1 The landscaping of the Hall (PRN 6196) included a rectangular fishpond, with a V-shaped feeder running down the hill side.
2 Plan.
A Post Medieval fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. It is visible as an earthwork, and is situated on the east side of Fenny Compton.
1 At the top of the hill are two circular and one elongated fishpond, with an overflow channel running down the hill.
2 Aerial photographs.
Fishponds used for the breeding and storage of fish, which date to the Medieval or Post Medieval period. They are visible as earthworks and on aerial photographs. The fishponds are situated 100m south of the church at Priors Hardwick.
1 There is a waterfilled pond on the E side of the deserted settlement. Earthworks on the N and W side of the pond may suggest that it was once ...
A fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish which dates from the Medieval/Post Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated to the west of Watergall Bridge.
1 Possible fishpond site centred at above grid reference. The area is still wet underfoot, but largely silted up.
A possible fishpond which would have been used for the breeding and storage of fish. It is still visible, though largely silted up. It would have been of Medieval/Post Medieval date, and is situated 350m south west of St Michael's Church at Ufton.
3 A fleet of possible fishponds to the S of Manor Farm. The S pond has recently been filled in.
Fishponds used for the breeding and storage of fish, which are of the Medieval/ Post Medieval period. They survive as earthworks and are situated 700m north west of Bishopton, Stratford on Avon.
1 The only surface indication of the Priory prior to excavation was a large fishpond. A deep area on the N of the site, close to Thelsford Brook, may be ...
A Medieval fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish. It survives as an earthwork. The site has been part excavated, and is situated at Thelsford Priory Charlecote.
1 The moat widens on the W to form a fishpond.
2 The fishpond is about 41m by 20m.
3 Scheduled as Warwickshire Monument No 171.
5 Aerial photograph.
A Medieval fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish. It is visible as an earthwork, and is situated at the site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Thornton.
1 Traces of two moats survive (PRN 1519). Beyond this are artificial banks which probably surrounded a series of large fishponds stretching to the N.
2 These fields were under crop ...
The site of a fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish during the Medieval and Post Medieval period. It remains as an earthwork and is situated 400m north of Broom.
1 Fishponds.
2 Plan.
3 Upstream of the manor (N and NE of the church) is a fine series of fishponds. Along the N side a leet runs beyond a prominent linear ...
Fishponds used for the breeding and storage of fish. The fishponds are associated with the Medieval and/or Post Medieval manors and survive as earthworks. The site is located 100m north of St Giles's Church at Chesterton.
1 Two rectilinear hollows and a bank follow the stream. These hollows are almost certainly small fishponds but there is no trace of any leats associated with them.
2 Plan included ...
The site of two Medieval fishponds used for the breeding and storage of fish, that were associated with Nuneaton Priory. They are visible as earthworks and are situated east of Manor Court Road, Nuneaton.
1 Earthworks of a possible fishpond are visible on air photographs.
3 The earthworks are also marked on the OS 1:10 000 sheet.
4 The lords ‘new fishpond’ appears in a 1379 ...
A possible fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish. It is visible as an earthwork. It is of unknown date, and it is situated 500m east of New Covert, Admington.
1 There are two large ornamental ponds in Farnborough Park called Sourland Pool and Lady Pool. To the east are two fishponds in a field called Well Orchard.
2 These ...
Ornamental fishponds, used for breeding and storing fish during the Imperial period. They are associated with the landscaping of Farnborough Park.
1 A large polygonal enclosure, defined by a substantial ditch and possibly a bank, has been identified on air photographs. The enclosure lies on the summit of a low ...
The site of a possible park pale forming part of Ettington Deer Park. The park pale is of Post Medieval date. It is surrounds Greenhill Wood.
1 Two large ponds are marked on the 1st edition OS 6′ map of 1886, lying on the southeastern slope of Greenhill Wood, adjacent to a stream feeding the River ...
The site of two possible fishponds marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. They are situated 250m south of Greenhill Wood in Ettington Park.
1 Two fishponds, separated by a narrow causeway, show on 0S map of 1881.
2 These fishponds have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Ilmington Parish (PRN 6446).
Two fishponds of probable Medieval date are shown on the Ordnance Survey first edition map of 1881. The fishponds are found north of Foxcote Great Coppice.
1 A grange belonging to a Cistercian Abbey appears to have existed on the slopes of the lower part of Edge Hill. Four fishponds survive nearby – ‘Mount Pool’, near ...
Fishponds, used for the breeding and storage of fish, which date to the Medieval period. They were associated with Radway Grange. They remain as earthworks, and are situated to the north west of Castle Wood, Edge Hill.
1 Fish pond SE of Bilton Lodge marked on 1886 map.
2 This fish pond is clearly marked on the 1843 Tithe map as extent and water-filled, whereas it is referred ...
The site of a fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. It dates to as least the Imperial period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It was situated just to the north of the Church of St Mark, Bilton.
1 Fish pond marked on 1886 map.
The site of a fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It dates to the Imperial period, and is situated north of Lyttleton Close, Binley Woods.
1 A fishpond complex of two rectangular fish tanks with a long lake, now shrunken to the Ox Pool. It is said locally that the Prior of Coventry had his ...
Fishponds, used for the breeding and storage of fish, which date to the Medieval/Post Medieval period. They remain partly visible as earthworks and are situated 200m southeast of the Manor House at Priors Marston.
1 Two pools on Walnut Hill are usually shown as fishponds, but these look more like flooded stone pits.
2 Walnut Hill is around this Grid Ref, watering and pits are ...
The site of two possible claypits or fishponds of uncertain date. They are situated 300m southeast of the church at Priors Marston.
1 The pond to the east of the road at the north end of Barford Bridge is shown on maps of 1729 and 1785.
2 Map of 1729.
3 Map of 1785.
4 ...
A Post Medieval fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. It is marked on several eighteenth century maps. It survives as a pond and is situated 200m north of Barford Bridge.
1 Pond shown on map of 1817 in the north corner of a field named the Fishpond Close.
2 The pond is not shown on the 1760 Barford Inclosure Map, nor ...
The site of a fishpond, used for the breeding and storage of fish. It dates to the Imperial period, was marked on a map of 1817. It was situated 400m south east of the church at Sherbourne.
1 The ponds to the north of the moat, published as fishponds, are duckponds of a later period of construction.
2 The owner suggests that these were small Medieval ...
Possible fishponds, used for breeding and storaging fish, of Medieval date, survive as earthworks. They are situated 100m north east of Whitacre Hall, Nether Whitacre.
1 A hollow depression, 120m long and 40m wide, in a field to the south of Admington Hall. Presumably the site of a pond attached to the manor house, ...
A Medieval fishpond, used for breeding and storing fish, is indicated by earthworks surviving at the southern end of Admington.