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 The excavation of trial trenches at Abbey Works, Bleachfield Street, Alcester recorded a number of features associated with Roman occupation of the site including a hearth with metalworking slag, ...
A road, hearth, metalworking slag, pits, postholes, gullies, beam slots, ditches,a well, and foundations of stone buildings were recorded during evaluation and subsequent excavation at the former Abbey Works, Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Finds included: pottery, amphora, bone, metal objects including jewellery and glass.
12 The evaluation, excavation and subsequent watching brief revealed 1st and 2nd century gullies and a ditch in the north-eastern part of the Roman ‘small town’. These enclosed areas ...
Archaeological evaluation and a subsequent watching brief revealed 1st and 2nd century gullies and a ditch in the north-eastern part of the Roman 'small town' of Tiddington.
1 The paucity of the finds means that it is difficult to place the excavated deposits into any kind of chronology. The single flint artefact is not enough to ...
Undated features encountered during archaeological evaluation.
1 Undated features, including a large ditch, a small pit containing heat-shattered quartzite pebbles, a gully and post hole were recorded during trial trenching in the vicinity of an Early/Middle ...
Undated features, including a large ditch, a small pit containing heat-shattered quartzite pebbles, a gully and post hole were recorded during trial trenching. The site is located between 32 and 46 Old Farm Road, Mancetter.
1 The excavation of three trial trenches in the centre of the medieval village of Long Lawford recorded a number of undated pits, ditches and gullies. These were probably ...
Undated features, including pits, ditches and gullies, recorded during trial trenching on land to the west of Caldecott Arms, Chapel Street, Long Lawford.
1 The possible extent of the medieval settlement of Nuneaton based on the OS map of 1888, 11SW.
2 Domesday has two entries for Nuneaton in Coleshill Hundred. The Phillimore edition ...
The possible extent of the medieval settlement at Nuneaton based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1888 and known archaeological features.
1 Two adjacent enclosures, each with entrance to W.
3 One large and one small subrectangular enclosure. These are associated with a couple of small pennanular enclosures and a possible undated ...
The site of two rectangular enclosures of unknown date. They are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 800m north east of Alveston.
1 Archaeological observation of the groundworks associated with the construction of new properties at 42, High Street, Hillmorton (EWA 7322, centred on SP53147356) revealed a 19th century pit, an undated ...
Post-medieval and undated features, including pits, a pond, probable boundary ditches, and yard surfaces, recorded during archaeological observation at 42-46 High Street, Hillmorton, Rugby.
1 Archaeological evaluation of the site at Bread and Meat Close revealed evidence of medieval industrial activity represented by a probable tile kiln and an oven or malting kiln. ...
Medieval features, including a probable tile kiln, an oven or malting kiln, a possible building or structure, clay and rubbish pits and a medieval roadside ditch. The site is located at Bread and Meat Close, Friars Street, Warwick.
1 Archaeological evaluation within the SAM of Tiddington Roman Settlement identified four broad phases of activity.
In Phase 1, the Late Iron Age-early Roman period, a co-axial field system appeared to ...
Evaluation trenching recorded a field system laid out during the Late Iron Age-early Roman period, with a possibly associated building. A second phase of activity dated to the 2nd century AD. The site is located north of Tiddington Road, Tiddington.
1 AP.
2 Undated enclosure complex shows on aerial photographs. This site evidently runs under a modern road and houses.
3 Site no 141 in survey.
4 Possibly a later Prehistoric open settlement.
5 ...
The site of a complex of enclosures. They are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. Undated ditches were observed during pipeline works across the cropmarks. The enclosures are located to the east of Townsend Road, Rugby.
1 Possible enclosures and linear features identified on air photographs.
2Linear features and enclosures visible on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The earliest ...
Linear features and enclosures that are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The features are undated but are situated west of Little Wolford.
1 1928: A shallow trench was cut just S of the crest of the N embankment of the ‘camp’. This revealed traces of the rampart.
2 Plan.
3 1954-5. A section was ...
The site of the defences of the Roman fort at Mancetter, which were excavated in 1927, 1954-56.
1 A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School. It was probably a drainage ditch or field boundary similar ...
A Romano British Ditch was found during an archaeological excavation in the grounds of St. Faiths Primary School.
1 Glasshouse Wood contains banks, ditches and lynchets, some of which are aligned on the Roman building (PRN 2594) and therefore are probably connected. Most of the earthworks lie to ...
A field system, comprising banks, ditches and lynchets that all survive as earthworks. The field system seems to be associated with a Roman building. The field system is located in Glasshouse Wood.
1 On its W side the wood is contained within a bank and ditch. This, except for a break to the S of the wood, encloses the W side of ...
A bank and ditch, probably of Medieval date, mark the western boundary of the parish of Ashow. The bank and ditch survive as earthworks. The boundary is located to the west of Glasshouse Wood.
1 Excavation from 1963 onwards in advance of gravel extraction revealed part of a defensive ditch. To the E of the road this was up to 6.7m wide and 3m ...
A defensive bank and ditch, forming an enclosure, were found during an archaeological excavation. The enclosure was Roman in date and formed the defences surrounding the Roman town of Tripontium. The enclosure was located 1km south west of Shawell.
1 Excavation of a complex of features (see PRN 3000, PRN 5359) produced evidence of two ditches which joined at a right angle. They were probably boundary or drainage ditches. ...
The excavation of two Roman ditches, in which many fragments of pottery were found. They ditches may have been boundary or drainage ditches. The pottery dated to the 1st and 2nd centuries. The site was located to the south of Cottage Farm, Stretton on Fosse..
1 Air photographs.
2 Undated linear earthwork shows on air photographs. This appears to consist of a bank ?and ditch and may represent a dam with a pond to the E.
3 ...
A linear feature of unknown date. It is visible as an earthwork on aerial photographs. The linear feature has the appearance of a bank and ditch. It was situated at Bond End, Monks Kirby.
1 APs.
2 Undated linear crop marks forming a network show on air photographs.
3 A geophysical survey carried out during 1992 over this cropmark identified the presumed trackways and ditches observed ...
Linear features, possibly of Prehistoric date, are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. The results of a geophysical survey suggest that the features are ditches and trackways. They are situated 400m west of Lawford Lane, Rugby.
carried out in 1965 1 1965: Excavation produced evidence for an Iron Age settlement. This was a rectangular enclosure 11.6m by 9.7m with an entrance to the S. Ten features ...
A possible settlement showed up on aerial photographs. An Iron Age enclosure was discovered during an excavation. A ditch and a pit, both containing fragments of pottery, were also found. The site is east of Bushey Hill, Barford.
1 1965: Excavation revealed storage pits of two types – perhaps Neolithic. Aerial photographs show an oval cluster of small pits, over twenty in number. On excavation the basic features ...
A pit cluster was excavated and was found to be a series of stake holes and gullies. These are believed to represent one oval building and part of a rectangular building. The site may be Neolithic in date and is located 300m northwest of Bushey Hill.
1 Romano-British settlement indicated by a sequence of four Romano-British ditches and gullies, a further diagonal gully of the same date and an undated but probable Romano-British small pit or ...
Romano-British settlement indicated by a sequence of four ditches and gullies, a further diagonal gully of the same date, an undated but probable Romano-British small pit or posthole, and pottery finds of Romano-British date.