1 A field centred at the above grid reference and lying within the Wappenbury earthwork contains traces of village earthworks and ridge and furrow. The NE corner contains ridge and ...
The site of an area of shrunken village at Wappenbury, dating to the Medieval period. Earthworks are visible on aerial photographs and these include several house platforms and hollow ways, as well as ridge and furrow.
1 In 1501 there was an enclosure and the 1517 Inquiry described the village as in ruinam positam. In the early 17th century the vicarage was rebuilt and in 1641 ...
The site of Wolfhampcote Medieval deserted settlement. There is documentary evidence for its existence and abandonment by the 16th century. Aerial photographs and part excavation, suggest a moat, a hollow way, fishponds, buildings.
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 There were 29 houses at Sawbridge in 1730.
2 Today there are fewer than ten houses and this indicates depopulation after 1730. There are probable house platforms on either side ...
The possible site of a Post Medieval shrunken village for which documentary evidence survives. House platforms, a hollow way and ridge and furrow cultivation are all visible as earthworks. The site is located 500m to the east of Sawbridge.
1 There were 29 houses at Sawbridge in 1730.
2 Today there are fewer than ten houses and this indicates depopulation after 1730. See PRN 3044 for one possible area of ...
The site of a Post Medieval shrunken settlement. The earthworks show traces of house platforms and a pond, probably for watering stock. It is situated at the Manor Farm at Sawbridge.
1 Rous records a population of 53, but the settlement had been depopulated by his day. He cites a chapel as destroyed (PRN 5309). Dugdale does not mention the existence ...
The site of the Medieval deserted settlement Compton Scorpion. Aerial photographs show earthworks of enclosures, hollow ways and house platforms. The settlement is located to the south of Windmill Hill.
1 A Medieval deserted settlement was surveyed after having been ploughed for the second time. A measured but tentative plan was produced. Pottery, much of it 12th and 13th century, ...
The site of an area of Medieval shrunken village at Longdon. It is known from documentary evidence, earthworks of house platforms and trackways revealed on aerial photographs, and from finds of pottery. It is located 600m north west of Longdon Poplars.
1 Earthworks in Church Field under pasture. Line of street and house platforms between Coventry Road and the church. Other earthworks in the field to the N.
2 No surface evidence ...
The site of a possible Medieval shrunken village. House platforms are visible as earthworks. The site is located 100m north east of the church at Marton.
1 Earthworks and possible house platforms may be indicative of deserted Medieval settlement.
2 This site requires a site visit.
Earthworks, including house platforms, may indicate that this is the site of a Medieval shrunken village. Lidar images show building footings to the west of the village and a moat to the east.
2 The field behind Moat Farm contains a series of earthworks which may represent croft boundaries, trackways etc.
The possible site of a Medieval shrunken village. House platforms and trackways are visible as earthworks. The site lies on the north west edge of Grandborough.
1 Terraces and village earthworks.
2 Hollow ways and house platforms clearly visible.
3 Air photograph
4Terraces, hollow ways and house platforms visible as earthworks on aerial photographs were mapped as part ...
The site of a shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork and on aerial photographs The site is located to the east and south east of Great Wolford.
1 Earthworks indicate a small settlement with a hollow way, house platforms, enclosures for cultivation and/or stock, and ponds and drainage channels. Recently parts of Lower Green were ploughed for ...
The site of a Medieval deserted settlement. House platforms, enclosures, ponds, drainage channels and a hollow way are visible as earthworks. Ploughing has uncovered some Medieval and Post Medieval pottery. The site is located at Lower Green, Old Milverton.
1 Earthworks indicate a small settlement with a hollow way, house platforms, enclosures for cultivation and/or stock, and ponds and drainage channels. Recently parts of Lower Green were ploughed for ...
The site of a Post Medieval deserted settlement. House platforms, enclosures, ponds, drainage channels, and a hollow way are visible as earthworks. Ploughing has uncovered some Medieval and Post Medieval pottery. It is situated at Lower Green, Old Milverton.
2 Earthworks of probable hollow ways and croft boundaries show on aerial photographs. Ridge and furrow is evident beyond these earthworks. This probably represents an area of abandoned Medieval settlement.
The Medieval shrunken settlement of Ansty. Evidence for ridge and furrow cultivation, a hollow way and house platforms survive as earthworks. The site is located 200m south of Ansty Hall.
1 A hollow way running E-W is crossed by a N-S road. At the SE angle of the two roads is a group of six building platforms. One is much ...
The site of a possible Medieval shrunken village at Wootton Wawen. It is visible as an earthwork and features include house platforms and a hollow way.
1 A hamlet in Brailes parish. Rous lists it, and there appear to have been a number of successive partial enclosures. These are recorded in 1430, 1509, 1549 and 1598. ...
The Medieval deserted settlement of Chelmscote. Hollow ways, house platforms and enclosures are visible as earthworks. The site is located 1km north west of Compton Wynyates.
1 Rescue excavation in advance of the construction of a housing estate on part of the deserted settlement. Surface indications included a hollow way running E-W along the S of ...
The site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Leek Wootton. An excavation of the site showed Medieval period activity including a hollow way, house platform and enclosures. The site lies under houses on Tidmarsh Road and The Hamlet.
1 The Domesday book records a priest and a substantial peasant population. C14 documents indicate that the population was still fairly high. The Lay Subsidy of 1428 records only 4 ...
The deserted Medieval settlement of Billesley Trussel. House platforms, hollow ways, enclosures and ridge and furrow cultivation are still visible as earthworks. The settlement is also known from documentary evidence. It is situated to the east of Billesley Hall.
1 There were thirteen entries in the lay subsidies for this village. A chapel here (PRN 1733) was destroyed in the C16.
2 Medium archaeology (B), no entry under ‘History’.
3 A ...
The site of the deserted settlement of Hillborough which is of Medieval date. House platforms, ridge and furrow cultivation, and house platforms are visible as earthworks. The site is located 100m south of Hillborough Manor.
1 Church stands virtually alone. The main settlement has moved to the former hamlet of Hampton on the Hill. Neither Rous nor Dugdale mention the depopulation.
2 Poor archaeology (C), excellent ...
The site of an area of Medieval shrunken village. The settlement lies in the vicinity of Budbrooke Church. Its remains are visible as earthworks.
1 ‘Norton’ occurs in Rous’ list without any further means of identification. This may refer to Norton Lindsey. The destruction of a church is recorded in 1581-90 (PRN 5440), but ...
The site of Norton deserted settlement dating to the Medieval period. Hollow ways, enclosures and possible house platforms are visible as earthworks. The settlement is known from documentary evidence and is situated 1km north of the church, Norton Lindsey.
1 Dodwell appears to have been wholly enclosed at some time before 1704. Since then the ancient hamlet of Dodwell, which consisted of some half-dozen houses a little to the ...
The site of the deserted settlement of Dodwell dating to the Post Medieval period. It is visible as an earthwork. The earthworks include house platforms, hollow ways, enclosures and evidence of ridge and furrow. The site is located 850m west of Bordon Hill, Luddington.
1 The possible area of the medieval settlement, based on the first edition 6″ maps of 1884, 56NE and 56SE.
2 There are 5 entries in Domesday under ‘Wolford’. The Phillimore ...
The extent of Medieval Settlement at Great Wolford as suggested by documentary evidence.
1 Excavation in advance of destruction by the M40. The main part of the excavation covers a row of buildings along the N side of a street, running E-W ...
The site of a Medieval deserted settlement at Dassett Southend. The settlement was excavated and the first buildings on the site date from the 13th century. The site was located 100m north west of the chapel at Little Dassett.