1 There are tantalising references to the wood of the bishops of Worcester from c.1170, but never in enough detail to explain the relationship between the wood, the square league ...
Remnant of Medieval Woodland
1 There was a mill at Hampton in 1086. It is also recorded in 1182 and 1299. Four mills are mentioned in a conveyance of the manor in 1678; these ...
A watermill was recorded at Hampton Lucy in the Domesday survey, and later documents refer to up to four mills. The present mill on a site, which may date back to the Medieval period, is still in use and is situated just above the bridge.
1 The site of the depopulated village of Hatton, now occupied by two farms, lies about one mile W of Hampton Lucy village.
2 In the 1332 lay subsidy there were ...
The deserted settlement of Hatton on Avon. Documentary evidence suggests that 17 people lived here during the Medieval period. The site is located 500m east of Alveston.
1 In 1299 a fishery is mentioned. In 1667 the fishery was said to extend ‘from a stone in the Ham to Hatton’s stile in the parish of Hampton Lucy’. ...
There is early documentary evidence for a Medieval fishpond here, used for the breeding and storage of fish. It survives as an earthwork and is situated 500m north east of Packsaddle Bridge, Hampton Lucy.
1 There was a priest at Hampton in 1086. The Medieval church, which stood ‘not exactly on the same site’ as the present building (PRN 5124), was completely demolished in ...
The site of the Medieval church of St Peter which was demolished in 1826. Documentary evidence records its earliest history. The site is located in Hampton Lucy.
1 S of Ingon Manor Farm at above grid reference. Possible site of Medieval hamlet.
2 The field was under crop and no surface indications of the site were to be ...
The possible site of the Medieval deserted settlement at Ingon. The site lies 200m west of Ingon.
1 Pers Comm from the land owners (April 2007).
2 Earthworks visible on LiDAR imagery, c.2008.
Traces of ridge and furrow visible from the gound as earthworks.
1 A roughly north-south aligned ditch was located during evaluation off Church Street, Hampton Lucy. The handle of a medieval jug was recovered from its fill. It measured approx 11m ...
A roughly north-south aligned ditch was located during evaluation off Church Street, Hampton Lucy. The handle of a medieval jug was recovered from its fill.
1 A leaden seal of Pope Innocent VI was found in a grave in the new churchyard in 1934 and is now preserved at the W end of the church. ...
Findspot - a lead papal seal dating to the Medieval period was found in a churchyard in the parish of Hampton Lucy. The exact location of the churchyard is unknown.
1The Bishop of Worcester obtained a charter of free warren 1248/9. A park is referred to from 1299 onwards and sources indicate that it contained pasturage but ‘barely enough wood ...
Hampton Park, a Medieval park, originally part of the Bishop of Worcester's demesne, later incorporated into the Post Medieval Fulbrook Park.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval settlement, based on the second edition 6″ OS map of 1887, 44NE.
2 Domesday lists Hampton Lucy in Pathlow Hundred. The Phillimore edition gives ...
The possible extent of the Medieval settlement in Hampton Lucy. The area of settlement is suggested by observations made on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
1 Park attached to Fulbrook Castle, created in the reign of Henry V by the Duke of Bedford. The castle being too close to Warwick, it was allowed to fall ...
The site of Fulbrook Park, a deer park dating to the Medieval or Post Medieval period. The park is known from documentary evidence. It is situated in the area of Fulbrook.
1 Knights Templars cross carved on a stone at Grove Field Farm. Nearby Sherbourne was one of Temple Balsall’s subsidiary manors.
Findspot - a carved stone depicting a cross, and dating to the Medieval period, was found 750m north of the church, Wasperton.
1 During an excavation and watching brief carried out by BUFAU during the laying of a pipeline 3.4km long, an area of surviving ridge-and-furrow was observed.
An archaeological excavation discovered evidence of ridge and furrow cultivation dating to the Medieval period. The site is located 600m north east of the church, Hampton Lucy.