1 Find of a harness pendant which was found in 1991 and brought in to the Museum for identification. Method of recovery unreported, and no detailed grid reference. SP17SE.
2 Illustration ...
Find of a medieval harness pendant in Lapworth. No specific grid reference.
1 The probable extent of the medieval settlement based on the first edition OS map of 1886, 25SW.
2 The ridge and furrow plotting for the parish.
3 Domesday lists Lapworth; in ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement at Lapworth based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886 and on aerial photographs.
1 Traces of the site of the capital messuage of Es’eneford can be seen in the field on the opposite side of the main road from Brook House (Lapworth Brook). ...
The site of a possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It is still just visible as an earthwork, and is situated 200m south of Lapworth Bridge.
1 A map shows a moat in approximately this position.
2 ‘Moat (site of)’ marked just S of Fetherston House.
3 A site visit required to assess the state of preservation of ...
A moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. The moat is of Medieval date and is situated at Fetherston House, Lapworth.
1 A manorial history exists. In 1410 the Prior of Coventry had ‘a manor surrounded with pools’.
2 The moated site containing the Medieval manor was Scheduled as an Ancient Monument ...
The site of a moated manor house dating to the Medieval period. The house is known from documentary evidence. It is situated 100m west of the church at Packwood. A post hole was found during an archaeological works. It is likely to have held a large timber upright probably forming part of the timber-framing from a long demolished section of the house. Glazed ridge tile fragments were found inside the posthole suggesting the medieval buildings high status.
1 There is a pondbay at the above grid reference. The pondbay carries a farm road and is 24m long and 1m high. It is below the moat, not the ...
The site of a dam, possibly dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork. The dam is located 700m north west of Packwood House.
3 Ridge and furrow cultivation transcribed from air photographs.
Ridge and furrow cultivation, in Lapworth parish, dating to the Medieval period. Some areas of ridge and furrow are survive as earthworks, whilst others are visible on aerial photographs.
1 Moat marked.
2 Broom Hall. Once ‘a considerable mansion surrounded by a moat’. Fishponds also exist.
3 The farmhouse dates in part from the mid 16th century. No mention of the ...
The site of Broom Hall Moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It dates to the Medieval period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1926, and was situated 150m west of Broom Hall Canal Bridge, Lapworth.
1 Moat marked.
2 On the OS map this feature appears as a small elongated stretch of water in line with other stretches a little to the S. They are all ...
The site of a possible moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It dated from the Medieval period and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1926. It was situated just south of the Tanhouse at Kingswood in the parish of Lapworth.
1 Moat marked.
2 This is a long waterfilled ditch at the foot of Farm Cottage gardens with possible traces of another arm turning S at the W end. No longer ...
Lapworth Farm Moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. Only faint traces are still visible of this possible moat of Medieval origin. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1926, and is situated 100m north of the canal locks at Lapworth.
1 Remains of a moat exist S of Bushwood Hall.
2 The moat is waterfilled and that part of the E arm that had been filled in has been re-excavated and ...
Bushwood Hall Moat, the well preserved earthwork of a Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It is located 400m south east of Copt Green.
1 A ‘mansion’ is recorded at the beginning of the reign of Edward I (1272-1307). It is not improbable that the moat to the W of Bushwood Hall marks the ...
A moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building, of Medieval origin. It is visible as an earthwork, though overgrown. It is situated 600m south of Bushwood Lane, Lapworth.
Site of a Medieval deerpark.
1 There were evidently two parks in Lapworth by the end of the C13, when ‘the greater park’ is recorded. In 1420 ‘the Little Park’ is ...
Documentary records indicate that this was possibly the site of a medieval deer park.