1 St.Mary’s Priory was founded in 1832 for nuns of the Order of St. Benedict, with a girl’s school attached. The buildings, which include a church with a bell-tower, are ...
St Mary's Priory which was founded in the Imperial period for an order of Bendictine nuns. The priory is situated to the west of Princethorpe Great Wood.
1 The S aisle of the conventual church partly survives in the N side of the present house. The semicircular arch at the E end was apparently between the aisle ...
Stoneleigh Abbey Church was built during the Medieval period. The church no longer exists in its own right but parts of if have been incorporated into a house that was on the same site. It is located to the east of the abbey remains.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 The chapel of Blackwell was in existence before 1240. It was a demesne chapel of the Prior of Worcester, but belonged to the church of ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel in Blackwell in the Medieval period.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 A chapel at Armscote belonging to the church of Tredington was granted in 1549 to Richard Field and others and probably demolished. The date of ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel at Armscote during the Medieval period.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 A chapel at Darlingscott belonging to the church of Tredington was granted in 1549 to Richard Field and others and was probably demolished. The date ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel at Darlingscott during the Medieval period.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles, W tower and S porch. Apart from the S doorway nothing remains of the 12th century church. Rebuilt in the early 13th century ...
The Church of St John the Baptist was Medieval in origin. It was extensively repaired in the Imperial period, with various additions. The church is situated 100m south of Wolvey Bridge.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 Among lands bought of the Crown by Edward Chamberlayn in 1550 was the late chapel called ‘Sainte Leonardes Chapell’ in Little Wolford. No other reference ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a Medieval Chapel of St Leonard at Little Wolford.
1 Site of The Hermitage, Polesworth.
2 Half a mile to the W of the church on the Tamworth road. Possibly the site of the chapel of medieval origin associated with ...
Possible site of chapel built above St Edith's well.
Possible site of Medieval chapel.
1 Two private chapels are mentioned in the parish in the C14. In 1344 a licence was granted to Agnes Austin for a chapel in her ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a Medieval Chapel at Salford Priors.
1 Of the monastic buildings only a few shapeless blocks of rubble rise above ground level. Excavation enabled the ground plans to be uncovered. The 12th century church had a ...
The remains of Kenilworth Abbey Church which dates from the Medieval period. Excavation has uncovered the ground plan and evidence of burials within the church. The site is at the tennis courts in Abbey Fields.
1 A chapel for dissenters.
2 Almost a mirror image of the C of E mortuary chapel (PRN 5478). Now used as a tool store.
A Nonconformist mortuary chapel which was built during the Imperial period. The building is still standing but is in use as a tool store. It is situated in the Clifton Road Cemetery, Rugby.
1 A hamlet in Brailes parish. Rous lists it, and there appear to have been a number of successive partial enclosures. These are recorded in 1430, 1509, 1549 and 1598. ...
The Medieval deserted settlement of Chelmscote. Hollow ways, house platforms and enclosures are visible as earthworks. The site is located 1km north west of Compton Wynyates.
1 Chapel by D G Squirhill. Cemetery (PRN 2410) opened in 1852.
2 Two chapels designed by Squirhill, which have long since disappeared.
3 On the OS map of 1905 there are ...
A mortuary chapel which was built during the Imperial period. It was situated in the cemetery on Brunswick Street, Leamington Spa, but has been demolished.
1 The church was granted to St Mary’s College in 1123 and was united with it in 1367. It apparently continued in use as a church for some time after ...
The site of the Medieval Church of St Lawrence. It was united with St Mary's in 1367 and ceased to be a church some time after this date. The churchyard was rediscovered in 1839 during road widening. It stood in West Street, Warwick.
1 At the S end of Clopton Bridge was a chapel of St Mary Magdalene and a hermitage, probably on the site of the present Swan’s Nest Hotel. The Clopton ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of the Chapel of St Mary Magdalene and of a hermitage, both of Medieval date. The site is at the south east end of Swan's Nest Lane, Stratford upon Avon.
1 A grass covered mound c2.4m to 3m in height lies to the east of the church. It may represent the remains of an eastern chapel associated with the Abbey. ...
The possible site of a chapel associated with Polesworth Abbey, which was founded in the Early Medieval period. The mound is visible as an earthwork and is situated 250m east of Bridge Street, Polesworth.
1 An appraisal was carried out of the undercroft of Warwick Castle. In the medieval period the undercroft was of fairly high status, but later it was used as a ...
An archaeological survey of the domestic range undercroft at Warwick Castle noted its architectural history. The domestic range undercroft was built in the Medieval period and has largely escaped alteration and retains many original features.
1 Eight in situ graves were located clustered together in the east corner of the burial ground. The burials were all in coffins and the graves were aligned on the ...
During archeological work at Castle Hill Baptist Church eight burials were discovered. These burials date to the Post Medieval and Imperial periods.
1 Chancel with N vestry, nave with N aisle and S porch, and W tower. The Medieval church was probably built early in the C12 and enlarged in the C14, ...
The Parish Church of St. Nicholas which has its origins in the Medieval period but which was largely rebuilt during the Imperial period. Several finds of Medieval date have been found in the churchyard. The church is situated 100m east of Radford Hall.
1 A small ‘unpretending’ edifice of brick, plastered over, consisting of a nave with four pointed arched windows on each side, a bell turret at the W end, under which ...
A mortuary chapel dating to the Imperial period. It was built on the site of a Medieval chapel, and is situated 300m south east of Little Spring Coppice.