1 Aerial photographs of Cosford show a village street, still with farmsteads and their gardens facing it. But Cosford has shrunk, and where the missing farmhouses were, can now be ...
The site of the Medieval shrunken village of Cosford. The remains of the village are visible as earthworks. The site is located in the area of Cosford Hall Farm.
1 Withybrook has shrunk and expanded at intervals, earthworks mirroring its fluctuations in prosperity and changing farming techniques. It is not recorded until the 12th century. By 1327 it had ...
The site of the Medieval shrunken village of Withybrook. Remains of the village survive as earthworks.
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 faint earthworks show on aerial photographs. This could be an extension to the settlement although this is uncertain.
The possible site of the Medieval shrunken village of Toft. The remains are visible as earthworks. The site is located to the west of Toft.
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.
1 Enclosures and linear features show on aerial photographs.
2 Enclosures and linear features show on aerial photographs.
3 These have been visited on the ground and are in a reasonable state ...
Enclosures and linear features are visible as earthworks on aerial photographs. They probably mark the site of an area of Medieval shrunken village. The site is located in Offchurch.
1 Documentary references to Walton exist from 12th century on.
2 A reference exists to an estate here in 1328, but Walton had no separate manorial existence after the Dissolution.
3 Walton ...
The site of the shrunken settlement of Walton. It dates to the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. The site is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs. It is situated to the south of Little Walton.
1 ‘Though I have not met with any direct mention of this place before E I time, yet do I conclude it to have been a village long before… There ...
The possible site of a shrunken village of Post Medieval date. The site is located at Barton.
1 Possible earthworks indicating Medieval shrunken village transcribed from air photographs. Aerial photograph reference numbers not recorded.
2 Earthworks mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. ...
The possible site of a Medieval shrunken village. The remains of the village are visible as earthworks on aerial photographs. It was situated to the south east of Ryton on Dunsmore.
1 The Commissioners of the 1517 Inquiry into depopulation reported that at Ryton on Dunsmore ‘by reason of enclosure the remainder of the inhabitants are deprived of common pasture and ...
The site of a Medieval shrunken village. The village is known from documentary evidence and its remains are visible as earthworks. It is situated 400m north east of Ryton on Dunsmore.
1 Trench produced evidence for a Medieval house with a wall of sandstone and pebbles and a floor of beaten clay. Quantities of coarse and green-glazed pottery of 11th – ...
The site of a shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. It was excavated and revealed a house, a wall and pottery. It was situated 500m north east of Dean's Green.
2 Area of probable shrunken Medieval settlement shows on aerial photographs.
3 Settlement earthworks and related extant ridge and furrow is visible on LiDAR imagery.
The site of a possible shrunken village in Bishop's Itchington dating to the Medieval period. Aerial photographs reveal earthworks at this site.
2 Earthworks of shrunken Medieval settlement to the W of Dassett Northend show on aerial photographs.
3 A watching brief was to be carried out during the excavation of foundation trenches ...
The remains of a settlement to the west of Northend are visible as earthworks. They may be the remains of the Medieval shrunken village.
1 ‘Rous’ list is confusing. He lists Merton, Merhul and Salemorton. But Salemorton is another name for Moreton. The hamlet of Morrell, as it is now spelt, is about half ...
The possible site the Medieval shrunken village at Moreton. Remains of the settlement are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site is located to the east of Little Morrell.
1 There may have been a Medieval village at Kites Green.
2 This is probably the Domesday manor known as Witeleia which was valued at 3 hides and had land for ...
The site of possible shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. Documentary evidence suggests the site is located at Kite Green.
1 Earthworks in the form of rectangular banks and linear dirtches visible on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The banks and ...
Earthworks in the form of rectangular banks and linear dirtches visible on aerial photographs may be the remains of a shrunken village. Features are located at the rear (east) of the properties on the High Street, Ryton on Dunsmore.
1 A hamlet is marked.
2 Only one farmhouse stands today. All the fields are arable and no earthworks indicative of desertion were seen.
3 Deserted Medieval village on this site, shown ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of the Post Medieval shrunken village of Lambcote. The site lies 500m east of Willoughby Covert.
1 Amorphous earthworks, possibly indicative of a shrunken settlement.
2 This site requires a site visit.
3 Area of site extended using evidence from air photographs.
4 In the Domesday survey Fullready named ...
The possible site of the Medieval shrunken village of Fullready. The remains of the village are visible as earthworks. They surround the west and north sides of the present settlement.
1 The village appears in Rous’ list. A church and one or two other buildings survive, but the air photograph shows that it was once much more extensive. William Willington, ...
The site of the shrunken settlement of Barcheston, dating to the Medieval period, has been identified on aerial photographs, documentary evidence and through Medieval finds, including a buckle, roof tile and whetstone.
1 Rous lists depopulation here, but although the parish village of Barcheston suffered at the hands of William Willington, Willington does not appear in the 1517 Inquiry. It is still ...
The site of a possible shrunken village, at Willington, dating to the Medieval period. The remains of the village are visible as earthworks on aerial photographs. The village is also mentioned in documentary evidence.
1 Possible depopulated village of Idlicote. Listed as Utlicote by Rous. There is a large house and park, but there is a modern village.
2 Site resettled pre-Industrial revolution, period of ...
The possible site of a shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. The site is suggested by pottery scatters found in this area. It is located 100m east of Idlicote.
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 Rev A K Collin reported that in digging in the garden of the recently built vicarage several pieces of pottery were found. Some of this was Roman (PRN 5272). ...
The site of an area of shrunken village dating to the Medieval period at Hunningham. It is known from finds of pottery dating to the same period.