1 It has been brought to the notice of the Society the fact that a considerable amount of Roman pottery is to be found in the field on the Warwickshire ...
The site of a probable Roman settlement, suggested by a pottery scatter. It is located 700m west of the Rollright Stones.
1 Rectilinear crop marks visible on aerial photographs were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping Project. The site is a possible prehistoric or Romano British settlement. ...
Rectilinear crop marks are visible on aerial photographs.
1 The probable extent of the Medieval settlement, based on the first edition 6″ map of 1884, 57SW.
2 Charter granted 15 May 1231 by Henry III to Hubert de Burgh, ...
Probable extent of Medieval settlement in Long Compton as indicated on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
Site of an Iron Age settlement.
1 An enclosure, first recorded by Stukeley in 1743 as an earthwork. It was relocated on a 1961 vertical aerial photograph. A geophysical survey confirmed ...
The excavation of an Iron Age settlement. Features and finds include enclosures, a ditch, pits, cesspits, an infant burial, animal skulls and pottery. The site is immediately to the north east of the Rollright Stones.