1 Find made with a metal detector – a Long Cross penny of Henry III cut in half, a broken round halfpenny of Edward III struck in London, probably before ...
Findspot - two coins dating to the Medieval period were found 700m east of Little Alne.
1 Finds made with a metal detector include a coin of Constantius II (after 355) and a late 4th century (Theodosian) minim.
2 Additional finds include a couple of brooches and ...
Findspot - coins, brooches and other bronze objects, all dating to the Roman period, were found 300m south east of Little Alne.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval settlement, based on the first edition Ordnance Survey map of 1886, 37NE and SE, and on WA 1588 and WA 1589, the site ...
The possible extent of the Medieval settlement at Newnham, based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, and on a known area of earthworks WA1588.
1 A field containing a series of broad, shallow ditches. It has been suggested that there is a moat on the site (PRN 1589), but the most obvious feature is ...
A fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish, and other ditches visible as earthworks. The fishpond and ditches date to the Medieval period. They are situated at Newnham, Aston Cantlow.
1 Finds made with a metal detector included a Charles II Irish halfpenny, 1681 (?).
Findspot - a coin, dating to the Post Medieval period, was found near Little Alne.
1 Find made with a metal detector in 1984: Penny of Henry III (1218-23).
Find made with a metal detector in 1984: Penny of Henry V (1413-22).
2 Edward III penny of ...
Findspot - coins, dating to the Medieval period, were found 300m south west of Little Alne.
1 Finds made with a metal detector in 1984: Farthing of George I (1723).
2 A sixpence of Elizabeth I and a New Spain coin of Philip V were found. Method ...
Findspot - coins, dating to the Post Medieval period, were found 500m south west of Little Alne.
1 The old Warwick-Alcester road enters the parish on the East at Gospel Oak. Here stood the tumulus from which Pathlow Hundred took its name.
2 No traces of this ...
The site of a mound, known as a Hundred Mound where meetings took place during the Early Medieval and Medieval periods. It is located 550m east of Pathlow.
1 A coin was found in the wall of Aston Cantlow church, north of the chancel arch in 1850. A rubbing of it features in a scrapbook of Aston ...
Findspot - a Medieval coin was found in Aston Cantlow Church.
1 1851: In Mill Field a burial was found on the brow of a hill, about 0.3m below the surface, the head raised somewhat above the feet. The head faced ...
An Anglo-Saxon burial dating to the Migration period. Two saucer brooches and a buckle were found with the skeleton. The burial was located 500m south west of Aston Cantlow.
1 A number of Palaeolithic implements found during ploughing at Little Alne Farm. Those implements chosen for publication consist of 2 sub-triangular handaxes and 2 pointed handaxes, all ...
Findspot - stone and flint axes, dating to the Palaeolithic period, were found near Little Alne.
1 A well discovered in a quarry with bones of elk, cow, Roman pottery and a few coins, one of Lucius Aurelianus. Other wells have been found in the same ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement. The site is suggested by the various finds that have been recovered in the area. These include Roman coins, animal bone and pottery. Building remains and a well have also been found, 580m east of Rough Hills.
1 Between the river and the village are the earthwork remains of a castle of the Cantilupes. It passed from them to the Hastings and is described in an extent ...
The site of Aston Cantlow Castle which dates from the Medieval period. It is known from documentary evidence. The ringwork, a defensive bank and ditch, is still visible as an earthwork. It is situated west of Aston Cantlow.
1 In the field known as Parsons Close, in the W angle of the road junction opposite Glebe Farm, there is a large rectangular moated enclosure where foundations were still ...
The site of a Medieval moat, a large ditch usually surrounding a building. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The moat is situated west of Burbage Road, Aston Cantlow.
1 To the E of the farmhouse at Glebe Farm are traces of a rectangular moat, which within living memory was partly filled with water and may mark the site ...
The site of a possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. The site is located at the south end of Burbage Road, Aston Cantlow.
1 The Liberty of Pathlow had the title of a Hundred and is recorded in 1086. The place which gives it its name is a tumulus, or heap of earth, ...
The site of a possible round barrow, a mound usually built to conceal a burial. The barrow probably dates to the Bronze Age period. It is situated 500m east of Pathlow.
1 George Lewing about 1850 noted a piece of ruined wall which is said formerly to have been a chapel, and that a house close by appears to have been ...
An area of undated earthworks may be the remains of an archaeological site or they might be natural. The earthworks are situated on the east side of Newnham.
1 There are traces of earthworks and moats in Old Close (PRN 1588) and in a field nearby called Moat Meadow.
2 Traces of a moat were seen in a field ...
A possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. The moat is still partially visible as an earthwork. It is situated 500m south of the disused railway line at Newnham, Aston Cantlow.
1 Assorted finds comprising a coin of the 2nd century, a brooch of the 1st century and horse harness reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - a coin, a brooch and a horse brass, all dating to the Roman period, were found in the area of Aston Cantlow.
1 A Roman copper alloy model of a double-axe reported by metal detectorists.
2 Illustration in FI file.
Findspot - a bronze axe, dating to the Roman period, was found 500m north east of Little Alne.
1 Finds made with a metal detector in 1984: Parts of two Roman brooches – one dates to around 100 AD, the other is part of a trumpet brooch dating ...
Findspot - two brooches, dating to the Roman period, were found 700m south west of Little Alne.
1 Finds made with a metal detector in 1984: Denarius of Hadrian (125-28).
Findspot - a coin, dating to the Roman period, which was found 300m south west of Little Alne.
1 Find of a coin made with a metal detector.
Findspot - a coin dating to the Roman period and found 300m south west of Little Alne.
1 Find made with a metal detector: A follis of Diocletian (284-305).
Findspot - a coin, dating to the Roman period, was found 200m north east of Little Alne.