1 A deserted village nucleus can be identified on the E bank of the River Arrow, set at the core of an open field still operating in the late 17th ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork. The settlement site is situated 900m east of Coughton.
1 A hollow way and a 19th century house site recorded in 1982.
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Imperial period. A hollow way and a house platform are visible as earthworks. The settlement site is situated 500m east of Coughton Court.
2 Linear features and possible enclosures show on air photographs.
Several linear features and enclosures of unknown date are visible as crop marks on aerial photographs. The features are located 600m east of King's Coughton.
2 Linear feature shows as crop mark.
A linear feature is visible as a crop mark on aerial photographs. It is of unknown date and is located 200m north of the Mill Industrial Park, King's Coughton.
1 Thundering ditch, or brook, which may date from the 13th century as a boundary feature between Wike and Sambourne.
A brook or ditch known as the Thundering Ditch. It may be a boundary feature dating from the Medieval period. It runs through the parishes of Admington and Coughton.
1 Roman coin found with a metal detector. Billon antoninianus of Carausis (276-282).
A Roman coin found in Coughton east of Coughton Court on the bank of the Arrow.
2 Crop marks of three sides of a double ditched subrectangular enclosure with a N entrance.
3 Projected trial trenches from 1983.
4 Trial trenching revealed that the enclosure was double ditched ...
A double ditched subrectangular enclosure of Romano-British date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated north of Arden Road, Alcester.
1 ‘There are few at this day that know where it (Wike) lyes, it being totally depopulated, and included within Coughton Parke’.
2 Wikewood was not enclosed until 1550.
3 ...
The possible site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Wike. It is situated 600m west of Coughton.
1 A long rectangular mound crowning the top of Cappa Hill. It is like a gigantic barrow encompassed by a double rampart, terminating on the N side with 2 ...
The site of Danes Bank, a boundary bank dating from the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. It is situated south of Coughton Park.
1 Find made with a metal detector in 1983. One Medieval heraldic pendant of bronze/brass decorated with red enamel.
Findspot - a pendant dating to the Medieval period was found 400m south east of Coughton Court.
1 The ancient steps of the churchyard cross are surmounted by a round shaft and an 18th century sundial.
2 Situated SE from S porch. Square socket stone ...
A Medieval cross. The steps and socket stone are probably original, with a column square sundial and ball finial which are 17th or 18th century. It stands in the churchyard of St Peter's Church, Coughton.
1 A deserted village nucleus can be identified on the E bank of the Arrow, set at the core of an open field still operating in the late 17th century. ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating from the Post Medieval to the Imperial period. The remains of the settlement are still visible as earthworks. It is situated near Coughton.
1 Dams and other linear banks form a fishpond complex.
Fishponds used for the breeding and storage of fish. They date to the Medieval/Post Medieval period, and survive as earthworks. They are situated 500m south of Sambourne.
1 A sketch of a bank and ditch, c1m from the bottom of the ditch to the top of the bank. This is situated on the parish boundary between Coughton ...
A bank of Medieval date which survives as an earthwork and may form a boundary. It is situated on the parish boundary between Coughton and Alcester.
1 Abandoned house sites and tofts are revealed by earthworks in the field in front of Coughton Court. Their removal was probably connected with the landscaping of parkland adjoining the ...
The site of a shrunken village at Coughton dating to the Post Medieval period. The remains of the settlement are visible as earthworks.
120 Ryknild Street which runs north from the Fosse Way at Bourton on the Water may have been an advanced section of the frontier line supposedly represented by the Fosse ...
Roman Road.
2 Enclosures and linear features show on aerial photographs.
3 A scatter of Roman pottery was discovered during field survey.
Enclosures and linear features, which are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs, and a scatter of pottery suggest that this is the site of a Roman settlement. The site is located 1km north of King's Coughton.
1 Find of a brooch and heraldic pendant, banks of river near Coughton Ford. Further description of the find, and drawings are given on the enquiry form sheet.
Find of a Anglo-Saxon brooch and heraldic pendant, banks of river near Coughton Ford.
1 Prehistoric flint scraper found in gravel during an archaeological observation.
Prehistoric flint scraper found at Mill Ford Farm, Coughton.
1 Find made with a metal detector in 1982. A coin of Carausius. London mint. Also various undated items including a ring, a brooch and a bracteate.
Findspot - a coin dating to the Roman period and other undated metal objects were found 500m east of Coughton.
1 The grounds of the Grade I Listed house include an avenue, formal garden with circular pond, lawns, kitchen garden, further ponds. New formal gardens have been created since c1990, ...
Gardens and parkland surrounding Coughton Court, with elements dating from the Post Medieval period onwards.
1 The edges of two conjoined pits were uncovered together with a possible ditch that crossed the trench (E) east-west before apparently turning south. Roman pottery was associated with ...
Roman features and finds recovered during excavations at Coughton Court included two pits, a ditch and substantial amounts of pottery.
1 Evidence of a rampart embanking the 12th – 13th century moated platform was found in the north east part of the site. The west, east and southern flanks ...
Medieval features and finds recovered during excavations at Coughton Court. Features included evidence for a rampart, the moat, the manor house platform, a drainage ditch and a beam slot.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval settlement, based on the first edition 6″ Ordnance Survey map, 37 NW, 1886.
2 Listed in Domesday in Ferncombe Hundred. The Phillimore edition ...
The possible extent of the Medieval settlement at Coughton as suggested by the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.