1 A hamlet in Withybrook parish. In the Lay Subsidy six persons were listed. It is also in Domesday Book. When Dugdale wrote it was ‘now little better than a ...
Hopsford, a deserted settlement which was established during the Medieval period. It was deserted during the Post Medieval period. Documentary evidence exists for the settlement. Some remains are visible as earthworks. It is situated 1km south west of Withybrook.
1 Dugdale records that there was nothing left of the manor house but ‘the skeleton’.
3 There are no surface indications to support the OS site for the Manor House and ...
The site of Hopsford Manor House which was built during the Medieval period. The manor house is known to have existed from documentary evidence. It was situated at Hopsford, 1km south west of Withybrook.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles, N chapel, S porch, and NW tower. Rebuilt in the 14th century when the aisles were added. In the late 15th century the ...
The parish church of All Saints, built in the Medieval period, with modifications through to the Imperial period. The church is located 175m north-east of Withybrook Bridge.
1 Withybrook has shrunk and expanded at intervals, earthworks mirroring its fluctuations in prosperity and changing farming techniques. It is not recorded until the 12th century. By 1327 it had ...
The site of the Medieval shrunken village of Withybrook. Remains of the village survive as earthworks.
1 A mill and mill pool belonging to Nicholas son of Liulf is recorded between 1188 and 1191. The mill pond is recorded again in 1229 as belonging to Nicholas ...
The site of a Medieval watermill and a dam that held back the water that powered the mill. The site is known from documentary evidence. The dam survives as an earthwork. It was situated east of the church at Withybrook.
1 A square ditched feature beside Withybrook Church was referred to as a moat on the 1844 Tithe Award map.
2 The ditches are visible as a squared depression in the ...
A moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It was probably Medieval in date, and was marked on a Tithe Award Map of 1884. It survives as an earthwork, and is situated 50m west of All Saints Church, Withybrook.
1 An archaeological evaluation prior to development was carried out in Withybrook in 1995 because the area was identified as possibly containing deposits relating to the Medieval settlement of Withybrook. ...
The remain of a gully of Medieval date was found during an excavation. A single sherd of Medieval pottery was found in the gully. The gully was situated 200m north west of the church in Withybrook.
2 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Medieval ridge and furrow cultivation in the parish of Withybrook. The ridge and furrow survives as an earthwork in some areas. In other areas it is visible on aerial photographs.