1 A Church of England Mission Church is mentioned in VCH.
2 Appears on an OS map of 1905.
3 The church is still in use. It is brick, with a ...
The Church of the Good Sheperd which was built during the Imperial period. It is still in use and is attached to a house. The church is situated 200m north of The Green, Broadwell.
1 Chancel, nave, N vestry, and W tower forming house. Orientated N-S. 1849, by William Butterfield. Built as a chapel-school, to be used as a school during the week and ...
The Church of St Edmund and Church House. The church/school and the church house were built in the Imperial period, and are situated south east of the Manor House, Thurlaston.
1 The old vicarage, presumably that of the 16th century, was demolished in the middle of the 19th century and the present one built. It is marked as building ...
The site of a vicarage dating from the Post Medieval period, which was demolished and rebuilt during the 19th century. It was situated next to Rowington church.
1 Much altered building, now cottages, refronted in brick. The birthplace of Sir William Dugdale in 1605.
The Old Rectory, a house that was built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated at Church End.
1 Chancel, nave, N and S aisles, S porch and W tower. The earliest architectural remains are of the early or mid 13th century, and indicate the existence of a ...
The Parish Church of St John the Baptist. It was built during the Medieval Period, with later alterations through to the Imperial period. The church is situated in Hillmorton.
1 The roofless remains of two buildings exist S of the church. The smaller is about 4.9m square and 11.4m from the church. It has a W doorway similar ...
The remains of Wroxall Priory, a nunnery founded in the Medieval period. The remains of two buildings exist on the site; the refectory or dining room; and the chapter house, where the nuns met to carry out business transactions. The site is 700m southwest of Wroxall Village.
1 Built in 1798 and demolished, except for the tower, in 1913. A stone in the graveyard marks the site of the Shirley transept, 1800-1913. Had the reputation of being ...
The Church of St Thomas a Becket which was built during the Imperial period. Everything but the tower was demolished in 1913. The tower has now been converted into a dwelling. The church was located on the north west edge of Ettington, on Banbury Road.
1 The former mission church of St Luke, which has now been converted. It was built by public subscription in the late 19th century; the license of the church ...
The former mission church of St Luke, which has now been converted.
1 Wood Bevington was originally part of Salford Priors Estate, granted to the Canons of Kenilworth in the early 12th century, and Wood Bevington Farm was the seat of one ...
A manor house and an oratory, a private chapel, dating from the Medieval onwards. It is situated 300m north west of Wood Bevington.
1 The principal dwelling was the Habit which can be located close to the site now occupied by Manor Court House. This seems to have been the Abbot’s or Prior’s ...
The possible site of the Medieval Prior's House associated with Nuneaton Priory. It would have stood on Manor Court Road, Nuneaton and the results of a geophysical survey suggest that some building ruins survive.
1 Chancel, N chapel, vestry, nave, S aisle, and W tower. Of red sandstone ashlar. Dates from latter part of 12th century, when it consisted of chancel, nave, and W ...
The Church of St Mary was originally built during the Medieval period. Alterations were made to the building later and some parts were rebuilt. The church is situated off Church Lane, Stoneleigh.