1 Archaeological evaluation revealed the reoccupation of the site (following the site’s abandonment to cultivation in the late medieval period), in the course of the expansion of the town in ...
Features reflecting the 19th century housing developments along Dugdale Street and Chapel Street, as depicted on the 1887 OS map, were recorded at The Ropewalk, Chapel Street, Nuneaton.
1 The possible extent of the medieval settlement of Nuneaton based on the OS map of 1888, 11SW.
2 Domesday has two entries for Nuneaton in Coleshill Hundred. The Phillimore edition ...
The possible extent of the medieval settlement at Nuneaton based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1888 and known archaeological features.
1 Sole End in Astley. There is a possibility that this farm group represents the Domesday Solege.
2 A few scattered houses at ‘Souley End’. This was ...
A shrunken village at Sole End of Medieval or Post Medieval date. It survives as an earthwork and is situated 500m south of Cowley Wood.
1 Bronze Age burial mound below Windmill Hill. This mound is besected by a recently widened lorry track but was complete and intact up until about a year ago. This ...
A possible round barrow, an artificial mound of earth used for covering a burial. It probably dates to the Bronze Age and is visible as an earthwork. It is situated 100m north of Windmill Hill Quarry. Alternatively, it has been suggested that it is a spoilheap from quarry activity.
2 Probable linear feature shows on air photographs.
A linear feature that is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It might be a trackway but is of unknown date. It is situated 500m north east of Astley.
2 An oval enclosure shows as a negative crop mark on vertical photographs. These marks may perhaps be of recent origin.
An enclosure of unknown date which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 200m east of Holmes Wood.
1 Possible round barrow located by B Waite.
2 A contour created Middle Bronze Age round barrow similar to many of those around Wolvey. Flints both around and on top of ...
The site of a possible Bronze Age round barrow, a mound surrounded by a ditch, usually used to conceal a burial. The site lies 200m north of Griff Quarry.
1 A single Romano-British gully was found during trial trenching, containing pottery and a fragment of kiln furniture.
A single gully of Romano-British date containing pottery and a fragment of kiln furniture.
1 A possible gully or beam slot associated with earlier occupation of extension to the Churchyard St Nicholas Church found during a archaeological observation in 2009/2010 for a soakaway and ...
A possible 19th century or earlier gully or beam slot associated with occupation of southern extension to the Churchyard of St Nicholas Church, Nuneaton
1 2 Platform adjacent to the church of St James, Weddington is visible on aerial photographs and LiDAR imagery, as is the platform on which the church sits.
3 Ridge and ...
A possible rectangular platform can be seen on aerial photographs and LiDAR imagery. The adjacent church is known to be on raised ground and there is a possibility that the two earthworks could be joined.
1 A quarter of a mile N of Moat House a by-road runs W past a field on the N side which contains a conspicuously large ash tree raised on ...
The site of a mound of unknown date which lay 500m north east of Exhall Hall. The area has now been built over.
1 Battery (site of). Applies to an earthwork situated on the side of a hill near Griff Hollow and thrown up by Oliver Cromwell. There are no remains to be ...
The site of an enclosure or a possible battery of Post Medieval date. It was situated 150m north east of Burlington Road.
1 The ‘Roman Camp’ shown here on Greenwood’s Map of 1822 was visited recently. It consists of a 2m ‘rampart’ with rudimentary ditches, 110 by 82.3m, with a Council Estate ...
The site of an enclosure of unknown date. It was sitauted 100m south of Cedar Road, Camp Hill.
1 Between the Priory and the canal, just to the W of the modern Earls Road, there is an earthwork which must have been a dam across the Barpool Brook. ...
The possible site of a Medieval dam which survives as an earthwork. It was probably associated with a mill pond marked on Beighton's map of 1722-5. The site lies on the south side of Vernon's Lane, Nuneaton.
1 During 1996, an archaeological evaluation in advance of construction work identified features and pottery suggesting a that an early 14th century timber domestic building may have stood on the ...
During archaeological work in Stratford Street, Nuneaton, the remains of a Medieval building were found. Medieval pottery dating to the 14th century was also found at the site.
2 A possible rectangular enclosure can be identified on an air photograph. This cropmark may be non-archaeological.
An enclosure of unknown date which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is situated 1km north east of Weddington.