1 Find made by metal detector in 1996: Multiple seal matrix, four circular dies joined at their terminals, cast in copper alloy. Post Medieval.
Findspot - a multiple seal matrix was found 300m north west of Monks Kirby.
1 Finds made by metal detector in 1996: T-shaped brooch in good condition except for damage to the wings and the missing pin. An inverted elongated “V” runs down the ...
Findspot - two Romano-British brooches were found 600m north of Monks Kirby Lodge
1 Findspot of Roman Samian ware. Method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of Roman Samian Ware 1 km south of Willey
1 Find of a Roman denarius. Method of recovery unrecorded. Grid reference given of “the area of SP461835”.
Find of a Roman denarius 400m northwest of the church at Monks Kirby.
1 Find of a groat of Henry VIII. Method of recovery unrecorded. Grid reference given of ” area of SP461835″.
Find of a coin of Henry VIII 400m northwest of the church at Monks Kirby.
1 Found along the Smite Brook, east and west of SP 4665 8290, although exact locations unknown. The flint has been retained by the finder.
2 After looking at the file ...
Find of worked flints along the Smite Brook 300m southeast of Monks Kirby.
1 Casual find o fpossible worked flint. It has been retained by the finder.
2 After looking at the file and the photos the dating should be left as it is.
Find of possible worked flint at Brockhurst northeast of Monks Kirby.
1 Casual find of possible worked flint.
2 After looking at the file and at the photos the dating should be left as it is.
Casual find of possible worked flint 200m southeast of Brockhurst, Monks Kirby.
1 Casual find of possible worked flint. The finder has retained the piece/s.
2 After looking at the correspondence and at the photos the dating should be left as it is.
Casual find of possible worked flint from 250m southeast of the War Memorial at Monks Kirby.
Site of a Medieval windmill.
1 Post mill. Kirby Windmill (Priory of Monks Kirby). Built by 1291. Exact location not known.
2 In 1291 the Priory of Monks Kirby had a windmill ...
Documentary sources suggest that there was a windmill at Monks Kirby belonging to the Priory. It was of the post mill type, and in use from the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. Its exact location is unknown.
1 Newnham Paddox listed as a deserted Medieval settlement.
2 There is no other evidence to back this up.
The possible site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Newnham Paddox. The site is located 500m west of Burton Pool Wood.
2 Possible faint earthworks show on air photographs.
3 This field is still under pasture and has at least three possible hollow ways and some possible evidence for house platforms. Immediately ...
The site of the Medieval shrunken village of Monks Kirby. The remains are visible as an earthwork. The site is located 200m north west of the church at Monks Kirby.
1 Hoard of six coins. Sixpences. English. One Mary (sola), three Elizabeth and two unknown. Latest dates to 1573. It is possible that the hoard is in a secondary location ...
Findspot - a hoard of Post Medieval coins was found 400m west of the church at Monks Kirby.
1 ‘The Moats w/Plantation’ marked.
2 The land is now allotment with no sign of a moat.
3 Moat is visible on an aerial photograph taken in the 1970s (SP4863/O).
The site of a possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It is no longer visible as an earthwork, but its existence is suggested by a tithe map of 1842. It was situated 300m east of the church at Monks Kirby.
1 A circular water-filled ‘moat’ is marked enclosing a small area of land. Two adjoining fields are called ‘House Close with Moat’ and ‘Moat Close’.
2 Moat marked with a footbridge ...
A possible moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It would date to the Medieval period, and was marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is partially visible as an earthwork, and it is situated 450m east of Burton Pool Wood, Monks Kirby.
1 Roman loop fastener found in 1995. Method of recovery unrecorded and no grid reference supplied.
Find of a Roman loop fastener in Monks Kirby. Exact location unknown.
1 Find of a medieval seal matrix of Peter de Wylie in March 1995 at SP463832. The area was described as the Withybrook area, but the grid reference given of ...
Find of a medieval seal matrix 100m northeast of the church at Monks Kirby.
1 Find of a French denier Tournois of the mid 13th century in March 1995 at SP46158565. The method of recovery was not described.
Find of a French medieval coin 200m southeast of Cloudesley Farm, Monks Kirby.
1 Air photographs.
2 Undated linear earthwork shows on air photographs. This appears to consist of a bank ?and ditch and may represent a dam with a pond to the E.
3 ...
A linear feature of unknown date. It is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs. The linear feature has the appearance of a bank and ditch. It was situated at Bond End, Monks Kirby.
1 2010 google earth shows a cropmark of a ring ditch. It is c30m is diameter. There are other less clear linear features and possible enclosures to the east on ...
A c30m diameter ring ditch shows as a cropmark on 2010 google earth maps. It is c340m south-east of Tythe Farm, Monks Kirby
1 Dugdale states that foundations of old walls and Roman bricks (some of which he saw himself) were dug up in his own time near the church. John Morton describes ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement or cemetery. Wall foundations and cremation urns were found at the site, which is located near the church in Monks Kirby.
1 About a mile towards Willey from Cestersover the railway cut through an ancient burial place. The graves were filled with dark coloured sand, apparently brought from a distance. The ...
The site of a cemetery of unknown date. The cemetery was discovered during the construction of a railway cutting. The site lies 600m north east of Little Walton.
1 c1900: An iron spearhead was found at Street Ashton. It is classed as Anglo Saxon.
2 On loan, Rugby School Collection, No 171. Iron spearhead with part of the wooden ...
Findspot - an Anglo-Saxon spearhead, dating to the Migration period, was found 100m south of Street Ashton.
1 1960: The N arm and the N halves of the E and W arms of the moat survive wet. There are traces of the remainder of the moat visible ...
The site of a moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It is of Medieval or Post Medieval date. It is visible on aerial photographs and survives as an earthwork. It is situated at Cestersover, Monks Kirby.