1 Great Packington has no village at all, the church stands by itself in the park. Army occupation has obscured the site. There are signs of buildings near to the ...
An enclosure, linear features and a trackway are visible on aerial photographs. These, together with the isolated church, suggest a Medieval deserted settlement. The site is 200m north of St James's Church, Great Packington.
1 Complex cropmark site. Site no 66 in survey.
3 Trackway with associated enclosures on two sides shows on aerial photographs. This is closely associated with two subrectangular enclosures (PRN ...
The possible site of a settlement. Enclosures, linear features and a trackway are all visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Although the site is undated, it may be Roman. It is situated 700m north east of Alveston.
1 Lower Itchington. At Old Town Farm traces of buildings once existed. Lower Itchington was once more important than Bishops Itchington and contained the church (PRN 829), but Thomas Fisher ...
The deserted settlement of Nether Itchington which dates to the Medieval period. It is known from documentary sources. Earthworks survive which may represent house platforms and cropmarks are visible on aerial photographs. It is located 1km south of Bishop's Itchington.
1 A hollow way and possible house platforms in the field due south of the junction of the A435 and B4085.
2HER lidar layer shows small number of houose plots at ...
Possible house platforms and a hollow way, probably medieval. The features are visible as earthworks and are situated 600m east of Ladies Wood. This would appear to represent the site of the medieval hamlet of Kingley.
1 Hollow ways of unknown date were observed by Hereford and Worcester County Council Archaeology Service during work in advance of widening of the M42.
Several hollow ways, a road or path through a cutting. They are of unknown date and are situated 400m north west Wheely Moor Farm.
1 One ‘D’ shaped single-ditched enclosure. Two part round-cornered enclosure. Twin ditches straight through site. Romano British pottery found. Site number 45.
2 Site 78 in survey
3 Perambulated. ...
Two enclosures, a trackway and parallel ditches are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Fragments of pottery found on the site dates to the Roman period. The site is located 600m south west of the cemetery, Barford.
1 The depopulation appears to have taken place in 1505 and is recorded as resulting from the enclosure of 310 acres. 60 people were forced to leave sorrowfully. ...
The possible site of the deserted Medieval settlement of Tachbrook Mallory which is indicated by a scatter of pottery. The site lies to the north of Chapel Hill Farm.
2 A possible trackway shows on APs at this location.
The site of a possible trackway of unknown date. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The trackway lies 1km north of the Blue Boar Inn on Lawford Heath Lane.
5 A possible trackway, faint traces appear on AP.
The site of a possible trackway that is of unknown date. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The trackway is situated 600m east of Coalpit Lane.
1 Aerial Photographs.
2 Visible on Aerial Photographs and on the ground. Possible hollow way leading to a ford.
3 Low level photos taken as part of the A432 Improvements Survey ...
The site of earthworks, particularly of a possible hollow way leading to a ford. They are of unknown date and are visible on aerial photographs. The site is situated 1km north of Hill Wootton.
1 The field known as Goosebanks shows a curving, rudimentary hollow way with earthworks on either side, and banks which may represent a back lane. The field is a probable ...
The site of a Medieval deserted settlement. A hollow way and ridge and furrow cultivation are visible as earthworks. This might be the deserted settlement of Warmington 'Old Town'. The site is located on the north west edge of Warmington.
1 A field adjacent to the church exhibits a wide variety of earthworks. Just outside the churchyard wall, platforms may be observed in both Garden Ground and the orchard adjoining. ...
Possibly shrunken post-medieval settlement or could also be a deserted medieval settlement associated with the earthworks to the south. A hollow way and several house platforms are visible as earthworks.
1 Earthworks are visible in Hall Yard, Middle Field and Ladbrook Meadow. In Hall Yard, they are overlain by later landscaping. Definite holloways can be traced, but ...
The site of a possible shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. The remains of several holloways are visible as earthworks. A Post Medieval house also existed on the site. It is located 400m south east of Fenny Compton.
1 This has been variously described as Prehistoric, British, Iron Age, Roman etc. It has many of the characteristics of a Prehistoric trackway or ridgeway. It runs along the top ...
The line of a trackway, possibly dating from the Prehistoric period, exists in parts as a tarmaced road and partially as an earthwork, which is visible on aerial photographs. It runs north from Warwick Road, Henley to Camp Hill.
1 Site of possible hollow way – pers comm.
2 Annotated on OS map. Undated.May be part of 1. 1 not located.
Site of a possible medieval hollow way to the north of Bearley.
2 Undated road shows on aerial photographs.
A trackway of unknown date is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. It is situated 600m south of Pounce Hill Farm.
1 Road referred to in a charter of AD 969. Either the road to Wellesbourne leaving the parish at SP 3252 or the one to Warwick crossing the boundary at ...
A trackway dating to the Early Medieval period which leaves Kineton from the north west, up to and beyond Compton Verney. It is known from a charter dated 969 AD.
1 In ploughed field pottery and coin of George III picked up. Features have been ploughed out but it was possible to pick up the line of shallow hollow ways ...
An area of shrunken village at Knightcote which dates to the Post Medieval period. It is known from the earthwork remains of house platforms and hollow ways. A Post Medieval coin was also found.
2 Trackways and enclosures show on aerial photographs.
Trackways and enclosures of unknown date which are visible on aerial photographs as crop marks.
1 A modern military vehicle test track, a modern quarry and an area of modern dumping, found during a survey of the Medieval shrunken village.
During a field survey of Baginton Castle earthworks several modern features were also recorded. These included a modern trackway used for testing military vehicles and a quarry. The features are visible as earthworks and are located 100m to the south west of the castle.
1 Meeting Lane, Baptist Chapel. Tesselated pavement found when chapel was built about 1660. Information from Rev J H Bloom.
2 Chance find c1660. Exact location uncertain.
3 The Rev J H ...
The remains of a Roman tesselated pavement was found in Meeting Lane, Alcester, suggesting that this might be the site of a Roman building.
1 Routeway identified in charter of AD 985 where it crosses the parish boundary between Alveston and Loxley.
2 Map showing located route.
An Anglo Saxon trackway dating to the Early Medieval period. It is mentioned in a 10th century charter. The trackway runs between Stratford and Loxley.
1 Development alongside the road from Studley to Redditch and along a strip of common bordering Green Lane had already occured by 1824 and Tanhouse Farm, inside the Redditch boundary, ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating from the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. The remains of the settlement are visible as earthworks and include a hollow way and house platforms. The site is located 700m north west of the fire station, Studley.