1 A hollow way appears to extend in front of the chapel to the stream, this suggests a shrunken village.
2 Hollow way visible on LiDAR, with feint other features running ...
The possible site of a Medieval shrunken village at Moreton Morrell. A hollow way is also visible as an earthwork. The site is located on the north east side of Moreton Morrell.
1 Rous mentions the destruction of a village at Milcote and a church is recorded as demolished in 1638 (PRN 6287). 17th century poor law disputes occurred.
2 There appear to ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Post Medieval period. A hollow way and other earthworks are visible. It is located 350m west of Clifford Chambers bridge.
1 Enclosures and linear features show on air photographs. Morphologically this site is probably a settlement of Roman date.
2 The site was fieldwalked in October 1986 and a very sparse ...
A settlement that is visible as a series of cropmarks on aerial photographs. It dates to the Roman period. During an excavation enclosures and trackways were discovered and several gullies dating to the Iron Age. It is situated 900m north of Salford Priors.
2 The field behind Moat Farm contains a series of earthworks which may represent croft boundaries, trackways etc.
The possible site of a Medieval shrunken village. House platforms and trackways are visible as earthworks. The site lies on the north west edge of Grandborough.
1 A small U-sectioned feature, 2m wide and 1.5m deep (N section), 1.7m wide and 1.2m deep (S section) and lying NW/SE. It was cut through from a cobbled layer ...
The site of a deserted settlement of Medieval date within the outer enclosure of Boteler's Castle, suggested by earthworks and a scatter of pottery sherds. Evidence suggests that it was abandoned by the mid thirteenth century. The site lies 200m east of Oversley Castle.
1 Spoken of by Dugdale as ‘reduced’, but in 1730 there were thirteen houses.
2 The extent of shrinkage is unclear, the main depopulation being in a field called ‘The Green’, ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Post Medieval period which is visible as an earthwork, most notable is the hollow way which runs through the site. Pottery has been found dating from the Medieval through to the Imperial period. It is located at Bascote.
1 Terraces and village earthworks.
2 Hollow ways and house platforms clearly visible.
3 Air photograph
4Terraces, hollow ways and house platforms visible as earthworks on aerial photographs were mapped as part ...
The site of a shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork and on aerial photographs The site is located to the east and south east of Great Wolford.
2 Undated trackway shows on aerial photographs.
4 Scheduled as Warwickshire Monument No 140.
5 Scheduling information.
6 Evaluation at Old Barn, Longbridge, recorded three undated, parallel gullies, which aligned with this trackway ...
The course of a trackway of unknown date which is visible on aerial photographs. It is located 500m east of Junction 15, M40.
1 Naspis ‘which hath not now above four houses in it, but anciently it was more populous.’
2 Rous names this village as destroyed. I identify this village as ‘The Aspes’, ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Post Medieval period. It is known from documentary evidence. Encloures and trackways are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site is located 600m south east of Nursery Wood.
1 Earthworks indicate a small settlement with a hollow way, house platforms, enclosures for cultivation and/or stock, and ponds and drainage channels. Recently parts of Lower Green were ploughed for ...
The site of a Medieval deserted settlement. House platforms, enclosures, ponds, drainage channels and a hollow way are visible as earthworks. Ploughing has uncovered some Medieval and Post Medieval pottery. The site is located at Lower Green, Old Milverton.
1 Earthworks indicate a small settlement with a hollow way, house platforms, enclosures for cultivation and/or stock, and ponds and drainage channels. Recently parts of Lower Green were ploughed for ...
The site of a Post Medieval deserted settlement. House platforms, enclosures, ponds, drainage channels, and a hollow way are visible as earthworks. Ploughing has uncovered some Medieval and Post Medieval pottery. It is situated at Lower Green, Old Milverton.
1 An evaluation carried out by Warwickshire Museum at Glebe Farm, Long Itchington in May 1992 located various features and finds representing the remains of Medieval settlement. Part ...
During archaeological work the remains of ditches, trackways and post holes were uncovered. The features suggested that this area was occupation site of Medieval date. It was located to the west of Southam Road, Long Itchington.
1 Evaluation of a cropmark site in advance of quarrying was unable to clarify the status of trackways associated with a known Roman settlement, (SAM 162). Open area excavation revealed ...
Evidence of Iron Age/ Romano British settlement uncovered during a series of evaluations and excavations. The site is located 600m to the east of Marsh Farm, Salford Priors.
1 Earthworks of a possible deserted settlement show on air photographs borrowed from NMR – reference numbers not recorded. These have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot ...
Shrunken medieval settlement with some survivng property plots and other associated earthworks. It lies around Whittington Farm.
2 Linear features show on aerial photographs, possibly forming a wide trackway.
3 ‘Cursus from aerial photography’.
4 The side ditches do not appear straight enough to indicate a cursus monument.
Linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They may represent the remains of a trackway. The features are situated 600m south west of Withybrook.
2 Earthworks of probable hollow ways and croft boundaries show on aerial photographs. Ridge and furrow is evident beyond these earthworks. This probably represents an area of abandoned Medieval settlement.
The Medieval shrunken settlement of Ansty. Evidence for ridge and furrow cultivation, a hollow way and house platforms survive as earthworks. The site is located 200m south of Ansty Hall.
2 Traces of up to three possible undated enclosures show on aerial photographs.
3 The cropmarks apparent on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. ...
Three possible enclosures of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Fieldwalking suggests that they are prehistoric in date and possibly represent settlement activity. They are situated between Bretford and Wolston.
1 1983: Small trench excavated to locate a trackway running E from the Roman settlement. The road line was probably represented by a break in the distribution of features c10m ...
Archaeological work in 1983 uncovered a trackway running east from the Roman settlement. The site is at the northern end of Stratford upon Avon Golf Course.
1 It is reported that this Deserted Medieval Village which was discovered and planned in 1967 was levelled and ploughed in 1968.
2 The plan shows a number of possible holloways, ...
The possible site of a deserted settlement dating from the Post Medieval period. The site lies 200m west of Chapel Farm.
2 Roads, trackways and linear ditches show to the E of Chesterton Roman Camp. These evidently indicate a settlement area outside the Camp.
The possible site of a Roman settlement. It is indicated by a number of roads, trackways and linear ditches which are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site lies in the area to the east of Chesterton Roman Camp, 400m north west of Windmill Hill.
1 A hollow way running E-W is crossed by a N-S road. At the SE angle of the two roads is a group of six building platforms. One is much ...
The site of a possible Medieval shrunken village at Wootton Wawen. It is visible as an earthwork and features include house platforms and a hollow way.
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 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.
2 Trackway shows as crop mark.
A trackway of unknown date is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. It is situated 400m north west of Grove Farm.