1 Haseley Park may have been made by Sir Thomas de Cherlecote, who obtained a grant of free warren in 1267, or by his father Sir Thomas. Sir George Throckmorton ...
Haseley Park, a Medieval deer park, where deer were kept for hunting. The deer park was situated to the north east of Hatton Green.
1 A probable mill dam was found at the above grid reference.
2 Bank up to 2.1m high on NE side and 2.4m on SW side.
3 A large earthwork straddling the ...
The possible site of a mill dam dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork. It is located 300m west of Rouncil Lane.
1 Wedgnock is one of three parks attached to the Castle of Warwick, which are marked on maps of Saxton and Speed. John Rous, who died in 1491, states that ...
The site of Wedgnock Park, a Medieval deer park. It was situated 1km north east of the Central Hospital, Warwick.
1 A roughly E-shaped building of the 16th century, altered in the 17th and 19th. Of two storeys, part timber framed in the centre of the south front and ...
The site of a manor house that was originally built during the Medieval period. Alterations were made to the building during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. The manor house is located in Princethorpe.
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 This is not the original Manor House (see WA 3133) but a fine building of the 16th century to 17th century, altered in early 19th century. Of two storeys, ...
The site of a manor house dating to the Medieval or Post Medieval period with later alterations. It is situated at Church Hill, Stretton on Dunsmore.
1 A “Manor House” appears at this site on the 1849 tithe map.
2 Woolscott Manor Farm is an isolated house. ‘Quite clearly it was the nucleus of a lost deserted ...
The site of a possible Medieval manor house. The present house on this site appears to have been built during the Imperial period. It is situated on Daventry Road.
1 Castle Farm is called Woolscott Castle on a Tithe Map from 1849.
2 The older part of the house is 17th century stonework built in an unusual manner with alternate ...
A house that was originally built during the Medieval period. Near the house there is a series of earthworks that may represent the remains of a hollow way and house platforms. The site is located between Woolscott and Grandburgh.
1 Listed by Dugdale as the largest and chief village of Wolfhampcote. Dugdale also mentions a chapel (PRN 6372).
2 The area behind Flecknoe Farm at SP5163 contains house platforms, hollow ...
The site of a Medieval shrunken settlement, with four areas of desertion. House platforms, hollow ways, trackways, and a pond are visible as earthworks and on aerial photographs. It is situated to the west of Flecknoe.
1 Three story red square brick building with stone dressings, of early 18th Century. It is built against a 16th Century house. The north and east elevations are plain ...
A manor house which was originally built during the Medieval period. Addtions were made to the building during the Post Medieval or Imperial period. The house is situated at Kites Hardwick.
1 A manor house may have been located within the moat – see MWA289.
2 “Coleshill Hall Farm, on the north side of the Birmingham Road ¾ mile south-west ...
Possible site of a medieval manor house within the moat north-east of Coleshill Hall Farmhouse
1 This was probably on the site of at least one of the two mills in Stoneleigh recorded in the Domesday Survey. By the 16th century there were six mills ...
The site of Stoneleigh Mill, a watermill which dates back to the Medieval period. The watercourses associated with the mill are still visible as earthworks. The site lies to the north of Stoneleigh.
1 There were two mills at Stoneleigh in 1086. By 1291 there were other mills at Stareton and Cryfield.
2 It is likely that the mill at Stareton was situated at ...
The possible site of a watermill dating to the Medieval period. The mill is known to have existed from documentary evidence. The watercourses associated with the mill are still visible as earthworks and are situated to the west of Stareton.
1 In Stoneleigh there was a house called Fynborgh. It was given by Henry I.
2 ‘Great Finborough’, ‘Middle Finborough’ and ‘Far Finborough’ marked near to a barn called Finbury. JMM ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a Medieval house at Finbury. The site lies 600m north west of Chantry Heath Woods.
1 In 1787 there was apparently a larger house (called “The Lunt House”) on this site, which was still there in 1831, and the present Lunt Cottages are supposed to ...
The results of archaeological work at The Lunt Cottages, Baginton, suggest that they were once part of a larger building, possibly dating back to the Medieval period.
1 The present rectory was built in the late 19th century and is situated on the spot which the previous rectory, a fine 15th century building, stood before it was ...
Tredington Rectory, a house dating to the Medieval period. It was rebuilt in the Imperial period although the Medieval windows were incorporated into the present building. It is located 100m south west of the church.
1 To the E of the present Manor House, in the grounds, are traces of a possible building platform with traces of a possible moat surrounding this. This is possibly ...
The possible site of a Medieval manor house surviving as earthworks. The site is located to the north of Shipston Road, Upper Tysoe.
1 Timber frame and painted brick with Medieval cruck, thatched.
2 The cottage is now uninhabited and has fallen into a state of decay.
3 Internal support is required to prevent the ...
A timber framed house of cruck construction with a thatched roof. The house is Medieval in date and is situated on High Street, Polesworth.
1 Medieval cruck in gable end of a timber framed building.
2 Photographed in 1977.
3 Plan of the cruck building and showing proposed alteration.
A house dating to the Medieval period with a cruck in gable end of the timber frame. The house is situated on High Street, Polesworth.
1 Dugdale states that the original Honington estates existed in the days of Edward the Confessor, and the manor was one of those with which Earl Leofric had endowed his ...
A manor house, the site of which dates to the Medieval period. The present country house dates to the Post Medieval period, with 20th century alterations. It is located 400m north west of Honington.
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 17th century and later building.
2 Probably stands on site of Medieval manor house.
The house standing on this site was built during the Post Medieval period. There may have been a manor house standing on the same site during the Medieval period. The site is located 500m north east of the church at Oxhill.
1 Excavations carried out in 1972 between Joyce Pool and Barrack Street, in advance of redevelopment, revealed substantial traces of the northern defences of the town. These included a robber ...
Evidence of the Medieval northern defences and suburban occupation of Warwick was uncovered during archaeological work. Ditches, wells, cess and rubbish pits and pottery, some decorated, were found on the north side of Barrack Street.
1 An approximately square building facing E. Externally it is mostly of 18th century brickwork but internally the back part retains the remains of a 15th century timber framed hall ...
The remains of a Medieval manor house have been observed within the fabric of an existing house. It was possibly a 14th century aisled hall which was reduced in size during the 15th century. It was faced with red brick in the Imperial period. It is situated in Wasperton.