1 Talton. Five coins – Julian (2), Valentinian I, Flavius Victor, Valentinian III found.
2 Marginal.
3 Present whereabouts of these coins is unknown.
Findspot - five Roman coins were found in the area of Crimscote.
1 1858: In a stone pit in Armscot Field were found fragments of pottery in close proximity to antlers of red deer. The pottery was coarse and imperfectly fired, and ...
Findspot - fragments of Anglo Saxon pottery and red deer horns, dating to the Migration or Early Medieval period, were found 300m south west of Halford Bridge.
1 Spring called ‘Drakes Well’. This quarry has yielded Romano British pottery which is in possession of the finder, who gave this information.
2 This quarry has been disused for at ...
Findspot - fragments of Roman pottery were found at a quarry site, 150m east of Stepstone Bridge.
1 A Roman coin of Constantine found at the above grid reference between 1967-1974, was reported to the Birmingham City Museum. No other details are known.
Findspot - a single Roman coin was found in the area of Middlefield Lane, Newbold on Stour.
1 A terracotta head (Romano British), perhaps the spout of a Roman pot. Details of finder and informant.
2 Noted by Ordnance Survey.
Findspot - a fragment of Roman pottery, perhaps a spout, was found to the south west of the church, Newbold on Stour.
1 Romano British site and burial.
2 This was an excavation conducted by Stratford schoolboys which recovered Romano British pot and a burial thought to be Romano British. Reports of slabbed ...
The site of a burial, possibly of Roman date. It was found 150m east of the dimantled tramway.
1 Find of Romano British mortarium rim sherd. Method of recovery unrecorded. Grid reference given of SP25804285.
Findspot of Romano British rim sherd 700m south of Tredington.
1 Romano British site and burial, the latter shown on MWA2745.
2 This was an excavation conducted by Stratford schoolboys which recovered Romano British pot and a burial thought to be ...
Findspot - pottery dating to the Roman period was found 600m north west of the allotment gardens.
1 Roman pottery found on line of the Severn-Trent pipeline.
2 Twelve sherds, also one possible Medieval sherd and one piece of tile.
Findspot - pottery sherds dating to the Roman period were found 400m north west of the allotment gardens.
1 Roman pottery found on line of the Severn-Trent pipeline.
2 Fourteen sherds including three sherds of Samian, two ‘early’ (1st century AD) grey coarse wares and a fragment of ‘fabric ...
Findspot - pottery sherds dating to the Roman period were found 200m north west of the allotment gardens.
1 Roman pottery found by Tim Yarnell on line of the Severn-Trent pipeline.
2 Four sherds include joining sherds from a coarse (?Prehistoric) vessel, two possible 1st century sherds, two worn ...
Findspot - pottery sherds dating to the Roman period and the fragment of a quern stone were found 500m south of the allotment gardens.
1 The Fosse Way probably originated as the link road along a temporary frontier line and was in existence by AD 47. Between Cirencester and High Cross it runs remarkably ...
The Fosse Way, a Roman road of mid 1st century origin, running from Cirencester to Leicester, partly along a temporary frontier line. The road runs to the south east of Stretton on Fosse.
1 A Tredington charter of AD 757 (though the relevant boundary clause is of a later date) refers to the rahweg (way of the roe deer). Part of this route ...
The route of a trackway dating to the Migration and Early Medieval periods. It is known from documentary evidence to have been called 'The Way of the Roe Deer'. It is located south west of Darlingscote.
1 Map showing part of Early Medieval routeway from Blackwell to Shipston.
The possible route of an Anglo Saxon trackway dating to the Migration and Early Medieval periods. It leads into Shipston from the north west.
1 112 sherds of Roman date brought into Warwick Museum. This includes a sherd in apparently ‘Belgic-type’ fabric. This group contains pottery from the early-mid 2nd century onward. This site ...
The site of a possible Roman settlement known from pottery and tile. It is located 600m north west of the allotment gardens.