1 1972: Observation and excavation during redevelopment. No sign of the town ditch was found. Two Medieval pits were found, one contained part of a 14th century face jug, the ...
Partial excavation of this site uncovered pits of Medieval date. The site is located in 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 1980: Excavation in advance of possible redevelopment located probable 12th century occupation in the form of a 12th century pit in Trench B and a yard trace in Trench ...
A Medieval pit and traces of a yard were found during an archaeological excavation. The discoveries suggest that the site was occupied during the 12th century. The site is 50m north of Guy's Tower, Warwick Castle.
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 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.
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 A post-medieval pit was uncovered near to the street frontage. The pit was truncated and it is likely that any structural remains would also have been disturbed.
Truncated pit of post-medieval or possibly later medieval date.
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 1975: Excavation in advance of demolition of stables. Material spanning the 12th to 16th century was recovered from a large shallow pit. This pit contained bone, charcoal and Medieval ...
Excavation of a Medieval rubbish pit produced material from the 12th to the 16th centuries. The site is at Castle Lane, Warwick.
2 The foundations of the College (PRN 1984) cut an earlier pathway. Running E-W under the college was a well-built wall, built with re-used stone and including architectural fragments of ...
Archaeological excavations at St Mary's College revealed Medieval structures including walls, pits, buildings and a well.
1 A number of cut features and a wall, indicating Medieval burgage plot boundaries, together with evidence of back-plot activity, were recorded during evaluation at Coten End. Two northwest-southeast aligned ...
A number of cut features and a wall, indicating Medieval burgage plot boundaries, together with evidence of back-plot activity, were recorded during evaluation at Coten End.
1 A medieval pit with 13th-16th century pottery as well as a possible medieval wall was discovered at the rear of nos. 28-30 Smith Street from an evaluation in ...
A medieval pit with 13th-16th century pottery as well as a possible medieval wall discovered at the rear of nos. 28-30 Smith Street.
1 Archaeological evaluation of land to the rear of buildings in Jury Street, Warwick, recovered evidence of Medieval activity dating back to the 12th century in the form of pits ...
Medieval pits and postholes were uncovered in Jury Street, Warwick.
1 Remains of an outbuilding, consistent with Medieval building types and in an area which was mainly occupied during the Medieval period. The outbuilding may have been to ...
The remains of a stone-lined pit and a wall, which probably formed a Medieval period outbuilding, were found in Brooke Close, Warwick.
1 An archaeological evaluation on land adjacent to Longbridge Manor, Warwick was carried out by Warwickshire Musuem. It revealed a single pit containing 13th century pottery. This suggests ...
An archaeological evaluation at this site uncovered a pit containing Medieval pottery of 13th century date. The site is to the east of Longbridge Roundabout.
1 An archaeological evaluation at this location involved excavation trial trenching either side of the former London Road, close to the Medieval Avon bridge. The excavation identified a number ...
The remains of Medieval and Post Medieval structures, and a series of 13th century pits, were found during an excavation. This settlement was located just south of Warwick Castle Old Bridge.
1 Evidence for Medieval activity was recorded in the form of a pit, containing pottery of 12th/13th century in date. Ditches of possibly earlier origin – possibly an Anglo-Saxon defensive ...
A 12th/13th century (Medieval Period) pit was found during archaeological work at Castle Hill Baptist Church Warwick. There were also two undated ditches, possibly with a defensive function.
1 Some 1.8m of 19th century garden soil was stripped revealing an unfinished well and a series of pits dating to the 11th-13th century. There were traces of timber buildings ...
An excavation of a part of the medeival settlement uncovered an unfinished well, a series of pits, and traces of timber buildings, all of Medieval date. The site is at the east end of Puckerings Lane, Warwick.
1 Evidence relating to the settlement of Warwick during late Saxon times. Several pits and a beam slot dating from the early 11th century were found. Waste disposal ...
Late Anglo Saxon pits and a timber slot were found under the Woolpack Hotel. This shows that Warwick was occupied in Early Medieval (Saxon) times. Other evidence supports a typical Medieval urban property.