1 The manor of Willicote lay mainly in Quinton parish but included lands in Clifford Chambers in 1677. By the late 18th century Willicote Farm was one of the largest ...
Aerial photographs show a probable Medieval deserted village. It is located 100m east of RAF Long Marston and is visible as an earthwork.
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 A Norman church.
2 Interior is earlier than exterior. Norman S arcade of two bays, with round piers. The N arcade is late 12th century. The chancel is Early English ...
The Church of St Swithin, Lower Quinton was erected in the Medieval period. It was altered structurally in the 12th and 14th centuries and underwent restoration in the Victorian era.
1 The site of Willicote DMV is accorded this grid reference in Beresford and Hurst (1971) where it is noted only in the gazetteer.
2 The alleged site is a field ...
The alleged site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Willicote, 300m east of RAF Long Marston.
1 Small rectangular entrenchment, doubtless of Roman origin.
2 In 1959 a section was cut across this earthwork. Records include a section drawing and a photograph and a note recording that ...
Cropmarks which are visible on aerial photographs may be the remains of a Medieval deserted settlement. The site is located 400m south east of Lower Clopton.
1 Medieval churchyard cross at Quinton, situated beside path near N porch. Square socket stone which seems to have had corners chamfered. Square shaft, each corner reeded dividing each face ...
The remains of a Medieval cross in the churchyard of St Swithin's, Lower Quinton.
1 Site noted at this grid reference.
2 No surface trace of deserted settlement.
4 Aerial photograph shows possible ridges, banks and ditches on all sides of Meon Hall Farm. The site ...
Aerial photographs show what may be the remains of a Medieval deserted settlement. The site is located 200m east of Meon Hill and is visible as an earthwork.
1 The possible area of settlement that remained after the shrinkage of MWA6452, based on the first edition 6″ map of 1884, 50SW.
2 The ridge and furrow plotting of the ...
The possible area of Medieval settlement at Upper Quinton. This area may have remained after other local settlement shrinkage.
1 Shrunken settlement earthworks show on vertical air photographs.
2 Vertical air photograph taken in 1967.
3 Ridge and furrow plot.
The remains of a Medieval shrunken village. Earthworks visible on aerial photographs indicate that the village of Lower Quinton was once larger.
1 Earthwork remains of shrunken settlement around Upper Quinton show on air photographs. These have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Quinton Parish (PRN 6451).
2 Air ...
The Medieval shrunken village of Upper Quinton. Earthworks, which are visible on aerial photographs, suggest that the southern part of Upper Quinton village may have been larger once.