1 Find made on the course of the Severn-Trent pipeline: One piece of flint with retouch.
Findspot - a flint artefact of Neolithic or Bronze Age date was found 350m south west of Clifford Hill.
1 Land at Wincote is recorded in 1086. Five cottages held by William of Wincot in 1266 as part of Clifford Manor may have been in the hamlet of Wincot. ...
Earthworks may indicate the remains of the Medieval/Post Medieval deserted settlement Wincot. The site is located 950m north east of RAF Long Marston.
1 A moated site noted close to the 15th century manor house.
2 The feature marked on the OS map as a moat is a sluiced pond, which with the river ...
The site of a possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It is still visible as an earthwork, and is situated 250m south east of the church at Clifford Chambers.
1 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
2 Portable Antiquities Scheme find provenance information:
Methods of discovery: Metal detector
Ridge and furrow cultivation in the parish of Clifford Chambers. It is probably of Medieval or Post Medieval date. In some areas the ridge and furrow survives as an earthwork. In other areas it is visible on aerial photographs.
2 Earthworks show on air photographs. These have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Clifford Chambers (PRN 3892).
Possible archaeological features of unknown date are visible as earthworks on aerial photographs. They are located on Clifford Hill, Clifford Chambers.
1 A Mesolithic flint blade or flake.
2 Noted in gazetteer.
Findspot - a flint blade dating to the Mesolithic period was found 800m west of Clifford Chambers.
1 Barbed and tanged arrowhead. Now in Coventry Museum.
2 Petit-tranched derivative arrowhead.
Findspot - two flint arrowheads dating to the Bronze Age were found 800m west of Clifford Chambers.
1 Clifford Chambers. Flakes, blades. In Coventry Museum.
Findspot - flint artefacts of Neolithic or Bronze Age date were found in Welford on Avon.
1 Roman pottery sherds found on the line of the Severn-Trent pipeline. Three ‘severn-valleyish’ sherds of pottery.
Findspot - fragments of pottery dating to the Roman period and found 800m south of Clifford Hill, Clifford Chambers.
1 A Roman sherd found on the line of the Severn-Trent pipeline during 1982. One of the sherds identified as derived from a large jar of (?Severn Valley) type.
Findspot - pottery sherds dating to the Roman period and found 400m east of Lower Gorse, Clifford Chambers.
1 Finds from the course of the Severn-Trent pipeline: 23 sherds of Roman pottery, two pieces of ?Roman tile, one piece of animal bone.
Findspot - 23 sherds of Roman pottery and two pieces of tile which possibly also date to the Roman period. They were found 400m south west of Clifford Hill, Clifford Chambers.
1 Finds made on the course of the Severn Trent pipeline: 26 pieces of tile – probably mostly Roman – including one piece of decorated hypocaust tile, 81 pieces of ...
Findspot - 26 pieces of Roman tile and 81 pottery sherds were found 300m south west of Clifford Hill, Clifford Chambers.
1 Material found on the course of Severn-Trent pipeline: Eight sherds of Roman pot, three pieces of ?Romano British tile, one piece of limestone.
Findspot - 8 sherds of pottery and three pieces of tile dating to the Roman period. They were all found 350m south west of Clifford Hill, Clifford Chambers.
1 An enclosure complex: At least two phases appear to be indicated: i) Blocks of ridge and furrow are aligned on the rectangular enclosure and trackway, presumably indicating a Medieval ...
Medieval features, including a trackway, a gully and pits, are visible on aerial photographs. The features probably represent more than one phase of occupation. The site is on Clifford Hill, Clifford Chambers.
2 Linear features, perhaps forming an enclosure, show on air photographs.
Undated linear features, possibly forming an enclosure, are visible on aerial photographs. They are located 750m north west of Clifford Chambers Bridge.
2 Linear features and possible enclosure show on air photograph.
Several linear features and a possible enclosure are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are of unknown date and are situated 1km north east of Atherstone on Stour.
1 1891, while making a sunk fence near the Manor House, about 30 skeletons were excavated, and it is thought that many more remain. They lay about 1.2m below the ...
The site of a cemetery dating to the Early Medieval period. Approximately 30 skeletons were excavated at the site, which is located 200m south of the church, Clifford Chambers.
12 A small circular feature was identified from LiDAR imagery by the AOC Assessment of Local Services Villages for Stratford-on-Avon District Council in 2012.
3This feature is partially comparable with features ...
Possible feature idenitfied on LiDAR imagery. Possibly of modern origin.
1 A Constantinian 3rd Brass, found in a garden at Kirklands, Crunden Road, Clifford Chambers. The item was retained by the gentleman who brought it in for identification.
Findspot - a coin dating to the Roman period was found 350m south west of Clifford Chamber's bridge.
1 The possible extent of the Medieval settlement, based on the first edition 6″ map, 44SW 1887.
2 The plotting of the ridge and furrow shows a lot of survival to ...
The possible extent of the Medieval settlement of Clifford Chambers. The extent of the settlement is suggested by the remains of ridge and furrow cultivation and evidence on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
2 Three sides of a sub-rectilinear cropmark enclosure can be identified on air photographs.
The site of an undated enclosure which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is located 950m south of Clifford Chambers.
2 Faint traces of a rectangular cropmark enclosure have been identified from air photographs.
The site of an undated enclosure which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is located 1km south of Clifford Chambers.
2 A possible complex of irregular cropmarks has been identified on air photographs. This may comprise an enclosure and linear features.
The site of an undated enclosure and linear features. They are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The site is located 950m south of Clifford Chambers.