1 Ashow, Thickthorn Wood. Linear earthwork. Excavation revealed this to be a Medieval boundary bank. Documentary evidence associated the earthwork with a monastic grange at Chesford Bridge.
A Medieval boundary bank survives as an earthwork. It is situated to the north east edge of Thickthorn Wood. Documentary evidence suggests that it was associated with a monastic grange at Chesford Bridge.
1 Finds made with a metal detector. Cast bronze leg and foot from a bronze jug or bowl. Late Medieval. Also other lead and iron objects.
Findspot - various metal objects, including part of a bronze jug or bowl, dating to the Medieval or Post Medieval period were found 800m west of the football ground, Bulkington.
1 Assorted finds comprising two coins of the 16th century and a square horse pendant dated from the 13th to 15th century reported by metal detectorists. Illustrations of both ...
Findspot - various metal objects, including coins, dating to the Medieval and Post Medieval periods, were found 800m south west of Kenilworth Castle.
1 Excavation in advance of construction of a new entrance building uncovered stratified medieval deposits across the whole of the excavated area. Dam construction layers dating to the 12th/13th century ...
Construction layers for the dam at Kenilworth Castle were found during excavation, together with a rubble surface and pottery, tile and glass.
1 An evaluation in advance of development uncovered evidence of medieval activity. The remains included a small ditch, a pit and a probable stone drain. These had cessy fills indicative ...
Medieval features, probably associated with former dwellings on the street frontages, were uncovered to the rear of The Kings Arms and Castle Hotel, Kenilworth.
1 The boundary of this precinct is mostly conjectural although some historic map evidence suggests it follows particular historic and modern boundary lines.
2 A 12th/13th century wall was ...
The presumed area and boundary to Kenilworth Abbey during the medieval period. The site forms most of Abbey Fields and the park around the Abbey.
1 An iron axe head, possibly a carpenter’s axe, reported by metal detectorists.
2 Drawing of the axehead.
Findspot - an iron axe head dating to the Medieval period was found 200m north east of the poultry houses, Clifton Road, Kenilworth.
1 In Februaruy 1989 stonework was uncovered by contractors machining a new pipeline easement across Abbey Fields. Rescue excavation revealed 3 buildings of 12th – 13th century date, which were ...
Rescue excavation in Abbey Fields, Kenilworth revealed evidence of buildings dating from the Medieval period.
1 In the corner of the northern and western outer walls of the Castle, the Earl of Leicester made an ornamental garden which was completed in time for the visit ...
The site of an ornamental garden at Kenilworth Castle which may date back to the Medieval period. It certainly existed by 1575 when Queen Elizabeth I visited Kenilworth castle, but was gone by the mid 1600s. The present formal box garden was created in 1973.
Review of Register entry recommended by Lovie as historical develop,ent insufficiently clear.
1 Evaluation trenches excavated in advance of development produced evidence for medieval buildings just behind the existing street frontage. Associated pottery finds suggest construction in the 12th to 13th century ...
Archaeological excavations produced evidence for medieval buildings just behind the existing street frontage. Associated pottery finds suggested construction in the 12th to 13th century or later. The site is located at 62-64, Warwick Road, Kenilworth.
1 An evaluation in Clinton Lane, Castle Green, Kenilworth, involving background research and trial trenching revealed scattered medieval occupation, dating probably to the 12th/13th -early 14th century, including remains of ...
Archaeological evaluation revealed evidence of occupation from the Medieval period, including the remains of a timber building. It is situated on Clinton Lane, Kenilworth.
1 Examination of published historical and archaeological data established that the proposed development at Eagle Lane lies within the area of Kenilworth which was part of the borough founded in ...
The site of a settlement dating to the Medieval and Post Medieval period which is known from historical and archaeological investigations. It is located at Eagle Lane, Kenilworth.
A boundary bank, known as the Park Pale, was constructed during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. The earthwork bank is still visible and it appears to partially enclose Chase Wood to the north and east.
1 A lead seal from the 13th century reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - a lead seal dating to the Medieval period was found near Chestnut Avenue, Kenilworth.
1 There was a mill attached to Kenilworth Castle in 1296 (PRN 3205) and in 1291 Kenilworth Priory held two mills in the area. The site of one of these ...
The site of Kenilworth Mill, for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval to the Imperial period. The mill, which stood to the west of Forge Road, was demolished in 1964 for redevelopment.
1 By damming two streams Geoffrey de Clinton or his son created the Mere or Great Pool. This was 1.2km long and in places 152m wide and defended Kenilworth Castle ...
The site of Kenilworth Mere, a Medieval pool created as part of Kenilworth Castle's defences, and of its associated dam. Field boundaries still mark the area it covered, which was to the west of the Castle.
1 At a slightly lower level than the Pleasurance is a long rectangular hollow, once a basin, connected by a canal with the great lake, where no doubt was the ...
The site of a canal and basin, an open area of water giving access to landing stages, dating from the Medieval period. It was situated 800m north west of Kenilworth Castle.
1 The site of the Abbey Pool is an area of low-lying marshy ground with no surveyable limits. It lies between the Finham Brook and high ground to the N, ...
Abbey Pool, the earthworks of a mill pond dating to the Medieval or Post Medieval period. The site is to the north west of the Abbey Fields.