1 Icehouse Spinney marked.
2 An overgrown mound with building debris scattered about represents the position of the icehouse. It presumably belonged to Coton House.
The site of an icehouse, a structure built partially underground and used for storing ice in the warmer months. It dates to the Post Medieval or Imperial periods. The icehouse is situated 300m south of Coton House.
1 165sq.m behind Nos 25, 31 and 33 Brook Street was excavated in summer 1973 prior to redevelopment. There were at least 33 cess and rubbish pits of Medieval ...
A pit cluster of Medieval and Post Medieval rubbish and cess pits was found during an excavation. Two ovens and pottery of the same period was also discovered. A small amount of Neolithic flint was also recovered. The site is situated on Brook Street, Warwick.
1 1972: Excavation before development. Five trial holes cut by the developers revealed two wells. Well A was cut into bedrock and was unlined. Well B was Post Medieval (PRN ...
Wells, pits, post holes and ovens of Medieval date were discovered during an archaeological excavation. The finds included fragments of pottery and a bronze ring. The site is at the junction of Swan Street and High Street, Warwick.
1 South Rookery is an ‘L’ shaped and has been restored and modernised, some previously hidden close-studded timber has been revealed to the left of the front door. The ...
A house dating from the Post Medieval period which has been restored and modernised. There was once a bread oven in a lean-to at the front of the house which had the date 1680 inscribed above it. It is situated at Rookery, Rowington.
1 This property has now been divided into five cottages. It was almost certainly originally one house of the hall and cross wing type. Now rendered externally with ...
A timber framed house dating to the Post Medieval period it has now been divided up into five cottages. A brick oven was found during restoration, but it had to be removed. It is situated in Kingswood.
1 Demolished c.1974 this was an early building consisting of ground floor and attics. In the E gable there were curved wind braces and wide timber framing, but the ...
The site of a timber framed house dating from the Post Medieval period some slight alteration took during the Imperial period. The house contained a bread oven. A Post Medieval timber framed barn still exists. It was situated
1 From the front this appears to be a late 18th or early 19th century house, but there is some timbering in the rear rooms and it would seem to ...
A house which from the front appears to have been built during the Imperial period, however there is some internal evidence to suggest it is an earlier, Post Medieval, house. Behind the property is a former malt house. It is situated in Turner's Green.
1 The central portion is of timber framing and brick, but both the outer sections are later additions. In a room in the old part there is a wide ...
A timber framed house dating from the Post Medieval period with later alterations. The bread oven has since been destroyed. It is situated in Lowsonford.
1 The remains of a post-medieval circular, brick-built icehouse were identified during the excavation of trial trenches prior to the proposed new extension to the hotel. The walls were ...
The remains of a post-medieval circular, brick-built cistern were identified during the excavation of trial trenches. The site lay west of the Abbeygate buildings at Coombe Abbey. This was originally interpreted as an icehouse.
1 Shown on Ordnance Survey map as manor house. Farmhouse. Early/mid 18th century. Flemish bond brick with string course. Plain-tile roof; brick and stacks. L-plan with wing on right to ...
The Manor House, a farmhouse that was built during the Post Medieval period. Documentary evidence suggests that there may also have been a brewery and a malthouse on this site. The manor house is located in King's Newnham.
1 A sunken Medieval malting kiln was dug into the top of the Roman layers.
2 Drawing.
The site of a Medieval malt kiln, a structure in which barley was dried. It was found during an excavation and was situated to the west of Tibbets Close, Alcester.
1 Ice house marked.
2 The ice house is concealed beneath a mound of earth about 2m high. It is a substantial red brick dome-shaped structure about 9m in depth. Access ...
An icehouse, a structure built partially underground in which ice was stored during the warmer months. It was built during the Post Medieval period and is situated 100m north east of Ragley Hall.
1 A small U-sectioned feature, 2m wide and 1.5m deep (N section), 1.7m wide and 1.2m deep (S section) and lying NW/SE. It was cut through from a cobbled layer ...
The site of a deserted settlement of Medieval date within the outer enclosure of Boteler's Castle, suggested by earthworks and a scatter of pottery sherds. Evidence suggests that it was abandoned by the mid thirteenth century. The site lies 200m east of Oversley Castle.
1 1968: Excavation of area including at least three Medieval house plots. Four ovens were set well back from the street front. A series of cess and rubbish pits yielded ...
Excavation of Medieval house plots uncovered traces of timber buildings, pits, ovens and 11th and 12th century pottery. The site was at Brook Street, Warwick.
1 In 1266 there were at Cawston two common ovens baking for Pipewell Abbey tenants in Dunchurch, Rugby, Lawford and Newbold…, one oven baking 16 quarters weekly and the other ...
Medieval bread ovens used to bake bread for the monks of Pipewell Abbey. The exact location of the ovens is not known but they may have been situated at Cawston Grange.
1 Two almost complete cooking pots in association with a Medieval oven. Date range 1200-1350 AD.
The remains of a Medieval oven and two cooking pots were found during an excavation. The site was situated in the area of Chantry Crescent, Alcester.
1 Two Medieval pits – a cesspit and a gravel pit – also a well-preserved stone drying oven consisting of a firing pit from which a well-constructed stone flue led ...
Two Medieval pits and an oven were excavated in Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Sherds of Medieval pottery were also found.
1 Two icehouses at Walton Hall (see also PRN 4903). The second icehouse is situated on the side of the lake. There is a well-defined and regularly-shaped mound covered with ...
The site of an icehouse dating to either the Post Medieval or the Imperial period. It is visible as a mound. It is situated 500m south of Walton.
1 Ice house marked.
2 This is one of two icehouses at Walton Hall (see PRN 4902). The icehouse has now disappeared. There is no depression or mound to show its ...
The site of an icehouse dating to the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. The bricks from the domed roof were apparantly removed during the 20th century. It was located 700m south of Walton.
1 Ice house occupies site of a former watermill (see WA 2280).
2 Letter mentioning this article.
A Post Medieval icehouse, a structure built partially underground where ice was stored during the warmer months. The icehouse was situated in Mill Pond Spinney, 400m north of Compton Wynyates.
1 A medieval enclosure with several phases of ditches was identified. A single oven was found near the south-west corner. Within the enclosure were a series of ditches, pits and ...
A sequence of medieval enclosure ditches aligned broadly parallel to Gypsy Lane, with a return at the south-west corner to form the southern boundary. A single oven was uncovered near the south-west corner of the enclosure.
1 A series of features were identified during evaluation off Church Lane, Middleton. They suggest settlement in the 12th-13th centuries, away from the focus of the original settlement. A large ...
A series of features were identified during evaluation off Church Lane, Middleton. They suggest settlement in the 12th-13th centuries, away from the focus of the original settlement.
1 Archaeological desk-based assessment was carried out as the first stage of modern work at this site, undertaken between 2009 and 2012. The timber-framed building was constructed c. 1483 as ...
The site of New Place, as recorded in documentary sources. Constructed c.1483, it was purchased by Shakespeare in 1597 and he lived there until his death in 1616. The origi nal timber-framed house was pulled down and rebuilt in 1702 in brick, only to be razed to the ground in 1759. The site has been the subsequently of antiquarian, archaeological and literary interest throughout the 19th century.
1 The ice house at Wootten Wawen no longer exists. For a long time previous to its demolition it was in a state of collapse. It was situated only about ...
The site of an icehouse, a structure built partially underground and used to store ice during the warmer months. The icehouse was in use during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It was situated next to Wootton Pool.
Duplicate of MWA13131