2 Faint traces of a possible earthwork enclosure show on air photographs.
3 Suspiciously man-made looking mound, irregularly shaped, profiled and contoured, with a maximum height of 6.7m. It has a ...
The site of a possible mound of unknown date which is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs. It is located 700m north of Eathorpe.
1 On a mid 19th century sketch map of Wappenbury, a field at this location is called Moat Close.
2 As this corresponds to the NW corner of the earthwork (WA ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this may be the site of a moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building, of Medieval date. It is situated 1km north east of Hunningham Bridge.
1 A halfpenny, minted in Ireland 1747-1755 (reign of George II). No further information.
Findspot - a coin of late Post Medieval/early Imperial date was found 600m north of Hunningham Bridge.
1 A field centred at the above grid reference and lying within the Wappenbury earthwork contains traces of village earthworks and ridge and furrow. The NE corner contains ridge and ...
The site of an area of shrunken village at Wappenbury, dating to the Medieval period. Earthworks are visible on aerial photographs and these include several house platforms and hollow ways, as well as ridge and furrow.
1 The field at this location contained classic ridge and furrow earthworks: it now lies across the modern road from the ridge and furrow described in WA 2985 but was ...
Ridge and furrow, which are the earthwork remains of a field system, that was used during the Medieval and Post Medieval period. The site is located at Wappenbury.
1 A quantity of 4th century pottery and a bronze armlet were found at this location during the layout of a field drain. At the time they were thought ...
Findspot - pottery and a bronze armlet dating to the Roman period were found in Wappenbury.
1 There are bridges across the Itchen east to Marton, and across the Leam north to Princethorpe, and west to Wappenbury. This last named bridge crosses by Eathorpe corn mill, ...
Documentary, Place Name
1 A leaf arrow, presumably of Neolithic date, of dark flint, found in December 1957 at Wappenbury, in the field E of the earthwork (SP3869). It is thicker than the ...
Findspot - flint arrowhead which probably dates to the Neolithic period was found 400m north east of the church, Wappenbury.
2 Part of an irregular oval enclosure shows on aerial photographs. This appears to be interrupted by quarrying and there is an internal rectangular feature (?quarry).
The site of an enclosure of unknown date. It is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is located 600m east of the church, Wappenbury.
1 A brooch and a fitting found in 1996 in Wappenbury. No grid reference given. Method of recovery unrecorded.
A brooch and an ornamental fitting from the Roman period were found in Wappenbury
1 Find of two medieval coins, a pin head and a possible sword or dagger chape in Wappenbury in 1996. No grid reference given and method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of medieval items in Wappenbury
1 Find of two Roman coins and a brooch. No grid reference given and method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of Roman items in the parish of Wappenbury
1 The probable extent of the medieval settlement based on the OS map of 1886, 43NW.
2 Wappenbury is listed in Domesday; in Marton Hundred. The Phillimore edition has a grid ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, and including the known shrunken area WA 2985.
1 Silver penny of Alexander III of Scotland and a silver penny of Henry III found in 1996. No grid reference was given and the method of recovery is unrecorded.
Two medieval coins found in Wappenbury. The exact location of the find is unknown.
1 Two late Iron Age coins found in the Princethorpe/Wappenbury areas by means of metal detecting. Very vague locations given.
Find of two late Iron Age coins in the Princethorpe area. The exact location is unknown.
1 A bronze coin from the 2nd century reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - a bronze coin dating to the Roman period was found 350m east of Wappenbury church.
1 Two coins from the 4th century reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - coins dating to the Roman period were found near Wappenbury.
1 A coin of the 14th century reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - a coin dating to the Medieval period was found in Wappenbury.
1 Portable Antiquities Scheme find provenance information:
Date found: 1999-01-01T00:00:00Z
Methods of discovery: Metal detector
Romano-British finds associated with the Roman pottery kiln site
2 Linear crop mark shows on an aerial photographs. This linear mark appears to curve round the oval enclosure and quarry (PRN 2975).
A linear feature of unknown date is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is located 700m east of the church, Wappenbury.
1 Object found in an occupation layer beneath the rampart of Wappenbury Camp (PRN 1840). Perforated stone hammer made from a stone which is only obtainable in Scotland and Anglesey. ...
Findspot - a stone hammer dating to the Neolithic was found near Wappenbury.
1 Leaf-shaped arrowhead struck from a flint pebble. It probably came from the collapsed revetment of the hillfort rampart (PRN 1840). Illustrated, fig.4.
Findspot - an arrowhead dating to the Neolithic period was found near Wappenbury.
1 The silting up of the ditch of the hillfort (PRN 1840) contained quantities of late 3rd to early 4th century pottery and kiln furniture derived from the neighbouring pottery ...
Findspot - pottery and kiln furniture dating to the Roman period was found near Wappenbury.
1 Two coins of the 4th century were reported by metal detectorists.
Findspot - two Roman coins were found in the area of Wappenbury.