2 Linear features and a possible trackway show as crop marks.
3 A magnetometer survey and evaluation prior to imrpovements to the A46 found no features connected to the cropmarks ...
Linear features and a possible trackway of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The features lie 500m south east of Hollas Hill.
1 1927: Excavation of a ‘tumulus’ at Billesley Hall. At the junction of the road to Aston Cantlow and the lane from Wilmcote there is a well-marked tumulus, now ...
A mound thought to be of Post Medieval date. During an excavation the mound was found to contain the burial of a horse. The mound survives as an earthwork and is situated 200m south of Billesley Hall.
1 The Domesday book records a priest and a substantial peasant population. C14 documents indicate that the population was still fairly high. The Lay Subsidy of 1428 records only 4 ...
The deserted Medieval settlement of Billesley Trussel. House platforms, hollow ways, enclosures and ridge and furrow cultivation are still visible as earthworks. The settlement is also known from documentary evidence. It is situated to the east of Billesley Hall.
Earthworks of Post Medieval fishponds.
1 In the lawn S of the house is a circular fishpond, and away to the S are the remains of a former moat.
2 The ‘moat’ ...
Fishponds which were used for breeding and storing fish. They are Post Medieval in date and are visible as earthworks. The fish ponds lie 100m to the south of Billesley Hall.
2 Linear features and part of possible enclosure show as cropmarks.
3 Fieldwalking prior to A46 improvements found a scatter of roman pottery increasing in density towards these cropmarks suggesting ...
Several linear features and a possible enclosure of unknown date, which are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs, are situated on Hollas Hill, Billesley.
2 3 Linear features show as crop marks.
Three linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 600m west of Billesley.
2 Part of a rectilinear enclosure and appended linear feature appear on air photographs.
An enclosure and a linear feature of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The features are situated 600m south of Billesley.