1 Aerial photographs.
2 Aerial photographs show ridge and furrow and also a disturbed appearance of the ground; there are also pools, possibly the result of quarrying. Site inaccessible due to ...
Aerial photographs have identified an area of ridge and furrow cultivation with disturbed ground and ponds which are probably the result of quarrying. Of Medieval/Post Medieval date, these features are situated at The Holdings, Dunsmore Heath.
1 The Abbey of Radmore was transferred to Stoneleigh in 1154-5. The foundation stone of the church of the new Cistercian Abbey was laid in 1155. In 1241 the monastery ...
The site of Stoneleigh Abbey, a Cistercian monastery that was founded during the Medieval period. Few traces of the abbey buildings survive above the ground except for the gatehouse. The site is located southwest of The National Agricultural Centre.
1 In 1341 Ralph, afterwards created Earl of Stafford, was granted a weekly market at Tysoe.
2 It was thought that the market was in the field at the above grid ...
The site of a Medieval market place in Lower Tysoe. The remains of the market place are visible as earthworks. The remains of a market cross have been found in this field, which is situated to the north west of Corner Farm.
1 In the centre of the High Market, in an area known as the Barley Market, was the Booth Hall or Tolbooth, built by Thomas de Beauchamp (d1369). Stalls in ...
The site of the Medieval market hall is known from documentary evidence. It was sold in 1791 and demolished. It stood in Market Place, Warwick.
1 165sq.m behind Nos 25, 31 and 33 Brook Street was excavated in summer 1973 prior to redevelopment. There were at least 33 cess and rubbish pits of Medieval ...
A pit cluster of Medieval and Post Medieval rubbish and cess pits was found during an excavation. Two ovens and pottery of the same period was also discovered. A small amount of Neolithic flint was also recovered. The site is situated on Brook Street, Warwick.
1 A trench was dug in the garden of 3 The Butts to try to locate the Medieval town ditch. The ditch was not located. A large quarry of 13th ...
The site of a Medieval quarry. Located behind 3 and 7 The Butts, Warwick.
1 1972: Excavation before development. Five trial holes cut by the developers revealed two wells. Well A was cut into bedrock and was unlined. Well B was Post Medieval (PRN ...
Wells, pits, post holes and ovens of Medieval date were discovered during an archaeological excavation. The finds included fragments of pottery and a bronze ring. The site is at the junction of Swan Street and High Street, Warwick.
1 Legends about the foundation survive and place the foundation at a number of dates between 839 and 1066. A certain amount of the history of the Abbey is known. ...
Polesworth Abbey, a nunnery house governed by an abbess. The Abbey dates to the Early Medieval period and lies 200m east of Bridge Street, Polesworth.
1 In use. The church to which it belongs (PRN 2035) is now completely demolished.
The Medieval cemetery which was associated with the Church of St Mary Magdalen. The church has been demolished but the cemtery is still in use. It is located 200m south of the present church at Pillerton Priors.
1 A large quantity of human bones were found on excavating for a sunken fence in front of Offchurch Bury, but no accurate observations were made thereon. The ground seems ...
The site of a cemetery which dates back to at least the Post Medieval period. It is located 1km east of the golf course, Newbold Comyn.
1 Cloptongrove appeared in deeds dated to c.1279-80 as an area which included messuages, land, meadows and pastures but reference in 1604 to a grove called Clopton Grove suggests that ...
Site of a medieval wood called Clopton Grove.
1 There are places called Grafon in ten English Counties including Warwickshire. The first syllable in this compound is now thought to be the Oold English graf, meaning Grove. ...
1 There was no silva recorded for Haselor in Domesday Book, but there was silva ten furlongs and eighteen perches long by five furlongs wide in Upton, a township within ...
Site of medieval Upton Wood (part)
1 The boundary of Shottery, near Stratford-upon-Avon is attatched to a charter which is attributed to the decade 699-709 and is usually regarded as authentic. The boundary is thought ...
Site of medieval wood called Westgrove
1 There is a record of a wood called Widecombe in the twelfth century
1 There is a record of a wood called Maisterswoode in 1465-6. Maisterwoode was held by the Knights Hospitallers as part of their manor of Grafton, but was in ...
Medieval wood called Masterswood (now called Red Hill Wood)
1 There are tantalising references to the wood of the bishops of Worcester from c.1170, but never in enough detail to explain the relationship between the wood, the square league ...
Remnant of Medieval Woodland
A sketch map of part of Woodcote drawn in c.1815 shows High Wood adjoining Kenilworth. A high Wood was named in 1633, but at that time was part of ...
Medieval Woodland ajoining Kenilworth
1 The list of lands in Wedgnock Park gave Wodelowegrove as the sole item under St. Nicholas parish. The references to Wodelowegrove in late fourteenth and fifteenth century documents ...
Site of Medieval wood, formely Woodlow Grove (Wodelowegrove)
1 To the north of Warwick was Guy Cliffe Grove, recorded in 1422-3 and 1483 The site is suggested by the enclosure award for St. Nicholas’s parish, which included ...
Medieval woodland formerly Guy Cliffe Grove
1
Medieval Wood formerly The Frith
1 Comprises Chase Wood, Henry Eave’s Whites Coppice, Mr. Malleries Whites Coppice, Black Hill Wood
Medieval Wood
1 The probable extent of medieval settlement based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886, 22SE.
2 Brinklow is not listed as such in the Domesday Survey, except as a Hundred.
3 ...
The probable extent of the medieval settlement at Brinklow based on the first edition Ordnance Survey 6" map.