1 Undated features, including post holes, pits and possible gullies, were recorded during the excavation of a trial trench prior to proposed development. The site was adjacent to a ...
Undated post holes, pits and possible gullies were recorded during the excavation of a trial trench. The site is adjacent to a known Anglo-Saxon cemetery. The site is located at Alveston Manor Hotel, Stratford-upon-Avon.
1 Trial trenching in 1969 on the Vicarage site exposed an undisturbed area with pits and post holes containing pottery similar to St Neots ware.
Pits and post holes of Early Medieval date were uncovered during part excavation of the site of the vicarage in Old Town, Stratford on Avon. Pottery of the same period was found in the pits and post holes.
1 1970: During the excavation of a Saxon cemetery a number of Bronze Age pits were found scattered over the whole area of the excavation.
2 Noted by Ordnance Survey.
3 Plan ...
A number of Bronze Age pits were found when archaeological work was taking place at Alveston Manor, Stratford-on-Avon.
1 Settlement features from the 1st/2nd centuries AD were found. A later 4th century ditch also contained stone which may have come from a building.
Four pits and a post hole dating from the late 1st or 2nd century were found. One pit was cut by a 4th century ditch. Possible building stone was also found. The site forms part of the Romano-British settlement of Tiddington.
1 Foundation trenches for an extension were observed at in Tiddington Rd on site in the centre of the Roman settlement previously excavated in 1937-8. Along the south and east ...
Roman features and finds, including high status pottery, associated with the Roman settlement at Tiddington were found during archaeological work. The site is on Tiddington Road, Stratford-on-Avon.
1 A fragment of walling, first exposed during excavation in the 1860s, was re-excavated during community excavations in 2011. Additional pits and possible post-holes were recorded. These foundations were dated ...
A fragment of walling, first exposed during excavation in the 1860s, was re-excavated during community excavations in 2011. Additional pits and possible post-holes were recorded.