1 Jetton found while digging in the garden of a cottage at the above grid reference.
2 A coin from Tournai in Flanders which could be early 16th century.
3 The same ...
Findspot - a jetton or counting piece, dating to the Medieval period, was found 700m north west of King John's Castle, Kineton.
1 Kineton (11). Built by 1565. Post mill.
2 Various records exist of windmills in the manor in the Medieval period.
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of a post mill, a type of windmill mounted on a post, dating to the Post Medieval period. The location was 100m north west of the Church of St Peter at Kineton.
1 Pittern Hill. Built by 1725. Ceased early 19th century. Post mill.
2 Moved monument location from (NGR SP 3206 5146) after review of aerial photographs indicated a mill mound located ...
Documentary and earthwork evidence suggests that this is the site of a Post Medieval post mill, a type of windmill mounted on a post. It stood 450m west of Pittern Hill.
1 Chancel with N organ chamber and vestry, nave with N and S trancepts and N aisle, and W tower. The W tower is said to date from 1315, but ...
The Church of St Peter was originally built during the Medieval period and the tower dates to this period. The church was partly rebuilt by Sanderson Miller in 1755, and again during the 1800s. It stands in Kineton.
1 The manor house at Little Kineton, a fine building of Elizabethan origin with additions made in 1720, was pulled down in 1790 by Richard Hill, who began a new ...
The site of a manor house which was built during the Post Medieval period. It was pulled down in 1790 with the intention of building a new house, but this was never completed. It was situated in Little Kineton.
1 At the foot of Edge Hill the first battle of the Civil War was fought in 1642 (PRN 1198) and a mound on the hillside still marks the common ...
A mound at the foot of Edge Hill, just outside Radway, is reputed to be a cemetery where dead soldiers from the Battle of Edge Hill were buried in the 17th century. The mound survives as an earthwork.
1 ,2An estate farm complex at Kineton, built c1850 for the Compton Verney Estate.
3 A section of the main barn was rebuilt, following a fire in 1999, and a photographic ...
An estate farm complex at Kineton, built c1850 for the Compton Verney Estate.
1 Probably originally Almshouses. The buildings are two storey, built in local white lias stone with brown Horton quoins and dressings. The rear wings are timber framed with ...
Range of 17th century cottages found along the north side of the Market Place.
1 Late 17th century double-pile house with two storeys and an attic. Limestone ashlar with brown sandstone dressings. Some 18th and 19th century additions and alterations.
17th Century Manor House at Kineton
1 An evaluation in 2004 revealed walled remains of a probable 12th/13th century building and boundary wall. The building appears to have been abandoned by the early post-medieval period ...
Medieval stone building 10m north of Rose Cottage, Kineton.
1 Three sections of metalled road surface found during an evaluation in 2004. Although a construction date for the roads was not found it appears to have been used ...
Metalled medieval road surfaces at Rose Cottage, Kineton.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval settlement, based on the first edition 6″ map of 1886, 35SW.
2 The 1886 map shows a small village at the intersection of 4 ...
The possible extent of the Medieval settlement at Little Kineton, as suggested by the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 At the foot of Edge Hill the first battle of the Civil War was fought in 1642 and a mound on the hillside still marks the common grave of ...
The site of a mound, supposedly under which 500 or more dead soldiers from the Battle of Edge Hill were buried in the Post Medieval period. The site is located at Graveground Coppice.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval settlement, based on the first edition 6″ maps of 1886, 45 SE and 51 NE.
2 Market (Letter close) mercatum Tuesdays granted 28th August, ...
The possible extent of the Medieval settlement of Kineton, as suggested by the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. Kineton is considered a 'typical' example of medieval urban failure.
1 At the foot of the hill on which King John’s Castle (PRN 1183) stood, there is a well called King John’s Well, and a little way from it is ...
The site of 'King John's Well', a well dating from the Medieval period. It was marked on an Ordnance Survey map of 1955, but can no longer be seen. The location is 150m north west of King John's Castle.