1 Possible prehistoric site listed at SP38919103. No further details.
Possible prehistoric site at Paul's Ford, 1.5km east of Attleborough.
1 2 Platform adjacent to the church of St James, Weddington is visible on aerial photographs and LiDAR imagery, as is the platform on which the church sits.
3 Ridge and ...
A possible rectangular platform can be seen on aerial photographs and LiDAR imagery. The adjacent church is known to be on raised ground and there is a possibility that the two earthworks could be joined.
1 The remains of a small homestead moat in poor condition.
2 The N and E sides remain. The moat is rectilinear and waterfilled. It appears to be in a good ...
A moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building. The moat is medieval in date and is visible as an earthwork. It is situated north of McDonnell Drive, Bedworth.
1 Sudeley Castle has the remains of a fairly large moat; there is a little water in one corner, but generally it is only a shallow depression. It was the ...
The site of Sudeley Castle Moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. The moat dated to the Medieval period and was situated 300m north east of Griff Lane.
1 A hoard of 29 denarii was found recently in the Griff granite quarry. It is improbable that the whole of the hoard has been recovered. Coins of the late ...
Findspot - a hoard of Roman coins was found 150m north of The Beresteads.
1 In 1607 a hoard of 250 silver coins of Henry III was found, together with three finger rings (one gold with ruby, one gold with agate and one silver ...
Findspot - a coin hoard comprising Roman and Medieval coins was found 800m south west of Harper's Hill.
1 Some years ago (ie prior to 1881), whilst digging a railway cutting near Nuneaton, a small urn containing a considerable number of Roman silver coins ranging from Vespasian to ...
Findspot - a coin hoard dating to the Roman period, its exact find location is unknown.
1 This hamlet, now in Nuneaton, was destroyed when the first Marquis of Dorset enclosed the whole manor, turning it to pasture in 1491. Ten houses are reported pulled down ...
The site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Weddington. It was situated 400m west of The Oaks.
1 Weddington Castle (apparently standing in 1947) was probably on the site of the capital mansion-house mentioned in a suit of 1566. It may have been built by Thomas, Marquis ...
The site of Weddington Castle which was built during the Post Medieval period. It was situated west of Castle Road, Weddington, but is now destroyed.
1 Five artefacts were found. These consisted of two scrapers, a burin, a laurel leaf and a bifacially pressure-flaked leaf-shaped arrowhead that is worked to an even flatness only 2.8 ...
Findspot - flint objects dating to the Neolithic period were found but their exact location is unknown.
1 Flint chipping floor.
2 Dating given as Mesolithic to Bronze Age.
Findspot - flint of Prehistoric date were found 300m north west of Paul's Ford.
1 The rock forming Group XIV is Camptonite and the parent source is to be found in the sills which penetrate the Cambrian rocks near Nuneaton. Most of the rock ...
The site of a possible stone axe factory dating to the Bronze Age. The site is located 900m north east of Collycroft.
1 A quarter of a mile N of Moat House a by-road runs W past a field on the N side which contains a conspicuously large ash tree raised on ...
The site of a mound of unknown date which lay 500m north east of Exhall Hall. The area has now been built over.
1 ‘Moat Farm’, a C16 and later building (MWA6257). Surrounding the cottages is a ditch which, though now dry, was once a square moat.
2 1951: The moat, although silted up, ...
The site of a moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building, which was of Medieval date. It was situated 100m north east of Goodyers End, Nuneaton.
1 A moated manor house. The building is mostly C18 and modernised, but goes back to at least 1535.
2 The moat is complete and waterfilled.
3 The moat varies from about ...
Exhall Hall, a manor house originally built during the Medieval period with later additions. The manor house is surrounded by a Medieval moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building, and is situated on the east side of Bowling Green Lane at Exhall Hall Green.
1 At the Old Rectory there is an ancient yew hedge in the garden fringing a stream which may once have formed a moat.
2 The site is now built over ...
The possible site of a moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building. It would have dated from the Post Medieval period. The site lies 500m north of Little Bedworth Heath but has now been built over with houses.
1 Battery (site of). Applies to an earthwork situated on the side of a hill near Griff Hollow and thrown up by Oliver Cromwell. There are no remains to be ...
The site of an enclosure or a possible battery of Post Medieval date. It was situated 150m north east of Burlington Road.
1 The ‘Roman Camp’ shown here on Greenwood’s Map of 1822 was visited recently. It consists of a 2m ‘rampart’ with rudimentary ditches, 110 by 82.3m, with a Council Estate ...
The site of an enclosure of unknown date. It was sitauted 100m south of Cedar Road, Camp Hill.
1 A prepared blade-core of possible proto-Levallois type of quartzite material was found by Mr Ron Waite in 2012. This forms part of the Waite collection of Palaeolithic artefacts from ...
A prepared blade-core of possible proto-Levallois type of quartzite material was found by Mr Ron Waite in 2012.
1 1968: Site discovered by ploughing which revealed in a normally reddish soil a very black area (approx 200 sq ft) containing many large pieces of Medieval pottery. Excavation produced ...
The site of a Medieval house and various occupation features and finds. The site was excavated and was situated 100m west of Lawn Cottage.
1 A small scatter of Romano British potsherds in the Harefield Lane area.
Findspot - a scatter of Roman pottery sherds was found on the southern side of Harefield Lane.
1 Possibly part of Chilvers Coton pottery production site. A scatter of probably 13th century pottery found close to the Lawn Cottage industrial site during fieldwalking.
Findspot - a scatter of Medieval pottery sherds was found 200m north of Lawn Cottage. They are probably related to the Chilvers Coton pottery production site in this area.
1 Isolated and little altered late 19th century “model” colliery village of some 130 terraced brick built cottages.
A settlement or colliery village called Bermuda which was built during the Imperial period to house workers of the nearby colliery. It is situated 300m east of Harefield Lane.
1 A watching brief in this location (WA 8321) found artefactual evidence of unusual Post Medieval and 18th century activity, including press moulded slipwares and much Polesworth/Nuneaton ware. Observer noted ...
Findspot - sherds of pottery dating from the Post Medieval period were found in Mancetter Road, Nuneaton.