1 The earliest reference to mills attached to the castle is in 1150. These stood about 100m downstream from the present site and were totally destroyed by floods in the ...
Castle Mill, the site of several watermills dating from the Medieval to the Imperial period. The present building dates from the 18th century. The main waterwheel survives at the southern end of Mill Street, Warwick, but no machinery is left.
add ref from west mids hereĀ
Revealed by excavation, the medieval church of St Lawrence had at least one aisle on the north side. Part of the chancel was also uncovered and a tower is mentioned in documentary sources. The ruinous church building was used as a barn for a short period.
2 The foundations of the College (PRN 1984) cut an earlier pathway. Running E-W under the college was a well-built wall, built with re-used stone and including architectural fragments of ...
Archaeological excavations at St Mary's College revealed Medieval structures including walls, pits, buildings and a well.
1 A drovers road with wide verges for pasturing animals. The road winds its way through farming country, generally avoiding centres of population. Road is mentioned on 18th ...
A trackway or drove road, known as the Welsh Way, which has existed since the Medieval or Post Medieval period. It was used by drovers to move cattle to the markets. The Leamington Road out of Kenilworth now marks the line of the trackway.
1 Stands on the N side of the High Street immediately inside the W gate. The buildings are set above the level of the High Street. On the High Street ...
The Lord Leycester Hospital on the High Street in Warwick dates from the Medieval period. It is a timber framed building. Some parts were built or rebuilt during the 14th century.
1 Some 1.8m of 19th century garden soil was stripped revealing an unfinished well and a series of pits dating to the 11th-13th century. There were traces of timber buildings ...
An excavation of a part of the medeival settlement uncovered an unfinished well, a series of pits, and traces of timber buildings, all of Medieval date. The site is at the east end of Puckerings Lane, Warwick.