1 A ‘mansion’ is recorded at the beginning of the reign of Edward I (1272-1307). It is not improbable that the moat to the W of Bushwood Hall marks the ...
A moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building, of Medieval origin. It is visible as an earthwork, though overgrown. It is situated 600m south of Bushwood Lane, Lapworth.
1 A site near the church surrounded by a deep moat.
3 The moat has been filled in since reference 1.
4 The moat is about 40m by 40m. The ditch is ...
A moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building, of Medieval origin. It survives as a faint earthwork, and is situated 150m south of the church at Claverdon.
1 Behind the house is a large square moat with high ground in the middle; only the E side contains water.
2 Best preserved on its W side where the steep-sided ...
A Medieval moat, a wide ditch which usually surrounded a building. The moat is visible as an earthwork and is situated at Oldfield.
1 Moat Field. Filled-in ditch on N, wet moats on W and S, deep hollow (old ditch) on W. ?Site of main farm.
2 The S arm is all that is ...
A possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch which usually surrounded a building. The remains of the moat are partially visible as an earthwork. It is situated 500m north of Pinchley Green.
1 Moat. The present occupier of the old rectory house was told by his predecessor that he himself dug this feature c1920.
2 It appears to be the same moat that ...
A modern moat installed as a garden feature. It is situated at the eastern end of Dorsington, 100m east of Dorsington Rectory.
1 A large dry homestead moat, partly destroyed by modern landscaping at the SW corner. Standing within it is Moat House, a stone building of some antiquity but much modernised.
2 ...
A large dry moat that survives as an earthwork in the centre of Dorsington. It surrounds a stone house. The moat is believed to be Medieval in date.
1 A homestead moat.
2 Three sides of a presumably once square moat. It is waterfilled and in places appears to be stone-lined. The SE side was presumably obliterated by the ...
The site of Braggington Moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. The moat is of Medieval date. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated at Braggington.
1 Remains of moats in field next to Quinton church; thought by Broom to mark the site of the old manor house of Quinton. The area is generally marshy and ...
The site of a possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It is situated in marshy ground 50m south east of St Swithin's Church, Lower Quinton.
1 Arley Hall was once a moated manor house.
2 Fragmentary remains of a homestead moat. The track of the W arm can still be vaguely traced.
3 The moat now consists ...
A moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building, which is Medieval in date. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated 350m west of St. Wilfred's Church, Arley. It was associated with Arley Hall.
1 At Over Arley, about five miles higher up the river, a camp on the banks, nearly a square, with double, and on one side treble, ditches.
2 There is no ...
An antiquarian reference to the site of an enclosure of unknown date. Its location is uncertain, as its date and monument form.
1 Monastic site, with 17th century and later building. There was a formal garden to the east of the house, though this has now been removed. House restored as hotel ...
The site of a formal garden dating originally from the Post Medieval period. A modern garden has recently been created on this site. Features include the remains of a moat, an orchard and a drive. It is situated in Abbots Salford.
1 Evidence of a rampart embanking the 12th – 13th century moated platform was found in the north east part of the site. The west, east and southern flanks ...
Medieval features and finds recovered during excavations at Coughton Court. Features included evidence for a rampart, the moat, the manor house platform, a drainage ditch and a beam slot.
1 Millburn Grange is mentioned in the Stoneleigh Ledger Book of 1305 which gives details of the Stoneleigh Abbey estates. The site is adjacent to a possible DMV.
2 A possible ...
The site of Millburn Grange, a Medieval farm or estate that was associated with Stoneleigh Abbey. The site of the grange is located 100m north east of Millburn Viaduct.
1 Behind Court Farm are the remains of two moats. The larger, immediately to the SW, is 90 paces square and still has water on three sides, the S being ...
A double moated site associated with a manor house. The moats date to the Medieval period but could represent different phases of building. They survive as earthworks, and are situated on the west side of the Sherbourne to Hampton Lucy road.
1 Behind Court Farm are the remains of two moats. The second moat lies a little to the N, enclosing an area some 50 paces square. The ramparts are steep ...
One moat of a doubled moated site probably associated with a manor house. Of Medieval date, it may represent a different stage of building to its other half. It is situated 300m south of the right-angle bend on the Sherbourne to Hampton Lucy road.
1 Norbrook house ‘is a modern structure of two gables, but it stands on the site of an ancient moated grange or manor-house… The site of the moat can yet ...
The site of a possible moat surrounding a former manor house. It would have dated to the Medieval period, and only faint traces remain as an earthwork. It is situated 300m north west of Northbrook Spinney, Fulbrook.
1 Waterfilled moat 80m E-W by 60m N-S with arms about 10m in width and a causewayed entrance midway along the S arm.
2 The remains of a homestead moat. ...
The remains a moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building, which is Medieval in origin. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated at Drakenage Farm.
1 A fine example of its kind. Complete, although it is not entirely filled with water and enclosing an area of 0.58 ha. It is bridged at one point on ...
Stoneton Manor moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. Dating from the Medieval period, it is still visible as an earthwork, and is situated 500m north east of Newfield Pool.
1 Site of fishponds shown to the south of Hurley Hall.
2 These fishponds (and Hurley Hall moat) were backfilled in the early ?20th century following a drowning. The present owner, ...
The site of Medieval moat and later fishponds (utilising re-excavated section of moat), used for the breeding and storage of fish, thought to date to the Post Medieval period. They are situated 60m south of Hurley Hall.
1 A particularly large moated (?) earthwork near the church could have been the manor house.
2 Plan.
3 Aerial photographs.
4 A settlement is first recorded as one of 24 vills granted ...
Evidence from aerial photographs, backed up by documentary evidence, suggests that this is the site of a Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It is still visible as an earthwork, and is situated 50m south of St Mary's Church, Priors Hardwick.
1 Excavation in 1966 indicated that the priory covered 1.7 ha and was bounded on the S and W sides by a large ditch or moat, onthe E by the ...
The site of a possible moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building, at Thelsford Priory. Excavation has uncovered its design and extent. It is situated 150m south west of Theslford Bridge, Charlecote.
1 A history of the manor of Thornton exists.
3 The moated manor on the W of the site is particularly well-preserved. The stone foundations of a building are visible on ...
A moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building, associated with the Medieval deserted settlement of Thornton. It survives as an earthwork, and is situated 1.5km north east of Ettington.
1 1951: Temple House is surrounded by a homestead moat in good condition and waterfilled. 1967: There are now only three portions of the moat.
2 Two sides of the moat ...
The site of a moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building. It dates from the Medieval period and is visible as an earthwork. The moat lies 300m west of Park Farm.
1 A long pool in the grounds of Manor Farm is said to be the remains of a moat.
2 The pool is said by the resident of the house to ...
The site of a possible moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. There is only circumstantial evidence for its existence. It would have been Medieval and associated with the Manor House 250m north of the church at Fenny Compton.