1 The bridge over the Stour at the parish boundary had been built by 1266 when one of the tenants of the manor owed the service of repairing the bridge; ...
Clifford Bridge, the site of a bridge dating from the Medieval to Post Medieval period, which was replaced in 1927. It crossed the Stour at Clifford Lane.
1 Land at Wincote is recorded in 1086. Five cottages held by William of Wincot in 1266 as part of Clifford Manor may have been in the hamlet of Wincot. ...
Earthworks may indicate the remains of the Medieval/Post Medieval deserted settlement Wincot. The site is located 950m north east of RAF Long Marston.
1 A moated site noted close to the 15th century manor house.
2 The feature marked on the OS map as a moat is a sluiced pond, which with the river ...
The site of a possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It is still visible as an earthwork, and is situated 250m south east of the church at Clifford Chambers.
1 In 1086 there was a mill. Two mills are mentioned in 1266. The mill is also recorded in 1538, 1562 and 1649. The mill was used as the manor ...
The remains of a watermill which is documented from the Medieval period. The building was converted into a house in 1972. The mill race survives. The site is located to the south east of Clifford Chambers.
1 Clifton Mill Race is still intact. The mill race has been diverted from the river between SP2051 and SP1952. Part of it forms the eastern side of ...
The site of a mill race which was in use from the Medieval to the Imperial period. It is still visible as an earthwork. The mill race was located to the south east of Clifford Chambers.
1 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
2 Portable Antiquities Scheme find provenance information:
Methods of discovery: Metal detector
Ridge and furrow cultivation in the parish of Clifford Chambers. It is probably of Medieval or Post Medieval date. In some areas the ridge and furrow survives as an earthwork. In other areas it is visible on aerial photographs.
1 An enclosure complex: At least two phases appear to be indicated: i) Blocks of ridge and furrow are aligned on the rectangular enclosure and trackway, presumably indicating a Medieval ...
Medieval features, including a trackway, a gully and pits, are visible on aerial photographs. The features probably represent more than one phase of occupation. The site is on Clifford Hill, Clifford Chambers.
1 There was a priest in 1086. The church of St Helen is a small building with a Cotswold stone roof, heavily restored in 1886, comprising nave, chancel with N ...
The Church of St Helen, which was originally built in the Medieval period. The church underwent alterations in almost all of the centuries that followed. It is situated 200m south east of the Post Office, Clifford Chambers.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval settlement, based on the first edition 6″ map, 44SW 1887.
2 The plotting of the ridge and furrow shows a lot of survival to ...
The possible extent of the Medieval settlement of Clifford Chambers. The extent of the settlement is suggested by the remains of ridge and furrow cultivation and evidence on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 Clifford Manor has early Medieval origins, with the entrance front remodelled c.1700. A fire in 1918 led to rebuilding and extension by Lutyens, 1919, with a new southern ...
Clifford Manor, a house which was originally built during the Medieval period. It was partially rebuilt by Lutyens in 1919. The house is situated 200m south east of the church, Clifford Chambers.