1 During observation of foundations trenches two ditches and a pit were recorded. One residual human bone fragment, one of animal bone and a piece of 2nd/4th century pottery were ...
Two Roman ditches and a pit, containing two bone fragments and a piece of 2nd/4th century pottery, were found during archaeological work. Previous work on the site had recorded 1st-4th century settlement activity, with ditches, interpreted as property boundaries, layers, pits and a possible gravel pit.
1 A series of pits and gullies of uncertain date. Research suggests this area of land has been used for agriculture probably since the Medieval period.
A group of shallow gullies and pits of uncertain date were found during archaeological work. The features were located in Wyre Lane, Long Marston. They may have been associated with Medieval agriculture.
Prehistoric features and finds
1 Ongoing excavations at Ling Hall Quarry (1989-1999) have uncovered several features/finds of prehistoric date. A small group of Mesolithic flints represents the earliest human activity ...
Ongoing excavations at Ling Hall Quarry (1989-1999) have uncovered various features of Prehistoric date. These include Mesolithic flints, Bronze Age burial remains, pit alignments and Iron Age hut circle and land holdings. Also pits, post holes, gullies and multi-period finds.
1 An archaeological evaluation east of the Roman settlement (WA 8319) found several undated pits and gullies which may belong to a field system aligned on the trackway (WA 4675). ...
Several undated pits and gullies were uncovered during an excavation. They may belong to a pre-Roman field system. The site is to the east of Oak Road, Tiddington.
1 An archaeological evaluation on this site within the Medieval village in 1998 (WA 8326) revealed evidence for 13th century activity in the form of pits and a ditch and ...
Medieval ditches, a pit and a gully were found during archaeological work. These features might have been associated with Medieval settlement in this area. The site was located towards the south of Brandon.
1 Three adjacent pits were uncovered in the northern part of the development and a possible fourth in the central area. Pit 3 fill comprised 50% pottery sherds while ...
Three or possibly four Post Medieval rubbish pits were observed to the rear of a property in Long Street, Atherstone during archaeological work.
1 A Neolithic ditch aligned east-west was found on the southern part of the site. It spanned three trenches and a single flint flake was recovered. Several worked ...
Prehistoric features and finds recovered during excavations at Coughton Court, included ditches, gulleys, a pit, postholes and Neolithic worked flint.
1 Pit containing sherds of 14th-15th century pottery, the majority of sherds came from a Chilvers Coton ‘C’ jug.
A pit containing Medieval pottery sherds was recorded at The Dolphin Inn, Atherstone.
1 An archaeological evaluation recovered evidence for occupation between the 12th and 14th centuries. The evidence was suggestive of property boundaries rather than settlement features; however domestic activity is ...
A possible settlement dating to the Medieval or Post-Medieval period. The site is located 500m south west of Hawkeswell Farm.
1 Evaluation of the area around a Medieval moat (WA2567) identified 11th century activity in the form of light industry which took place in the area to the north of ...
Excavation at this site revealed Medieval industrial activity in the form of pits, gullies and burnt material deposits. The site lies underneath the golf course at Fox Covert.
1 Cropmarks show on aerial photographs. These comprise a rectangular enclosure with faint internal features.
2 Site 4. During fieldwalking in 1977 a pottery scatter was found here (WA 7463). ...
An enclosure, with some internal features, is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. Excavation has dated it to the Roman period. It lies 450m south of Witherley Bridge.
1 Archaeological observation of the excavation of foundation trenches prior to the construction of a sheltered housing development revealed one possible rubbish pit and possible ditch and gullies. All ...
A possible pit, ditch and gullies of unknown date were discovered during archaeological work. The site is at the intersection of the Banbury and Shipston Roads at Stratford-on-Avon.
1 An evaluation in Clinton Lane, Castle Green, Kenilworth, involving background research and trial trenching revealed scattered medieval occupation, dating probably to the 12th/13th -early 14th century, including remains of ...
Archaeological evaluation revealed evidence of occupation from the Medieval period, including the remains of a timber building. It is situated on Clinton Lane, Kenilworth.
1 An archaeological evaluation of land at the Dilke Arms, Ryton-on-Dunsmore, in the centre of the Medieval village, recovered some evidence for Medieval activity, dating back to the 13th century, ...
Medieval pits, gullies and post holes associated with a settlement were uncovered during an excavation. The site is 100m west of St Leonard's Church, Ryron-on-Dunsmore.
1 Two trenches 5m wide, dug in 1989 and 1990 respectively, have located the southern defences and have suggested a revision of the overall shape as a rectangle. In 1989 ...
Excavations revealed the remains of a Roman fort and associated buildings. The fort is situated 300m north east of Bardon Manor Farm.
1 Archaeological evaluation in the grounds of Gramer House, Mancetter, revealed the remains of two pits, a gully and a ditch of Roman date. All of the features were ephemeral ...
An excavation revealed the remains of a pit, gully and a ditch which all dated to the Roman period. They were situated 150m east of Farm Road, Mancetter. Further fieldwork on the site located more Romano-British pits and gullies, potentially related to military structures.
1 In Medieval times, Priors Hardwick was more important than Priors Marston, and Marston was a chapelry of Hardwick at least until the Dissolution. In the Lay Subsidy Roll c1332, ...
Earthwork remains of a Medieval shrunken village at Priors Hardwick. Priors Hardwick is first recorded as one of 24 vills given to Earl Leofric to found the monastery at Coventry, the grant was confirmed by Edward the Confessor in 1024.
2 Linear features show S and SW of an undated settlement enclosure (PRN 1497). These linear features may represent part of a field system. A possible scatter lies alongside one ...
A complex of curvilinear cropmarks, circular enclosures and pits visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. This site is located 300m west of Salford Priors.
1 Site 1. During excavation of Roman fort buildings, WA 3496, at Manor House Farm, traces of Medieval occupation were found. A layer of reddish clay containing much pottery, bone, ...
The site of a possible Medieval settlement was uncovered during excavation. The site lies east of Quarry Lane, Mancetter.
1 The site was excavated by Warwick Museum in advance of the building of the M40 motorway and is now totally destroyed. Finds included Beaker fragments, rare in Warwickshire, and ...
A boundary ditch, thought to be Bronze Age in date, was discovered during an excavation. Finds from the site included fragments of early Bronze Age pottery. The site now lies under the M40.
1 An evaluation was carried out by the Cotswold Archaeological Trust on the allotment site at the rear of houses in Loxley Road in May 1992. Romano British pottery ...
An archaeological evaluation uncovered features dating to the Iron Age/Roman period. The features, including pits and gullies, suggest that this may be the site of a settlement. The site is behind houses on the north side of the Loxley Road, Stratford-on-Avon.
1 A geophysical survey was carried out as part of an evaluation. From the magnetometer survey only one pit-type feature and gullies were identified. The resistivity survey recorded ...
A pit and several gullies were identified. The site was located north of the church at Ryton.
1 Archaeological observation found no evidence for activity prior to the 17th century; the only feature was the cutting of a pit, possibly for rubbish.
During an archaeological excavation a Post Medieval pit was discovered. It was found at King Edward VI Grammar School, Stratford-on-Avon. The pit may have been used for dumping rubbish.
1 Occupation features found close to the site of the pagan Saxon cemetery. A number of parallel slots suggested animal pens, these had been cut by a curving ditch ...
The site of an Early Medieval settlement. Excavation has uncovered features and finds associated with occupation, including post holes, ditches, pits and enclosures. It is 150m north east of Bidford Bridge.