a single Medieval pottery sherd was found 600m north east of the church, Ilmington.
1 60 sherds of Roman date brought into Warwick Museum. This pottery lacks closely dateable pieces. Severn valley wares dominate this particular collection.
A large number of pottery fragments of Roman date were found 800m south east of Crimscote Downs. This suggests that the site may be that of a Roman settlement.
3 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Ridge and furrow cultivation in Ilmington Parish, dating from the Medieval period onwards. In some areas of the parish the ridge and furrow survives as an earthwork. In other areas it is visible on aerial photographs.
1 Two fishponds, separated by a narrow causeway, show on 0S map of 1881.
2 These fishponds have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Ilmington Parish (PRN 6446).
Two fishponds of probable Medieval date are shown on the Ordnance Survey first edition map of 1881. The fishponds are found north of Foxcote Great Coppice.
2 Earthworks show on air photographs. These have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Ilmington Parish (PRN 6446).
Earthworks, which are probably of Medieval date, are visible on aerial photographs. The earthworks are located 400m south west of Ilmington.
Redundant record (previously used to record an event).
1 A lower palaeolithic bifacial handaxe, found in Ilmington some years ago, was brought to the County Museum. One edge has been worked by opposed serial flaking but the other ...
Findspot - a Palaeolithic handaxe was found 700m south west of Ilmington.
1 The complete upper half of an Iron Age rotary quern of beehive type was found incorporated in a garden wall. The quern is fashioned from a medium coarse millstone ...
Findspot - a beehive quernstone dating to the Iron Age period was found 400m east of the church, Ilmington.
A number of accounts of Warwickshire folklore include tales of a strange booming sound heard in the vicinity of the village of Mickleton. The source of this noise was reputed ...