1 Coins from the 16th and 17th century reported by metal detectorists.
2 Portable Antiquities Scheme find provenance information:
Date found: 1999-07-31T23:00:00Z
Date found: 2003-01-01T00:00:00Z
Date found: 2004-01-01T00:00:00Z
Methods of discovery: Metal detector
Findspot - coins dating to the Post Medieval period were found 250m north east of Temple Hill Spinney.
1 End scraper found at this location. Other Mesolithic flints have been recovered from this area with a possible connection to the major Mesolithic finds to the North at ...
Findspot - a Mesolithic flint tool, a scraper, was found 100m north west of the Greyhound Stadium, Warwick.
1 A 17th century coin and 18th century bronze medal were recovered from a building site at this location.
Findspot - a coin and a bronze medal dating to the Post Medieval period were found 400m north west of Warwick Castle.
1 1983: Watching brief in Market Square on a storm-drain. Part of the trench section showed what appeared to be the corner of a stone-built building. Could be the public ...
The corner of a stone built building was discovered during an excavation. It is believed to have been standing in the Imperial period. It could either be a public house marked on an 1806 map or 'The Butchers Hall' on a 1711 map. It stood on Market Place, Warwick.
1 Lead bale seal of German College/Protestant School under royal patronage. Founded in 1571. Found in garden of a house in Stratford Road.
2 Drawing.
3 The source is recorded in 1 ...
Findspot - a lead seal dating to the Post Medieval period was found in the garden of a house in Stratford Road, Warwick.
1 Finds made with a metal detector in 1984: Penny of Edward I (c1280-1), penny of Edward I (c1302-10).
Findspot - two coins dating to the Medieval period were found 400m north west of Ashbeds Wood.
2 Enclosure and length of trackway, probably overlain by ridge and furrow. The enclosure may be an example of a banjo enclosure of Iron Age date.
3 Field Survey by RMEF ...
The site of a trackway and a banjo enclosure which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It dates to the Iron Age period and is located 200m south of the Heathcote Road, Leamington Spa.
2 Undated enclosures, possibly ring ditches or penannular gullies, show on aerial photographs.
Enclosures of unknown date are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs. The enclosures are situated 600m north west of Hawkes Farm.
2 Trackway or old road shows as a crop mark on aerial photographs.
A trackway of unknown date is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. It is located 200m east of Lower Heathcote Farm.
1 Coin found with a metal detector in 1984: James I half-groat.
Findspot - one coin dating to the Post Medieval period.
1 Heathcote in Warwick. Dugdale places it near Myton, where there are today a Heathcote Hill and Farm. The Heathcote in Rous is probably the Heathcote in Wasperton (PRN 2208).
2 ...
The possible site of the deserted settlement of Heathcote which was of Medieval date. It is thought to have been located south east of Heathcote Home Farm.
1 Old Banbury road (SP 28 64 – 29 63), to the the south of Warwick abandoned when the area was emparked in 1744. The site shows on Aerial ...
The course of the old Banbury Road used in the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. The road is visible on aerial photographs. It ceased to be used when the area became parkland in 1744. It is located in Castle Park, Warwick.
Excavation of Post Medieval features.
1 Observation during reconstruction of Medieval precinct wall revealed 1 – 1.1m of deposits. A sandstone crosswall was also observed. Finds included fragments of late Medieval ...
Site of a post medieval wall. The wall lies along The Butts, Warwick.
1 Human remains have been found on a number of occasions. Bodies were disturbed and reburied during the construction of prefab houses on the site in the Second World War. ...
Excavations have revealed a possible Medieval cemetery associated with the Medieval chapel and hospital of St Johns. The cemetery lies underneath flats at St Johns, Warwick.
1 The act authorising a canal from Digbeth to Warwick was passed in 1793. The canal was to end at Saltisford wharf and was originally to have been wide ...
The Warwick and Birmingham Canal, a waterway used for the transporting of goods. It was built during the Imperial period.
1 The Warwick-Birmingham Canal used to continue into Saltisford but it is no longer navigable beyond the bridge at Budbrooke Junction, SP2765. The disused section contains water as far as ...
The site of Saltisford Wharf, a canal wharf and basin, where vessels would have loaded and unloaded goods during the Imperial period. It was located at the east end of Warwick Race Course.
1 A boat-building yard, wharf and slipway are shown in this position on the OS 25″ map.
2 The site is now occupied by part of the Shire pie factory.
The site of Emscote Road Boatyard and canal wharf, where vessels would have loaded and unloaded goods during the Imperial period. It was located 300m west of the intersection of the Avon and the Warwick Canal.
1 Finds made using a metal detector in 1990: Three coins of the 13th and 14th century.
2 Finds made using a metal detetcor in 1990: Coins of the 13th and ...
Findspot - coins, two strap ends, buckles and a seal dating to the Medieval period were among the finds from Castle Park, Warwick.
1 Copper alloy steelyard weight of 15th-16th century date found on Warwick Racecourse.
Findspot - a copper alloy steelyard weight dating to the Medieval period was found on Warwick Racecourse.
1 During reconstruction of the Priory House the grounds to the S of the house were laid out as an ornamental garden. Several burials were located about 0.6m from the ...
The site of several undated burials. They were found in Priory Park, Warwick, during the creation of a garden in the 19th century. The burials did not contain any grave goods. It has been suggested that they could be either Romano-British or Medieval in date.
1 A drovers road with wide verges for pasturing animals. The road winds its way through farming country, generally avoiding centres of population. Road is mentioned on 18th ...
A trackway or drove road, known as the Welsh Way, which has existed since the Medieval or Post Medieval period. It was used by drovers to move cattle to the markets. The Leamington Road out of Kenilworth now marks the line of the trackway.
1 Turnpike road from Birmingham to Warwick and Banbury, established between 1725 and 1750. Under the control of the same trust which ran the Birmingham to Edgehill route. The stretch ...
A toll road, where travellers had to pay a toll to use the route. The road was built during the Post Medieval period. It runs from Warmington to Birmingham via Warwick.
1 A turnpike road established between 1750 and 1775.
A toll road from Warwick to Stratford upon Avon established during the Imperial period. Travellers would have had to pay to use the road.
1 Two small cannon balls found with a metal detector.
Findspot - two small cannon balls dating to the Post Medieval period were found 700m east of Castle Park, Warwick.