1 Ridge and furrow cultivation in the Medieval period.
Medieval ridge and furrow cultivation in the parish of Lower and Upper Shuckburgh. The remains are visible as aerial photographs.
1 Built or rebuilt of timber in the late 15th or early 16th century. Some rebuilding in stone took place about a century later.
2 A proud range of 1844 ...
Shuckburgh Hall, a house first built in the later Medieval period in timber, which has been altered and added to during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is now partly timber framed and partly built in stone. It stands in Upper Shuckburgh.
1 ‘Windmill Hill’. Large windmill mound surrounded by ridge and furrow. SP4861.
2 The grid reference given in reference 1 is incorrect. The mound is situated in a field with very ...
A windmill mound marks the site of a former windmill which might date back to the Medieval period. The mound is visible as an earthwork. It is situated 400m south west of Lower Shuckburgh.
2 Earthworks of a Medieval deserted settlement show on aerial photographs. This is one possible site for the deserted Medieval settlement of Upper Shuckburgh (see PRN 858).
3 The earthworks of ...
The Medieval deserted settlement of Upper Shuckburgh. Remains of the settlement are visible as earthworks on aerial photographs. The site is located 200m north west of Goarn Spinney.
1 Old village stocks.
2 The site is enclosed by iron railings. Only one small wooden stump remains. A local farmer recalls that the stocks were vandalised ...
Village stocks, in which an offender's wrists and/or ankles were held as a punishment. The stocks probably date to the Post Medieval period, and the remaining wooden stump is located 50m southwest of St John the Baptist's Church.
1 The 1517 Inquiry found depopulation here. Upper Shuckburgh was depopulated in 1492. The church stands in parkland. There is a small group of houses in ...
Earthwork remains of deserted Medieval Settlement of Upper Shuckburgh
1 ‘Windmill Hill’. Large windmill mound surrounded by ridge and furrow. SP4861.
2 The grid reference given in reference 1 is incorrect. The mound is situated in a field with very ...
A windmill mound marks the site of a former windmill which might date back to the Medieval period. The mound is visible as an earthwork. It is situated 400m south west of Lower Shuckburgh.
1 The 1517 Inquiry found depopulation. Lower Shuckburgh was depopulated in 1492 and 1508. There is a small group of houses close to the church, but they ...
The possible site of a Medieval shrunken village at Lower Shuckburgh. The village is known to have existed from documentary evidence. The remains of the village are visible as earthworks in some areas.
1 The earliest reference is 1725 on Beighton’s map of Warwickshire. Information on ownership exists for the late 19th century. By 1914 the mill was disused and ...
The site of a watermill which was in use during the Post Medieval period. It continued to be used until the end of the Imperial period. The mill buildings were demolished in th 1930s but the watercourses are still visible as earthworks. The mill was situated at Mill Farm.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S chapels, tower and N porch. Lower stage of tower 13th century, upper two stages 18th century. Rest of church rebuilt in modern times. 17th ...
The Church of St John the Baptist, which was of Medieval origin, has been completely rebuilt in recent years. It is situated in Upper Shuckburgh.
1 A park existed in 1600. It contained about 120 acres and there was a herd of 200 deer.
2 The park still contains deer and is empaled ...
The site of a Post Medieval deer park where deer were kept for hunting. It was attached to Shuckburgh Hall. The deer park is marked on several maps, the earliest dating to 1822.
Recommended for inclusion on Register by Lovie.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval deserted settlement of Upper Shuckburgh, based on the first edition OS map of 1886, 41NW, and the second edition map of 1887, 41NE, ...
The possible extent of the Medieval deserted settlement of Upper Shuckburgh, based on documentary evidence.
1 Shuckburgh was a chapelry of Priors Hardwick until the latter part of the 19th century. Before 1860, when it was completely rebuilt, the chapel consisted of chancel and nave, ...
The site of a Medieval chapel which is known to have existed from documentary evidence. It was situated to the south of the church at Lower Shuckburgh.
1 Look out point with cannon. Six civil war cannon and one naval cannon.
Cannon Bank, the site of a Post Medieval battery, where several cannon were situated during the English Civil War. The remains of the battery are visible as an earthwork. The site is located at Upper Shuckburgh.