1 There were 29 houses at Sawbridge in 1730.
2 Today there are fewer than ten houses and this indicates depopulation after 1730. There are probable house platforms on either side ...
The possible site of a Post Medieval shrunken village for which documentary evidence survives. House platforms, a hollow way and ridge and furrow cultivation are all visible as earthworks. The site is located 500m to the east of Sawbridge.
1 There were 29 houses at Sawbridge in 1730.
2 Today there are fewer than ten houses and this indicates depopulation after 1730. See PRN 3044 for one possible area of ...
The site of a Post Medieval shrunken settlement. The earthworks show traces of house platforms and a pond, probably for watering stock. It is situated at the Manor Farm at Sawbridge.
1 Stocks marked.
2 The stocks are restored and in good condition.
Flecknoe Village Stocks, a wooden structure in which the feet and/or hands of criminals would have been locked as a punishment. The stocks were used during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. They were situated near the centre of Flecknoe.
1 A ditch containing 19th century pottery was observed parallel to the existing northern boundary of the site during the excavation of drainage trenches .
A ditch containing 19th century pottery was observed parallel to the existing northern boundary of the site during the excavation of drainage trenches. The site was located at 'Hunters Moon', Flecknoe.
1 During a watching brief and topographical survey two house platforms were identified anlong with two other possible platforms. A possible cobbled road/trackway was found to the north and ...
A medieval trackway or road was recorded during a watching brief at Beau Geste, Sawbridge.
1 In June 1992 the Oxford Archaeological Unit carried out an archaeological evaluation of a plot adjacent to Manor Farm, Flecknoe, in advance of house construction. A cobbled surface ...
During archaeological work a cobbled surface was found. The feature dated to the late Medieval or Post Medieval period. It was situated 300m east of the church at Flecknoe. Subsequent work recorded a number of boundary ditches of possible late Saxon origin.