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 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)
12 1966: The site had been much disturbed by Post Medieval buildings and drains and no trace was found of Medieval or earlier buildings. A series of seven large pits, ...
The site of several Medieval pits which were discovered during an excavation. The pits contained fragments of pottery and two coins
1 Two trenches were dug and at least 10 graves were revealed, generally aligned south-west to north-east. Four distinct rows of graves were identified in Trench 2. No complete skeletons ...
10 undated inhumations which can reasonably be asserted to have been part of the medieval cemetery on the south side of the church of St Lawrence.
1 1971. A large circular limekiln of pre-Monastic date was found beneath the chapter house of the priory (PRN 1958). A second square kiln lay 5m to the N. Both ...
Two large lime kilns, probably of Medieval date, were excavated at this site. They were located at St Sepulchre's Priory, Warwick.
1 1968: Excavation of area including at least three Medieval house plots. Four ovens were set well back from the street front. A series of cess and rubbish pits yielded ...
Excavation of Medieval house plots uncovered traces of timber buildings, pits, ovens and 11th and 12th century pottery. The site was at Brook Street, Warwick.
1 Human remains have been found on a number of occasions. Bodies were disturbed and reburied during the construction of prefab houses on the site in the Second World War. ...
Excavations have revealed a possible Medieval cemetery associated with the Medieval chapel and hospital of St Johns. The cemetery lies underneath flats at St Johns, Warwick.
1 Site of an old quarry shown on the First Edition Ordnance Survey map
Former stone quarry at Wharf Street, Warwick. Exact date of quarrying activity is not known.
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 Dugdale’s 1650 edition, speaking of Thomas Fisher, records that his true name was Hawkins, and that his father by profession sold fish at the Mercate Cross near Warwick. The ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this is the site of Warwick Market Cross, which stood on the east side of Market Place.
1 In the Saxon chronicles the town is called “Werinca”, and a Saxon penny found here bears the legend “Werhica”.
2 Rous states that the mint was “certainly on the site ...
The possible site of a mint, where coins were produced. Documentary evidence suggests that a mint may have existed in Warwick during the Early Medieval period. The exact location of the mint is unknown.
1 Assumed to be associated with the construction with St Sepulchre’s Priory.
Quarry at St Sepulchre's Priory, Warwick
1 A medieval quarry pit, a late 17th- to early 18th-century stone vaulted cellar and a well of possibly similar date were recorded during observation at 9-11 Chapel Street. The ...
A medieval quarry pit was recorded during observation at 9-11 Chapel Street.