1 Ridge and furrow cultivation based on an aerial photo transcript.
The remains of ridge and furrow cultivation from the medieval period in the parish of Little Lawford, based on aerial photographs.
1 Ridge and furrow survival from the parish identified from aerial photos.
Ridge and furrow survival from the medieval period in the parish of Radway based on aerial photographs.
1 Ridge and furrow survival identified from aerial photos.
Ridge and furrow cultivation survival from the medieval period in the parish of Southam identified from aerial photographs.
1 Ridge and furrow survival taken from an aerial photograph transcription.
Ridge and furrow survival from the medieval period in the parish of Ladbroke which has been identified from aerial photographs.
1 Ridge and furrow survival across the whole parish identified from an aerial photgraph transcript.
Ridge and furrow survival from the medieval period in the parish of Compton Verney which has been identified from aerial photographs.
1 An undated ditch and a section of possible ridge and furrow or ditch were observed during the excavation of drainage trenches. The ditch contained well preserved organic layers similar ...
An undated ditch and a section of possible ridge and furrow or ditch were observed during the excavation of drainage trenches. The site was located at 'Hunters Moon', Flecknoe.
3 Two undated enclosures, one subrectangular and one D-shaped, show on air photographs. A trackway (PRN 5159) runs from the undated settlement to the east (PRN 966) across this site.
4 ...
A subrectangular and a 'D' shaped enclosure are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. These indicate a possible settlement of unknown date. The cropmarks lie 400m NE of Sherbourne Church.
1 Archaeological trial trenching prior to the proposed construction of a new garden centre recorded the shallow remains of medieval plough furrows, aligned close to north-south. No archaeological features ...
Medieval furrows recorded during trial trenching at Crabtree Garden Centre, Stratford Road, Bidford on Avon.
1 In 1478 Thomas Morgan owned Sambourne manor house, called ‘Taillors’ after a previous tenant. In the C18th/C19th a house called Tailors occupied the site of the now ...
Now occupied by Middletown Farm.
1 Mentioned in Beresford and Hurst’s gazetteer.
2 A site visit showed that this field, on either side of the stream, has small scale earthworks in it, and is surrounded by ...
The site of a Medieval deserted settlement which survives as an earthwork. The site is surrounded by ridge and furrow cultivation. It is located to the east of Little Lawford.
1 Air photograph.
2 Ridge and furrow cultivation and a headland or possible hollow way observed on site visit (Also see WA 3185).
3 On the very edge of ridge and furrow ...
An area of ridge and furrow cultivation of Medieval date and a possible hollow way. The remains are visible as earthworks and are situated at the north end of Marton.
1 Rous and Dugdale indicate shrinkage but there has been resettlement.
2 Examination of aerial photographs shows the modern village to be bounded by ridge and furrow.
The site of a possible shrunken settlement at Little Wolford dating to the Medieval period. Aerial photographs show the modern village is surrounded by Medieval ridge and furrow.
Ridge and Furrow cultivation in Bidford on Avon Parish.
1 AP.
2 Vertical AP SP04NE in CRO.
3 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Medieval ridge and furrow cultivation in the parish of Bidford on Avon. The ridge and furrow survives as an earthwork in some areas. In other areas it is visible on aerial photographs.
Ridge and Furrow cultivation in Binton Parish.
2 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Medieval ridge and furrow cultivation in the parish of Binton. In some areas is is visible as an earthwork. Elsewhere it is visible on aerial photographs.
2 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Medieval or later ridge and furrow cultivation in Burmington Parish. The remains are visible on aerial photographs. In some areas of the parish the remains survive as earthworks.
1 A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School. It was probably a drainage ditch or field boundary similar ...
A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School.
1 The field name ‘Town Close’ indicates possible site of deserted settlement. Further investigation revealed possible house platforms. Various documents exist relating to the history of the manor.
2 The earthworks ...
The site of a deserted settlement of Medieval or Post Medieval date and known from documentary evidence and finds of pottery. The earthworks visible include house platforms, hollow ways and ridge and furrow. The site is located 600m north east of Kemps Green.
1 Ditch 1001 probably represented a field boundary ditch, and another ditch may have been part of the same Romano British field system.
2There was a scatter of residual Roman pottery ...
Romano-British field boundaries found during excavation in the outer enclosure of Boteler's Castle. These were possibly part of a larger field system aligned on Ryknild Street.
1 Pers Comm from the land owners (April 2007).
2 Earthworks visible on LiDAR imagery, c.2008.
Traces of ridge and furrow visible from the gound as earthworks.
1 The field name ‘Town Close’ indicates possible site of deserted Medieval settlement. Further investigation revealed possible house platforms. Various documents exist relating to the history of the manor.
2 The ...
A deserted settlement dating to the Medieval or Post Medieval periods. The settlement is known from documentary evidence and pottery finds. House platforms, holloways and ridge and furrow are visible as earthworks. The site is located 600m north east of Kemps Green.
1 Ploughed out Ridge and furrow was identified during archaeological trial trenching. This is likely to have related to the deserted settlement of Coton immedieately to the north.
Ridge and furrow remains were identified during an archaeological evaluation. These were probably associated with the deserted medieval settlement of Coton.
1 Ridge and furrow extant, particularly to the east of Northbrook.
Ridge and furrow earthworks. The associated settlement earthworks are no longer visible.
1 The excavation of 24 trial trenches recorded predominantly north-south aligned furrows from ploughed out mediaeval field system, possibly associated with settlements at Coton(MWA 2778), Newton(MWA 9546) or Biggin(MWA 2778).
The excavation of 24 trial trenches recorded predominantly north-south aligned furrows from ploughed out mediaeval field system.
1 The population of Weethley is now less than half of what it was at the beginning of the C19, and inequalities in the soil near the church suggest that ...
The site of a Medieval shrunken village at Weethley and traces of ridge and furrow cultivation. The site is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs and is also known from documentary evidence. It is situated 400m south of Weethley Farm. Lidar evidence shows that many earthworks are extant.