1 1968: Excavation of area including at least three Medieval house plots. Four ovens were set well back from the street front. A series of cess and rubbish pits yielded ...
Excavation of Medieval house plots uncovered traces of timber buildings, pits, ovens and 11th and 12th century pottery. The site was at Brook Street, Warwick.
1 This field contain traces of ridge and furrow in one end which appear to have been disturbed by later quarrying. There is also a lot of ridge and ...
Ridge and furrow cultivation which has been disturbed by later quarrying, possibly for the extraction of gravel. It may date to the Medieval through to the Imperial period. The earthworks are situated 200m northeast of the church at Harborough Magna.
1 2 houses, formerly the Lion Inn. 16th century, and 20th century alterations and additions. Timber framed with plaster infilling, an old tile roof and large chimney with four diagonal ...
Guy Fawkes House, formerly an inn dating to the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. The Warwickshire conspirators are said to have waited here to hear the results of the Gunpowder Plot in 1605. The house is situated on Daventry Road, Dunchurch.
1 In 1266 there were at Cawston two common ovens baking for Pipewell Abbey tenants in Dunchurch, Rugby, Lawford and Newbold…, one oven baking 16 quarters weekly and the other ...
Medieval bread ovens used to bake bread for the monks of Pipewell Abbey. The exact location of the ovens is not known but they may have been situated at Cawston Grange.
1 Two almost complete cooking pots in association with a Medieval oven. Date range 1200-1350 AD.
The remains of a Medieval oven and two cooking pots were found during an excavation. The site was situated in the area of Chantry Crescent, Alcester.
1 Two Medieval pits – a cesspit and a gravel pit – also a well-preserved stone drying oven consisting of a firing pit from which a well-constructed stone flue led ...
Two Medieval pits and an oven were excavated in Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Sherds of Medieval pottery were also found.
1 Flints and Roman sherds indicate cultivation at some level, also 6 Medieval sherds. Much post-Medieval material could indicate a midden, or housing in, or near, the field – ...
Several quarry pits of unknown date were found at this location as were sherds of Roman, Medieval and Post-Medieval pottery. The site is located 700m north west of Highdown Hill Plantation.
1 A scatter of Modern brick, tile and slate may indicate a building or dumping of occupation material in a hollow. The field also contains a marl pit and the ...
A scatter of modern building debris suggests that the material may have been dumped into an earlier hollow or quarry of unknown date. It is located 800m north west of Tatchbrook Mallory.
1 Site of ‘Potters old claypit’ (1681). Waster potsherds of possible 14th century date found.
The site of a clay pit where clay was extracted for use in the pottery industry. The clay pit might date to the Medieval period. It is situated 600m north west of Collycroft.
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 This is the site of the burial ground for the old Church of Compton Verney (WA 1190). Gravestones are evident in the disused burial ground.
2 Grave Yard ...
The site of a cemetery which was in use during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. It was attached to the old church at Compton Verney and is marked as a disused grave yard on the Ordnance Survey map of 1906.
1 At least seven graves were recorded during fieldwork at Gramer House, Mancetter. Pottery from one grave was dated to the medieval period. It is suggested that this represents a ...
At least seven graves were recorded during fieldwork at Gramer House, Mancetter. Pottery from one grave was dated to the medieval period. It is suggested that this represents a shift of the graveyard boundary. The remains of a wall bisecting the trench could have been this boundary in the 19th century.
1 Earthwork banks and a ditch seen on aerial photographs beside the railway to the north of Brandon Castle were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping ...
Earthwork banks and a ditch can be seen on aerial photographs beside the railway to the north of Brandon Castle.
1 Site of an old quarry shown on the First Edition Ordnance Survey map
Former stone quarry at Wharf Street, Warwick. Exact date of quarrying activity is not known.
1 On the southern bank of the stanford brook a series of pits can be seen on aerial photgraphs. Two linear ditches can be seen extending to the south ...
A series of pits and ditches can be seen in a field to the south of Hopyard Coppice Barton on the Heath.
1 Remains of earthworks on a steep hill called ‘The Mount’, which forms a promontory. The site is by nature strong and commanding. The extant remains consist of a flat-topped ...
The site of Beaudesert Castle which dates to the Medieval period. The castle is a large ringworkwith two probable baileys. The ringwork was eventually surrounded by a stone curtain wall and is known to have contained several stone buildings. It is visible as an earthwork and is known from documentary evidence. It is situated 400m east of Henley in Arden.
1 Early 19th century maps show additional buildings lying to the W of Oldberrow Church, four shown in 1814. The tithe map of 1839 shows only two. There are no ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Imperial period which is known from documentary evidence. It was situated 100m west of the church, Oldberrow.
1 The hollow way seen on aerial photographs on the sothern bank of the River Avon 50m to the east of the B4029 Fosse Way, near to Bretford Bridge ...
A hollow way can be seen on aerial photographs on the sothern bank of the River Avon 50m to the east of the B4029 Fosse Way near to Bretford Bridge.
1 Seven graves were recorded during the demolition of old farm buildings at Lower Lark Stoke Manor in 1995. An area was excavated and six of the burials were ...
Medieval cemetery either for the family of Lower Lark Stoke Manor or the villagers of the deserted settlement of Lark Stoke. No associated church or chapel has been identified to date. Burials disturbed by groundworks were re-interred.
1 Brailes was a village whose fields lay open in the traditional Midland pattern until William Brown was granted, in 1485, the offices of bailiff of the lordship and keeper ...
The site of the Medieval shrunken village of Lower Brailes. The site is visible as an earthwork. It is situated 300m south of the church at Lower Brailes.
1 Linear earthworks marking out plots show on aerial photographs. This may mark out an area of shrunken Medieval settlement at Brailes.
2 Additional aerial photographs taken in January 1992 have ...
The site of a Medieval shrunken village at Upper Brailes. Evidence for the shrunken village is visible in some areas as earthworks.
1 A medieval enclosure with several phases of ditches was identified. A single oven was found near the south-west corner. Within the enclosure were a series of ditches, pits and ...
A sequence of medieval enclosure ditches aligned broadly parallel to Gypsy Lane, with a return at the south-west corner to form the southern boundary. A single oven was uncovered near the south-west corner of the enclosure.
1 Site of market at Coleshill.
In 1207, Osbert II de Clinton obtained a royal charter for a weekly market in his manor of Coleshill on a Sunday (and also a ...
Site of market at Coleshill between the High Street and the Parish church, outside the west door. Area of market now infilled.
1 Possible site of market place, Polesworth.
Morton states that the major landowner and lord of manor was the Abbey. While most of its records have been lost, it is known ...
Weekly market granted to the Abbey in 1242. Location uncertain.