1 This carries the main Oxford-Stratford road and appears to be 18th century. A bridge is mentioned here in 1615 and an older arch, incorporated into the present bridge at ...
Tidmington Bridge, the remains of a Post Medieval bridge. An older arch within the present structure may represent the earlier one. It crosses the River Stour 300m south of the church.
1 A small stone bridge of the pack-horse type, on the Knee Brook, is 1.8m wide with two segmental arches and cutwaters both sides. It has no parapets and a ...
A small stone bridge which is possibly Post Medieval in date. It is of the packhorse type with two segmental arches and cutwaters on the upstream side. It crosses the Knee Brook 1.5km south west of Tidmington.
1 A large 3 storey (2 storey plus attics), stone building of c1600 altered and added to during the reign of Queen Anne and refronted on the west later in ...
Tidmington House, a manor house dating to the Post Medieval period. It is located 300m north east of Tidmington.
1 Probably early 19th century but the detail is Victorian Tudor Gothic. Two storeys in stone. Mullioned windows, some with traceried heads. Featured centre-piece has moulded stone ...
A coach house dating to the Imperial period. It is is situated 300m north east of Tidmington.
1 A small church consisting of a chancel, nave, W tower and S porch. The building dates to about 1200. This was probably the same plan, although the chancel was ...
Tidmington Church. The earliest parts of the building date to the Medieval period, but it was been partly rebuilt during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is located 250m north east of Tidmington.
2 Earthworks of linear features and enclosures show on air photographs and probably indicate a reduced village.
The site of a shrunken village, at Tidmington, dating to the Medieval period. The earthworks are visible on aerial photographs.
Site of a Roman ?well.
1 Roman finds made in well in stream bed when road widening. Well was 0.9m in diameter and 2.1m deep. Finds, previously held by Mr Wilkinson, ...
The site of a possible well dating to the Roman period, identified from Roman finds including a jar and animal bones. It is located 700m south of Burmington.
2 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Medieval or later ridge and furrow cultivation in Burmington Parish. The remains are visible on aerial photographs. In some areas of the parish the remains survive as earthworks.
2 Earthwork remains of a possible deserted settlement show on air photographs. These have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Burmington Parish (PRN 3887).
3 An archaeological ...
The site of a possible deserted settlement dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs and is located 300m east of the church at Burmington.
1 Find of two pewter vessels and a palm guard at SP275375 in March 1995. The method of recovery was not recorded.
2 A farthing of James I and a rim ...
Find of post medieval items in Burmington 500m southeast of Fox Hill Covert.
1 An early cob building of uncertain date and first shown on late 19th century mapping. Now much decayed shows four phases of building and reconstruction. First cob ...
An early cob building of uncertain date and first shown on late 19th century mapping.
1 Mile Post marked.
2 One of a series of cast iron mile markers placed exactly one mile apart on the Stratford on Avon to Oxford turnpike road, the first being ...
The site of a milepost dating to the Imperial period and was located 600m north of Mitford Bridge.
1 A turnpike road constructed between 1729-50. The first Act was 1729.
2 The Act for repairing the Road leading from a Gate called Shipston Toll Gate, at Bridge Town, in ...
A toll road which ran from Stratford to Long Compton Hill. It was built during the Post Medieval period and continued in use into the Imperial period.
1 Ridge and furrow ploughing to the north of the river Stour and south of Mitford Bridge and Hazel Wood Farms in the parish of Burmington apparent as earthworks ...
Ridge and furrow ploughing to the north of the river Stour and south of Mitford Bridge and Hazel Wood Farms in the parish of Burmington is apparent as earthworks on aerial photographs taken in 1953 but is now levelled.
1 Chancel with N vestry, nave with S porch, and NW bell-turret. There is a fair amount of Medieval masonry in the church walls perhaps dating from as early as ...
The Church of St Barnabas and St Nicholas was built in the Imperial period, replacing a Medieval church on the same site. The bell turret was added in the 19th Century, during renovation. The church is situated north east of the Manor House, Burmington.
1 In Burmington churchyard is the three-tiered base and a small fragment of the stem of an ancient cross.
2 Situated by path, S side of the church. Square, octagonal socket ...
The remains of a Medieval cross, of which only the three tiered base and a fragment of the shaft survive. It is in the churchyard, to the south of the Church of St Barnabas and St Nicholas, in Burmington.
1 In Rous. The hamlet of Burmington, which still exists, may be represented by Burmington Grange.
2 Location unknown (U). Period of desertion known but documentary evidence inferior in quantity (1).
3 ...
Possible site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Burmington Parva. The settlement is known from documentary evidence. Aerial photographs reveal extensive Medieval ridge and furrow, but no evidence of settlement. The site is located in the area of Burmington Grange.
1 The house appears to have a 16th century origin but has been considerably altered.
2 Incorporated in the front a blocked twin 13th century opening with a round arch, and ...
Burmington Manor House, a building which dates from the Medieval period. Alterations were made to the building in the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is located 50m south west of the Church.
1 Dated 1752 with figures cut on a moulded panel. Stone with stuccoed front, 3-light metal casements. Moulded wood doorcase with open pediment. Old tiled roof with ...
Burmington Mill House which dates to the Imprerial period. It is located 300m north west of the church.
Granary.
1 East of the Church and south of Burmington Farm stands a traditional type of granary. It is brick built aand timber-framed, standing on staddle stones. A ball ...
The site of a brick-built and timber framed granary dating from the Medieval period. It is situated 200m south east of the church at Burmington.
1 Burmington Manor gardens, Burmington, Stratford.
Lovie gives no details other than the house has C13th origins, altered in C16th and C19th.
2 Some formal planting is apparent on 1st edition Ordnance ...
Burmington Manor gardens, Burmington, Stratford.Lovie gives no details other than the house has C13th origins, altered in C16th and C19th.
1 Find of a medieval livery badge at SP275375 in spring 1995. The method of recovery was not recorded.
Find of an item from the medieval period 500m southeast of Fox Hill Covert.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval settlement based on the first edition 6″ maps, 57 NW 1884, 54 SW 1886, and 53 SE 1886.
2 Ridge and furrow survives ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement in Burmington as indicated on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and by ridge and furrow earthworks on aerial photographs.
1 An evaluation (in 1995) of Medieval settlement (WA 3888) recovered a single struck flint from within a gully, however this may have been redeposited in a modern feature.
Findspot - a prehistoric flint object was found 300m east of the church during archaeological work.