1 Aerial photographs.
2 Aerial photographs show ridge and furrow and also a disturbed appearance of the ground; there are also pools, possibly the result of quarrying. Site inaccessible due to ...
Aerial photographs have identified an area of ridge and furrow cultivation with disturbed ground and ponds which are probably the result of quarrying. Of Medieval/Post Medieval date, these features are situated at The Holdings, Dunsmore Heath.
1 1972: Excavation before development. Five trial holes cut by the developers revealed two wells. Well A was cut into bedrock and was unlined. Well B was Post Medieval (PRN ...
Wells, pits, post holes and ovens of Medieval date were discovered during an archaeological excavation. The finds included fragments of pottery and a bronze ring. The site is at the junction of Swan Street and High Street, Warwick.
1 Cloptongrove appeared in deeds dated to c.1279-80 as an area which included messuages, land, meadows and pastures but reference in 1604 to a grove called Clopton Grove suggests that ...
Site of a medieval wood called Clopton Grove.
1 There are places called Grafon in ten English Counties including Warwickshire. The first syllable in this compound is now thought to be the Oold English graf, meaning Grove. ...
1 There was no silva recorded for Haselor in Domesday Book, but there was silva ten furlongs and eighteen perches long by five furlongs wide in Upton, a township within ...
Site of medieval Upton Wood (part)
1 The boundary of Shottery, near Stratford-upon-Avon is attatched to a charter which is attributed to the decade 699-709 and is usually regarded as authentic. The boundary is thought ...
Site of medieval wood called Westgrove
1 There is a record of a wood called Widecombe in the twelfth century
1 There is a record of a wood called Maisterswoode in 1465-6. Maisterwoode was held by the Knights Hospitallers as part of their manor of Grafton, but was in ...
Medieval wood called Masterswood (now called Red Hill Wood)
1 There are tantalising references to the wood of the bishops of Worcester from c.1170, but never in enough detail to explain the relationship between the wood, the square league ...
Remnant of Medieval Woodland
A sketch map of part of Woodcote drawn in c.1815 shows High Wood adjoining Kenilworth. A high Wood was named in 1633, but at that time was part of ...
Medieval Woodland ajoining Kenilworth
1 The list of lands in Wedgnock Park gave Wodelowegrove as the sole item under St. Nicholas parish. The references to Wodelowegrove in late fourteenth and fifteenth century documents ...
Site of Medieval wood, formely Woodlow Grove (Wodelowegrove)
1 To the north of Warwick was Guy Cliffe Grove, recorded in 1422-3 and 1483 The site is suggested by the enclosure award for St. Nicholas’s parish, which included ...
Medieval woodland formerly Guy Cliffe Grove
1
Medieval Wood formerly The Frith
1 Comprises Chase Wood, Henry Eave’s Whites Coppice, Mr. Malleries Whites Coppice, Black Hill Wood
Medieval Wood
1 There was more woodland to the east of the road, where How Grove, shown on a map of 1597, presumably occupies the site of the wood called le ho ...
Medieval Wood formerly How Grove
1 The bruillum of Echells included meadows to the north, west and south of the sixteenth century wood, and fields to the east.
The bruillum of Echells included meadows to the north, west and south of the sixteenth century wood, and fields to the east.
1 A map of 1766 shows an area of woodland far more extensive than the present wood. At that time it was divided into Great Munkes Hays, Little Munkes ...
Woodland mentioned in Medieval documentary sources with possible wood banks and ditches surviving as earthworks.
1 Rare sketch maps of c.1500 amongst the Archer papers show Charlecote Grove seems to be roughly the same shape and size as the modern Chalcot Wood, but the grove ...
Charlecote Grove seems to be roughly the same size and shape as the modern Chalcot Wood.
1 A small U-sectioned feature, 2m wide and 1.5m deep (N section), 1.7m wide and 1.2m deep (S section) and lying NW/SE. It was cut through from a cobbled layer ...
The site of a deserted settlement of Medieval date within the outer enclosure of Boteler's Castle, suggested by earthworks and a scatter of pottery sherds. Evidence suggests that it was abandoned by the mid thirteenth century. The site lies 200m east of Oversley Castle.
1 A number of important earthworks exist outside the castle. Running in a SE direction for a length of about 137m is an artificial bank thrown across the valley from ...
The site of a dam which was created during the Medieval period to create the water defences at Kenilworth castle known as the Mere, which no longer exists. The earthwork bank is still visible and is situated to the south, west and north of the castle.
1 On the southern bank of the stanford brook a series of pits can be seen on aerial photgraphs. Two linear ditches can be seen extending to the south ...
A series of pits and ditches can be seen in a field to the south of Hopyard Coppice Barton on the Heath.
1 The hollow way seen on aerial photographs on the sothern bank of the River Avon 50m to the east of the B4029 Fosse Way, near to Bretford Bridge ...
A hollow way can be seen on aerial photographs on the sothern bank of the River Avon 50m to the east of the B4029 Fosse Way near to Bretford Bridge.
1A coppice wood of 20.8 ha. Almost certainly recorded in the 1279 Hundred Rolls, the wood can probably be identified with one of the two woods recorded in Domesday Book ...
Piles Coppice, a Medieval (and probably earlier) managed woodland. The woodland comprises: wood banks, a deer park bank and evidence of ancient coppicing.