2 Undated linear cropmarks show on aerial photographs.
3 Evaluation across this cropmark site. No other features, other than modern plough scars were recorded.
Linear features, of unknown date, appear as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 1km south of the resevoir, Radford Semele.
1 Possible house platforms can be discerned at the top and the bottom of the hill on either side of an unusually pronounced hollow way running down the hill from ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Medieval period. The site has been identified from the earthworks of two hollow ways and several possible house platforms. It is located 300m south west of the church, Ufton.
1 Close to the S entrance to the churchyard there is a cross, the head of which dates from the close of the 14th century. It has four panelled sides ...
The remains of a Medieval cross. Only the carved head survives; the base and the shaft are modern. It stands in the churchyard of St Michael's Church, Ufton.
Find of a Post Medieval stone mortar.
1 A stone mortar was found a short time ago in the mud when cleaning out a small pool on a farm at Ufton. ...
Find
1 Evidence for former settlement in area SP3761 to 3761. The field in question is largely ploughed out, but possible house platforms can be discerned and one, or possibly two, ...
The site of a possible deserted settlement which dates to the Medieval period. Earthworks of house platforms and perhaps two hollow ways are still visible. The site is located 200m south west of the church, Ufton.
3 Faint traces of two possible rectilinear enclosures have been identified on air photographs.
The site of two possible enclosures, of unknown date, which are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 800m south west of Ufton.
1 Three sides of a rectangular enclosure can be identified on an air photograph.
The site of an enclosure of unknown date which is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. It is located 900m east of the resevoir, Radford Semele.
1 Skull of man aged 30-40 found when removing soil from front of Colbourne House. The soil was redeposited and the skull had possibly come from elsewhere.
Findspot - A human skull of unknown date was found 200m south of the church, Ufton, although it had probably been transported here from another location.
Possible site of holy well.
1 ‘Holy Well Field’.
2 ‘Holy Well Field’, ‘Further Holy Well Field’, ‘Lower Holy Well Field’.
3 The present owner states that he has never come across ...
The site of a possible holy well of unknown date which is known from documentary evidence. Two maps from 1672 and 1840 refer to Holy Well Field. It was located 650m south of the church, Ufton.
1 A coin from the 16th century was found at this location.
Findspot - a coin dating to the Post Medieval period was found to the north of the church, Ufton.
1 A stone coffin for a child, dug up in Ufton churchyard. This was made of local sandstone, 1m long and 0.33m wide. The exterior was roughly formed, somewhat D-shaped, ...
Findspot - a stone coffin of unknown date was found in Ufton churchyard.
1 Coin of Magnentius (350-353) in good condition, found 22.12.58, and brought in to the museum.
Findspot - a coin dating to the Roman period was found 250m south east of the church, Ufton.
1 The probable extent of the medieval settlement at Ufton based on the OS map of 1886, 40NW.
2 Domesday lists Ufton in Stoneleigh Hundred. The Phillimore edition has a grid ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement at Ufton based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 Excavations on a site in the Medieval settlement also revealed a single pit of possible Bronze Age date.
2 Pottery identified as Late Bronze Age by Stephanie Ratkai.
A single pit of Bronze Age date was uncovered at this site on Harbury Lane, Ufton.
1 The jug or handled pot was found by the sexton, digging a grave in 1904. It was at a depth of about 1.5m and near it were several large ...
Findspot - a pot or jug with a handle dating to the Medieval period was found 100m west of the church, Ufton.
1 Cotswold Archaeological Trust (CAT) was commissioned to undertake an archaeological evaluation on land to the E of Harbury Lane, Ufton. The evaluation indicated that Medieval and Post Medieval deposits, ...
Archaeological investigation revealed the remains of buildings and ridge and furrow dating to the Medieval period. The site is located 500m south of the church, Ufton.