1 In 1501 there was an enclosure and the 1517 Inquiry described the village as in ruinam positam. In the early 17th century the vicarage was rebuilt and in 1641 ...
The site of Wolfhampcote Medieval deserted settlement. There is documentary evidence for its existence and abandonment by the 16th century. Aerial photographs and part excavation, suggest a moat, a hollow way, fishponds, buildings.
Earthworks of Medieval fishponds.
1 Fishponds marked.
2 Fishponds marked.
3 1979: An area of ground around the old stew ponds was cleared. The intention was to clear the two ponds and possibly ...
Medieval fishponds used for the breeding and storing of fish, probably connected with the Medieval Abbey of Stoneleigh. There is documentary evidence for them from the 18th century. They are situated 1km southwest of the present Abbey.
Site of Medieval and Post Medieval park.
1 In 1165 and 1187 the Pipe Rolls contain references to the park which surrounded Kenilworth Castle. Further references occur in the 13th century. ...
The site of Queens Park which formed part of the deer park belonging to Kenilworth Castle during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. The earthwork remains of the park pale are still visible. It is located at Chase Wood.
1 Rectangular waterfilled (?) moat measuring approximately 80m NE-SW and 45m transversely, the arms being some 10m in width. Situated below the confluence of two minor streams.
2 This feature could ...
The site of a moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building, dating to the Medieval period. It is situated 1200m east of Kingsbury Church.
1 Aerial photograph.
2 Earthworks of enclosures and probable sunken ways show on air photographs. These appear to indicate the site of a shrunken Medieval village. Place names Nethercote, Nethercote Bridge ...
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs and is located 750m east of Great Wolford.
1 A field containing a series of broad, shallow ditches. It has been suggested that there is a moat on the site (PRN 1589), but the most obvious feature is ...
A fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish, and other ditches visible as earthworks. The fishpond and ditches date to the Medieval period. They are situated at Newnham, Aston Cantlow.
1 A small but deeply incised stream, part of which was dammed by the Medieval villagers to make two fishponds, with extra breeding chambers and an intricate supply system of ...
The site of Medieval fishponds, used for breeding and storing fish. The fishponds are visible as earthworks and are situated at Stretton Baskerville, 1km south west of Sketchley.
1 The surviving earthwork is the village pond, now dry, and its dam.
2 Plan.
3 Scheduled as Warwickshire Monument No 111.
4 Scheduling information.
A Medieval dam and fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish. They are visible as earthworks and on aerial photographs, and are situated south of Mobbs Wood, Combe Fields.
1 The only artificial feature in the area of the proposed Deserted Medieval Village (PRN 4171) is a minor drainage moat associated with fast-flowing streams and modern drains.
3 The moat ...
The remains of a possible moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It could date from the Medieval period through to the Imperial period. It remains visible as an earthwork, and also shows up on aerial photographs. It is located 450m southeast of Newton. A possible associated fishpond and traces of house platforms and other features are also visible on aerial photography.
1 Remains of a major fishpond complex associated with a moated site (PRN 3318).
3 Remains consist of three fishponds separated by a 0.6m bank. One of these is flooded and ...
A Medieval bank and fishponds, used for the breeding and storage of fish. They are visible as earthworks, and are situated on the west side of Draycote.
1 Part of an extensive series of earthworks including fishponds to the E and SE of Wishaw Hall Farm.
2 Plan.
3 A moat. What remained of the moat was filled in ...
The site of a moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building, and a fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish, which were Medieval in date. They were situated to the west of Moxhull Park, Wishaw.
1 Dams and other linear banks form a fishpond complex.
Fishponds used for the breeding and storage of fish. They date to the Medieval/Post Medieval period, and survive as earthworks. They are situated 500m south of Sambourne.
1 Earthwork remains of a ditch, ‘Park Pale’, running north to south, are marked on an OS map.
2 This has been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Merevale ...
A ditch that may be a section of Medieval park pale. It is visible as an earthwork and is situated 650m east of Merevale Abbey.
1 ‘Old Sand Pits’ marked.
2 There are several modern houses and the area is called ‘Moat Close’. There is a small pond forming part of the garden which may be ...
The site of a possible Medieval moat. Some earthworks are visible 300m west of the church at Thurlaston. This area is actually a dammed pond, if there is a moat here at all, then it is a few metres to the north.
2 Linear features and possible ponds show on aerial photographs.
3 Fishponds and linear boundaries are shown in this location and clearly relate to the crop marks.
The site of Medieval fishponds, used for storing and breeding fish. Several linear features that are visible as cropmarks are also located at this site. They lie 250m northeast of Bramcote Hall.
1 Enclosure, fish ponds and ridge and furrow ploughing mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project
A rectangular enclosure formed from banks and ditches is apparent on aerial photographs to the north of Ryton. At the nothern end of the enclosure there appears to be two rectangular fish ponds that are fed from by a small stream, which now drains direct
Earthworks of a fishpond.
1 In Fishpond Coppice in Weston Park is one of the original eight fishponds in the Park.
2 This is the only one to show surface indications today, ...
A Medieval fishpond used for the breeding and storage of fish. It survives as an earthwork as the last remaining one of an original eight. It is situated at Fishpond Coppice, Long Compton.
1 Excavation inside the moat revealed the foundations of a number of walls, usually about 0.23m below the surface. Several of these were followed, but insufficient work was done to ...
The site of Goodrest Lodge, a Medieval/Post Medieval manor house with double moat, bridge, fishponds and well. Remains of these features are visible as earthworks. On excavating the site, walls and floors were revealed. It is situated at Leek Wootton.
1 These two fishponds have man-made banks along the W side which appear to coincide with the Wedgnock Park boundary.
2 Marked as ‘Quarry Site’ on map of Wedgnock Park in ...
The site of fishponds, which were used for the breeding and storing of fish. Their date of origin is unknown, but they are still visible as earthworks. It is likely that they were used during the Medieval period. They are situated 300m south west of Gostee Spinney, Leek Wootton.
1 c.
2 The moat appears to have been subrectangular and about 75 by 50m, with a pair of fishponds to the SE.
3 Only the waterfilled NW arm survives, slight surface ...
Hurley Hall Moat, a wide ditch surrounding a building. It is visible as an earthwork and is Medieval in origin. It is situated at Hurley Hall Farm. Close by are two fishponds, used for the breeding and storage of fish, dating from the same period.
Earthworks of Post Medieval fishponds.
1 In the lawn S of the house is a circular fishpond, and away to the S are the remains of a former moat.
2 The ‘moat’ ...
Fishponds which were used for breeding and storing fish. They are Post Medieval in date and are visible as earthworks. The fish ponds lie 100m to the south of Billesley Hall.
1 A path turns sharply back to the left from the road. This leads down to what has been a dam across the stream, presumably for a pool. The path ...
A dam for a millpool or fishpond, which survives as an earthwork, and dates to the Medieval period. It is situated 300m north east of Castle Hill, Fulbrook.
1 Site of fishponds shown to the south of Hurley Hall.
2 These fishponds (and Hurley Hall moat) were backfilled in the early ?20th century following a drowning. The present owner, ...
The site of Medieval moat and later fishponds (utilising re-excavated section of moat), used for the breeding and storage of fish, thought to date to the Post Medieval period. They are situated 60m south of Hurley Hall.
A boundary bank, known as the Park Pale, was constructed during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. The earthwork bank is still visible and it appears to partially enclose Chase Wood to the north and east.