1 A chapel is recorded in 1535.
2 Hugh de Hercy’s grant to the priory of St Neots in the late 12th century included the chapel of the Blessed Mary of ...
The Church of St Mary Magdalen which was built during the Medieval period. The church was burned down during the Post Medieval period. It was located 300m south of the present church in Pillerton Hersey.
1 Windmill Hill. Built by 1576. Probably gone by 1725. Post Mill. Also a reference to a windmill built by 1663, probably ceased early 18th century. These are almost certainly ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a windmill here by 1536. The site is 1km east of Pillerton Priors.
1 Archaeological observation during the excavation of foundation trenches for a new conservatory revealed a hard packed stone and pebble surface probably belonging to a medieval or post-medieval street. The ...
A hard packed stone and pebble street surface dating to the Medieval or Post Medieval Period and a former rear property boundary were recorded at Oberon, Pillerton Priors.
1Noted.
2 Recording in advance of construction of a cattle shed uncovered the fragments of one or two buildings and an associated stone surface. The remains , which were in good ...
The remains of one or possibly two medieval buildings at Sandpit Farm, Pillerton Priors, with a large quantity of pottery sherds of the same period.
1 Arch Obs revealed a cobbled yard and foundations of a stone wall. Pottery dating from the 12th/13th century indicates that it is likely to be the remains of a ...
A Medieval cobbled yard and foundations of a stone wall were discovered during an excavation. They are likely to represent the remains of a building. The were found 200m west of the church at Pillerton Priors.
1 Reuse of part of Roman road evidenced by references in charters of AD 985 and AD 988; in the latter the road is called the ‘mycelan straete’ or great ...
Mycelan Straet, meaning Great Road, an Early Medieval road running south east from Stratford. It partially follows the line of an earlier, Roman, road and is mentioned in two charters in 985 and 988 AD. In documentary evidence from 1340 it is called 'Saltstret'.