1 Holywell Farm has cruck timbering and is of late Medieval build. Much of the house is enclosed in brick so hiding part of the timbering. Ownership ...
A timber framed cruck house build at the end of the Medieval period and into the Post Medieval period. It is situated at Holywell.
1 The house was the home of the Meysey family from about 1560 until the mid 17th century. In 1584 Edward Meysey died whilst ‘the newe howese’ (perhaps being ...
A timber framed house which dates to the late Medieval and early Post Medieval period. It is situated at Rookery, Rowington.
1 An ‘L’ shaped house of timber frame and brick. The cross wing has curved braces and is probably early Tudor. In a ground floor room there is ...
A timber framed house which dates from the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. It is situated 600m north east of the Fleur de Lys Public House, Lowsonford.
1 The house which is of three storeys was enlarged c.1570s and incorporates part of the older house. The central chimney stack has diagonal brick shafts, and wouth of ...
A timber framed house parts of which may date back to the Medieval period, but it is mainly of Post Medieval date. There is also a timber framed barn infilled with brick. It is situated 700m north east of Lowsonford.
1 A timber frame and brick house raised on a high brick footing. The property once formed part of the Baddesley Clinton estate and was probably altered considerably in ...
A timber framed house which may have been rebuilt in the late 1500s although one of the ceilings in a downstairs room dates to the early 1500s. It is situated at Kingswood.
1 A Manor House appears to have existed on the site of the present Rowington Hall at an early date and may have been built by Adeliza, wife of Roger ...
A manor house was first built on the site of the present Rowington Hall in the Medieval period, but documentary records suggest it was rebuilt in the early Post Medieval period. During the Imperial period it was altered and refaced in stone. It stands opposite Rowington church.
1 Old Farm, formerly known as Whitley End Farm. Occupancy for this site is noted from 1548 – 1665. When the house was built in the Medieval period ...
A timber framed house which was built in the Medieval period, although alterations were carried out later, including a two storey porch in the Post Medieval period. It is situated 900m north east of Rowington church.
1 On the very edge of the churchyard stood a building known by various names including The Court, The Church House and The School House. It was probably Medieval ...
The site of a possibly Medieval building which was used as a court house, a village hall and a school house. It was possibly rebuilt during the Post Medieval period and was demolished around 1860. It was situated in the churchyard in Rowington.
1 The common land at Bushwood that falls in Rowington Parish is marked on two maps – that covering the Medieval period and that covering the period 1550 – 1650.
Bushwood Common was a piece of common land that was in use during the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. It lay between Lowsonford and Bushwood.
1 Common land at Finwood Green is marked on two maps in this book entitled Medieval Period and 1550 – 1650AD.
There was common land at Finwood Green between the Medieval and Post Medieval period.
1 A strip of common land which runs from Turners Green in a north westerly direction along Rowington Green.
There was common land running from Turner's Green to Quarry Lane, along Rowington Green during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods.
1 Common land is marked on these two maps at Holywell.
There was common land at Holywell during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods.
1 Common land is marked on the map 1550 – 1650 AD in this book.
There was common land at Pinley Green during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods.
1 An area of glebe land around and to the north-west of the church at Rowington. It is shown on a map of Rowington in the medieval period.
An area of glebe land which dates between the Medieval and Post Medieval periods and is owned by the church. It is located surrounding and to the north-west of the church at Rowington.
1 Rowington Park was an area of woodland lying in the centre of the parish, to the SW of the Birmingham to Warwick Road and between Rowington Hall and High ...
In the Medieval period a deer park existed in the centre of the parish of Rowington and it possibly contained a rabbit warren. By 1606 documents record that the park had been broken up and turned to pasture.
1 Field work suggests a mill and mill pond existed, being triangular in shape, to the east of Rowington Church and west of Foxbrook Farm, in the valley bottom. ...
The site of a watermill, mill pond and dam which were in use during the Medieval period, though it probably ceased to be used during either the 1400s or 1500s. It was located 250m east of the church, Rowington.
1 An annular brooch identified from photographs sent in by the finder. Method of recovery unreported.
Find of a medieval annular brooch 500m east of Broom Hall.
1 Remains of the church adjoin the SE angle of the house and form an L-shaped plan. The main body is about 19.5m long and 5.9m wide. About 4.6m at ...
The remains of Pinley Priory Church which is of Medieval date. The ruins of the church have been incorporated into a later building. The site is located 700m south east of Great Pinley.
1 Pinley Abbey is a house adjoining the NW corner of the Priory Church (PRN 5432). Its main block is a rectangle of three rooms, probably part of the priory ...
The remains of the priory buildings associated with Pinley Priory. The buildings were of Medieval date and have been incorporated into later buildings. The site is located 700m south east of Great Pinley.
1 There are considerable remains of a moat enclosing a large area to the S, SE and E of the Priory buildings. It dies out to the N of the ...
The remains of a Medieval moat, a wide ditch which usually surrounded a building. The moat is partially visible as an earthwork and is situated at Pinley Priory, 700m south east of Great Pinley.
1 Two fishponds on SW side of Pinley Priory moat.
The site of two possible fishponds of Medieval date. They are visible as earthworks and are situated at Pinley Priory, 700m south east of Great Pinley.
3 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
The extent of ridge and furrow cultivation in Rowington parish which dates from the Medieval period onwards. In some areas the ridge and furrow survives as an earthwork. In other areas it is visible on aerial photographs.
1 Linear earthwork running south of and parallel to the Old Warwick Road in Kingwood. Earthwork is bounded on either side by a ditch. It can be seen ...
A Linear earthwork with a ditch either side, running south of and parallel to the Old Warwick Road at Kingswood. Possibly an old line of the road.
1 Sim Lane is shown on a number of early maps of Kingswood (including Tithe Map). It fell out of use when the Birmingham and Warwick Canal was constructed ...
Medieval Road which formerly ran from the Old Warwick Road, Kingwood, east of the Bell House to the canal. The line of the road is preserved in field boundaries.