1 A watching brief took place at this location during 1998, though foundation trenches for a new house had been filled with concrete before they could be examined. No archaeological ...
Findspot - fragments of pottery were found during archaeological work in Upper Quinton. The pottery dated to the Imperial period.
1 The possible area of settlement that remained after the shrinkage of MWA6452, based on the first edition 6″ map of 1884, 50SW.
2 The ridge and furrow plotting of the ...
The possible area of Medieval settlement at Upper Quinton. This area may have remained after other local settlement shrinkage.
1 Metal detector finds from Lower Quinton Farm. These consisted of: a Roman copper alloy fibula fragment (later 1st century AD), bronze coin of Constantine I (307-337), bronze coin of ...
Findspot - Roman coins, a brooch and a pendant were found 950m south east of Lower Meon.
1 Shrunken settlement earthworks show on vertical air photographs.
2 Vertical air photograph taken in 1967.
3 Ridge and furrow plot.
The remains of a Medieval shrunken village. Earthworks visible on aerial photographs indicate that the village of Lower Quinton was once larger.
Ridge and furrow cultivation in Quinton Parish.
3 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Earthwork
1 Earthwork remains of shrunken settlement around Upper Quinton show on air photographs. These have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Quinton Parish (PRN 6451).
2 Air ...
The Medieval shrunken village of Upper Quinton. Earthworks, which are visible on aerial photographs, suggest that the southern part of Upper Quinton village may have been larger once.
1 A turnpike road established by Acts of 1756 and later. The powers for this stretch of road apparently lapsed and it was turnpiked under a separate trust in 1818.
A toll road running from Stratford to Andoversford. Travellers would have had to pay a toll to use the road during the Imperial period.