1 Find made with a metal detector in 1986: Short cross penny of Henry III.
Findspot - a coin dating to the Medieval period was found 550m south west of Exhall.
1 Finds made with a metal detector in 1987 at SP090543: Penny of Edward III (1351) and a 13th-15th century horse/heraldic pendant.
2 Finds made: rim fragment of cooking pot.
Findspot - a coin, a pendant and a fragment of a cooking pot, all dating to the Medieval period, were found 250m south east of Wixford.
1 Dugdale records depopulation here. Beighton’s map in Dugdale marks the site to the N of King’s Broom.
2 Aspley, formerly a sub-manor, but depopulated in the 16th century, was situated ...
The site of a deserted settlement, known as Aspley juxta Wixford. The settlement dates from the Medieval to the Post Medieval periods. It is known from documentary evidence and is located 800m south of Wixford.
1 All around Moor Hall are traces of a large moat and adjoining NE of it faint traces of another, beyond which are artificial banks which probably surrounded fishponds (PRN ...
Moor Hall Moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It dates from the Medieval period, and parts of it are still visible as an earthwork. It is situated at Moor Hall, Broom.
1 There was a mill at Wixford in 1086, which belonged to the Abbey of Evesham in the 12th century. It had certainly fallen out of use by the 18th ...
The site of a watermill at Wixford. The mill was recorded in the Domesday survey but had become disused by the end of the 18th century. It was located 200m south of Wixford Bridge.
3 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Ridge and furrow cultivation in Wixford Parish which dates from the Medieval period onwards. In some areas the ridge and furrow survives as earthworks. Elsewhere it is visible on aerial photographs.
1 One sherd of Medieval pottery and flint which may not be of archaeological significance.
2 Fragments of a silver penny of Edward the Confessor (1042-1066) found by metal detector at ...
Findspot, 400m north east of Wixford Bridge - a coin and pottery of Medieval date.
Flint artefacts previously part of this record now 10227.
12 Ridge and furrow ploughing and associated headlands seen on aerial photographs in fields to the east of Wixford
were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project.
Ridge and furrow ploughing and associated headlands can be seen on aerial photographs in fields to the east of Wixford
1 – 4 Ridge and furrow ploughing to the south of Whichford apparent as earthworks on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project.
Ridge and furrow ploughing to the south of Whichford is apparent as earthworks on aerial photographs taken in 1947 but is now levelled.
1 Find of a penny of Edward III in, or before 1987 at SP09105443.
Find of a coin from the medieval period at the southern end of the Caravan Park.
1 In Medieval period known as Icknield Street/ Ryknield Street. Earlier, a Gloucestershire reference records it as Buggildestret (the road of Burghild). Between Studley and Alcester the Medieval route along ...
The line of a road dating to the Medieval period. It follows the route of the Roman road, Icknield or Ryknild Street.
1 The possible extent of Medieval settlement, based on the first edition 6″ map of 1886, 43NW.
2 The ridge and furrow plotting of the parish.
3 Domesday lists Wixford. It ...
The possible extent of the Medieval settlement at Wixford. The extent of the settlement is suggested by the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and ridge and furrow earthworks visible on aerial photographs.
1 In the churchyard is a fine large base of a churchyard cross with a moulded top edge, the stump of a shaft, and three steps to the platform: 15th ...
The remains of a Medieval churchyard cross. It is situated 500m north east of Wixford Bridge, in Wixford churchyard.