2 Two sides of a probable rectangular enclosure show on aerial photographs.
3 The enclosure is on a hill, or ridge, top with downhill slopes to W and E. The ground ...
The site of a possible Roman settlement. An enclosure is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. Various finds, including pottery, tile and animal bone, were found during a field walking exercise. The site is located 500m south of Princethorpe.
1 No further information available for this top level record. See children records.
The possible site of a Roman settlement and cemetery. The site is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 500m east of Bubbenhall.
1 1985: a hole was dug in the back garden of a house on Bleachfield Street to see what could be found. Pottery from this hole was examined and was ...
The remains of a Roman building were found during archaeological work in Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Roman pottery and coins were also found at this site.
2 Possible ring ditch or enclosure, other enclosures and linear features show on air photographs. Some of these marks are probably natural. The crop marks are impossible to plot because ...
The site of a Roman settlement. During partial excavation of the site, enclosures, ditches, houses and a possible corn drying kiln were found. The site was located 1km east of Bidford on Avon.
1 Roman pottery scatter located. Fairly thick scatter of pottery with one or two pieces of tile, a few pieces of stone and animal bone. Pottery is mostly orange and ...
Various finds of a Roman date, including fragments of pottery, a ring, coins and a glass bead, suggest that this might be the site of a Roman settlement. The site is located 600m east of Bidford Grange.
1 Excavations carried out in 1967 on site threatened by gravel extraction. The site shows on aerial photographs as a series of intersecting rectangular enclosures covering about 3.7 ha. An ...
Enclosures are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site was excavated prior to development. Ditches, pits, a semi-circular feature, and some occupational debris were found, suggesting a rural settlement of Roman date. It was situated 300m east of Hail End Bridge.
1 During a field walk enough Romano British pottery was found at SP1753 to suppose occupation.
3 Localised scatter of Romano British pottery of 2nd to 4th century date found either ...
The site of a settlement dating to the Roman period and known from large scatters of Roman pottery. It is located 900m west of the Race Course at Stratford.
1 Four Constantinian coins and a coin of Claudius from a field called Bankey Meadow.
2 1950: The site covered a number of fields and pottery, stone and bone were recorded. ...
The site of a settlement dating to the Roman period. It is known from finds of pottery and coins, but also stone which appears to represent former buildings.
2 Archaeological features were recorded during development works, indicating Romano-British activity related to, but outside of the Roman settlement area previously identified to West. A number of ditches have been ...
Archaeological features were recorded during development works, indicating Romano-British activity related to, but outside of the Roman settlement area previously identified to the West.
12 Magnetometer survey at Old Lodge Farm has recorded a settlement of some size. Ditches and pits have been recorded across an area across which fieldwalking has already recorded prehistoric ...
Magnetometer survey at Old Lodge Farm has recorded a settlement of some size. Ditches and pits have been recorded across an area across which fieldwalking has already recorded prehistoric and Roman finds.
1 Magnetometer survey at Lingcroft has recorded a settlement of some size. Ditches, enclosures and pits have been recorded across an area across which fieldwalking has already recorded prehistoric and ...
Magnetometer survey at Lingcroft has recorded a settlement of some size. Ditches, enclosures and pits have been recorded across an area across which fieldwalking has already recorded Roman finds.
1 2Magnetometer survey at Twenty Seven Acres has recorded a settlement of some size. Ditches, enclosures and pits have been recorded across an area across which fieldwalking has already recorded ...
Magnetometer survey at Twenty Seven Acres has recorded a settlement of some size. Ditches, enclosures and pits have been recorded across an area across which fieldwalking has already recorded Roman finds.
1 Pits and ditches containing a small pottery assemblage were recorded during evaluative archaeological fieldwork. These features indicate the remains of a small settlement, probably a small farmstead in proximity ...
Pits and ditches containing a small pottery assemblage were recorded during evaluative archaeological fieldwork. These features indicate the remains of a small settlement, probably a small farmstead in proximity to the Fosse Way.
1 A field called ‘The Stones’ has long been worked as a quarry. Potter recorded the recollections of the parish road man who died in 1905 concerning the quarry. When ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement. Roman coins and a possible hearth were found during quarrying. The site is located 500m north east of Halford.
1 Autumn 1966: A large number of pot sherds were picked up from ploughed fields. April 1967: An extensive search was conducted and the spread of sherds and tile fragments ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement. Fragments of Roman pottery, tile and glass have been found on this site and the remains of a stone floor were found when archaeologists dug a test pit. The site is located 500m east of Castle Hill Lane, Upper Brailes.
1 During the autumn of 1966, a large number of potsherds were picked up in ploughed fields. In April 1967 an extensive search of fields was conducted and the spread ...
Findspot - a large number of pottery sherds were found 600m north of Lower Brailes suggesting that this might be the site of a Roman settlement.
1 A small field bordering the River Itchen, and lying in the angle between the river and the railway, has regularly turned up Roman sherds when cultivated. Pottery was collected ...
Pottery, tile and a coin dating to the Roman period, which may represent a settlement site, has been found over several years, 700m north of Snowford Bridge.
1 On the N slope of the hill, on what appears to be a levelled area, a heavy scatter of Romano British pottery has been revealed by the plough. Other ...
Numerous pieces of Roman pottery have been found on Blacklow Hill. This may indicate that there may once have been a Roman Settlement there.
1 Discovered during fieldwork on the line of the Kenilworth Bypass. The site consisted of a possible field system and a house platform, or enclosure, on the edge of Glasshouse ...
A Roman enclosure or platform, visible as an earthwork, was recorded during fieldwork. Trial trenches revealed the remains of a Roman building and a cremation burial suggesting that this is the site of a Roman settlement. It is situated at Glasshouse Wood.
2 Enclosures and linear features show as crop marks.
3 The site was fieldwalked in 1985. There were no very clear concentrations of material over the enclosures, although a thin scatter ...
Enclosures and linear features that show up as cropmarks on aerial photographs. A thin scatter of Roman pottery sherds observed by fieldwalking, suggests that this might be the site of a Roman settlement. It is situated south of the former church of St Mary's, Whitchurch.
1 Small rectangular buildings and linear features show on air photographs.
2
3 The site has no immediate parallel and is difficult to date because of the paucity of surface finds.
4 It ...
The site of a settlement dating to between the Roman and Early Medieval period. It is known from cropmarks of enclosures and linear features which are visible on aerial photographs. The cropmarks are similar to those of Saxon Palaces. It is located 800m north east of Snowford Bridge.
1 An evaluation of land to the south of known Romano British settlement uncovered evidence of activity including a large pit or ditch, other rubbish pits with fill containing pottery ...
The site of Romano British roadside settlement in the Ennersdale Road area of Coleshill.
1 An evaluation in advance of development uncovered a number of Romano British pits and two inhumation burials. A small assemblage of pottery, including most of a large 4th century ...
Site of Romano British domestic activity at 119 Tiddington Road, Stratford on Avon.
Also later burials.
1 1977: A Leamington builder digging foundation trenches unearthed Roman pottery. A three week excavation was mounted by R Lamb. A layer of cobbles with pieces of tile and pottery ...
The site of a Roman settlement which was uncovered during building work. An excavation produced cobbled floors, pits, pottery, and building and occupation debris. Its location is 500m southeast of Castle Meadow Bridge, Shrewley Common.