1 Two large reservoirs to the W of and adjacent to the Warwick and Napton canal near Napton Junction. “The company
decided to build a reservoir at Napton instead of buying ...
Napton Reservoirs, constructed in the Imperial period to serve the Warwick and Napton Canal.
12 Slight earthworks of a rectalinear feature, 120m north to south, were identified from LiDAR imagery by the AOC Assessment of Local Services Villages for Stratford-on-Avon District Council in 2012.
34 ...
A rectangular feature was noted on Google Earth satellite imagery; its location, between two substantial areas of ridge and furrow indicates that this represents an area of headland.
1 Two mills are mentioned in 1348, this may be the location for one of them.
2 From Napton Windmill a track leads past the church in an adjacent meadow there ...
The possible site of a windmill which dated from the Medieval period. An earthwork, which might be the remains of a windmill mound, is situated 200m north west of the church in Napton on the Hill.
1 A stone-lined well was discovered during topsoil stripping. About 6m to the north of the well was a discontinous line of ironstone rubble blocks. This probably ...
The remains of a wall and a well of unknown date were found during archaeological work. They were situated in the area of Howcombe Lane, Napton on the Hill.
Imperial linear allotment features
1 A 19th century garden trench and stone-lined conduit were uncovered during an archaeological evaluation ahead of a residential development at the Allotment Site, Napton on ...
A 19th century linear feature, possibly a garden trench, and stone-lined conduit were uncovered during archaeological work. They were found at the north end of Howcombe Lane, Napton on the Hill.
1 Archaeological evaluation found a small area of undisturbed features principally of early Roman date. Most of the site had been quarried for clay.
2 A small excavation was undertaken ...
Several ditches and gullies of Roman date were found during an excavation. They might represent the remains of a Roman field system. The features were found to the north west of Napton Hill.
1 Dead Leys Field and the adjoining Johnsons Field contain a complex of earthworks with a well-defined hollow way and croft boundaries. A large platform at SP4660 was said to ...
The Medieval shrunken village of Chapel Green is visible as an earthwork. Among the visible features are enclosures and a hollow way. The site is located between Chapel Hill and Napton on the Hill.
1 In Bays Green is a very deep hollow way typical of those associated with DMVs in the heavy clay soils of the Feldon. Aerial photography shows the hollow way ...
The possible site of a Medieval shrunken village. A hollow way is visible as an earthwork. The site lies to the west of Chapel Green.