1 Two sub circular enclosures and linear features of unknown date. They are visible on an aerial photograph as cropmarks. The features are located to the south ...
Two sub circular enclosures and linear features are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are of unknown date and are situated to the south east of Snowford Bridge.
2 Faint linear cropmarks and possible enclosures show on aerial photographs.
Enclosures and linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 500m south east of Snowford Barn.
2 Linear features show on aerial photographs.
Linear features of unknown date are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 850m south west of Snowford Bridge.
2 Pits and linear features show on aerial photographs.
Linear features and pits of unknown date show up on aerial photographs at this site 700m south east of Snowford Bridge, Long Itchington.
1 Small rectangular buildings and linear features show on air photographs.
2
3 The site has no immediate parallel and is difficult to date because of the paucity of surface finds.
4 It ...
The site of a settlement dating to between the Roman and Early Medieval period. It is known from cropmarks of enclosures and linear features which are visible on aerial photographs. The cropmarks are similar to those of Saxon Palaces. It is located 800m north east of Snowford Bridge.
1 Spoken of by Dugdale as ‘reduced’, but in 1730 there were thirteen houses.
2 The extent of shrinkage is unclear, the main depopulation being in a field called ‘The Green’, ...
The site of an area of shrunken village at Bascote which dates to the Medieval period. Earthworks of the the deserted settlement are visible at 'The Green' and pottery from this period and the Post Medieval period has been recovered.
1 The possible extent of the medieval settlement based on the first edition map of 1886, 34SE.
2 Domesday lists Ling Itchington in Marton Hundred. The Phillimore edition has a grid ...
The possible extent of the Medieval settlement, other than the known deserted area MWA1643, based on the first edition 6" Ordnance Survey map.
1 Complex double rectangular enclosure. Storage pits predating the outer boundary were found. Due to the size of the feature only the 5m easement for the pipeline ...
An archaeological excavation partially uncovered several features dating to the later Iron Age and Romano-British Period. They included a double ditched enclosure, a rectangular enclosure and storage pits. The site is located 500m north east of Snowford Bridge.
1 In the charter bounds of Long Itchington (1001) pass through a ‘High Oak in the middle of Wulluht Grove’. The Grove is a 200-acre wood shared between Long ...
The site of the parish boundary between Ufton and Long Itchington which dates to the Early Medieval period. It is situated between Ufton Wood and Long Itchington Wood.
3 A complex of cropmark features has been identified from air photographs. This comprises a small square cropmark enclosure, part of a possible double-ditched rectangular enclosure and several linear ...
Several linear features and rectangular enclosures which are of unknown date appear as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 500m south west of Snowford Bridge.
2 Three sides of a rectangular enclosure can be identified as a faint cropmark on an air photograph. Part of a possible second rectangular enclosure is also visible.
The site of two possible enclosures, of unknown date, which are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 200m north of Ufton Wood.
1 Barrows are included during the perambulation of the Long Itchington Charter bounds in a reference to ‘Sic hlawe’ and ‘Lytlam hlawe’. The position of these has been suggested ...
The site of two possible round barrows dating to the Bronze Age. Alternatively they may represent Anglo Saxon burials of the Migration or Early Medieval periods. They are known from documentary sources and were located 800m east of Burnt Firs.