1 Pottery of Roman date was observed by a walker. The pottery is probably of Roman but more specific dating was not possible. Pottery kept by finder.
A scatter of Roman pottery was observed from a footpath running west of the Long Compton to Little Rollright Road.
1 During pipe laying across a Medieval site (PRN 2370) pottery and a coin of the Roman period were found.
Findspot - pottery and a coin dating to the Roman period found located 100m west of the church.
1 Medieval coins and a seal matrix of the 14th century reported by metal detectorists.
4 Description of the above seal matrix. The design of this matrix would suggest ownership ...
Findspot - coins and a seal matrix, all dating to the Medieval period, were found 350m south of Harrow Hill.
1 In 1968 two sherds of Medieval pottery were found in the interstices of a stone wall in the garden.
2 Letter about the wall.
Findspot - two sherds of pottery dating to the Medieval period. They were found 150m south east of the church.
1 Two coins: ‘First brass’ of Lucilla, ‘Second brass’ of Daza.
2 Two Roman coins that were ploughed up at Long Compton were exhibited.
5 Reference 4 gives SP2833 as grid reference, ...
Findspot - two Roman coins found 1km south west of Long Compton.
1 A ground flint celt, smoothed all over. Illustration by Bloxam.
2 This is the same axe that is said elswhere to have been found at Barton-on-the Heath (WA 3809).
3 ...
Find spot - a Neolithic stone axe. The exact location of the find spot is unknown, but it may have come from the area of Long Compton.
1 Two 16th century Nuremberg tokens ploughed up at Long Compton.
2 Noted.
Findspot - two Post Medieval coins found near Long Compton.
1 Coin of Valens (AD 364-75) found in a field to the W of Long Compton church. It was brought for identification by a Shipston High School pupil.
Findspot - a Roman coin was found 150m north west of the church.
1 A 4th century AE3, so worn that no further details could be deduced, was found in Long Compton churchyard in 1983.
Findspot - a Roman coin found 50m south west of the church, Long Compton.
Find of a Post Medieval coin.
1 A halfpenny token of 1664 issued by Robert Fitzhugh and inscribed with the apothecaries’ arms was brought to the Museum for identification. It was ...
Find
1 In the buried soil below the round barrow was a scatter of Mesolithic flint. This consisted of a tight cluster of snapped blades, two possible Microliths, one Mesolithic arrowhead ...
Findspot - a flint scatter dating to the Mesolithic period found 800m south east of The Hollows.