1 1968: More than 30 shallow pits containing early Neolithic flints and pottery were found, together with a number of small post holes which may represent a rectangular building. Evidence ...
A Neolithic settlement was found during an archaeological excavation. Pit clusters and post holes, possibly representing a rectangular building, were discovered. Flint artefacts, including an arrowhead, and pottery were found. The site was located near Brook Street, Warwick.
1 Excavations were carried out on the site of the Mulberry Tree Pub during 1966-7. Immediately above the natural sandstone was a sandy layer containing flint flakes, cores and Neolithic ...
During an excavation evidence for a Neolithic settlement was recovered. This included 33 shallow pits containing flint artefacts and fragments of pottery. A flint scatter was also discovered dating to the same period. The site was located near Market Street, Warwick.
1 Description in Victoria County History.
2 When Warwick Castle was begun in 1068 its site encroached on part of the town, and four houses there belonging to the Abbot of ...
The site of a settlement dating to the early Medieval period at Warwick Castle. Documentary evidence records that the building of the castle led to four houses being demolished.
1 More than 30 shallow pits containing early Neolithic flints and pottery were found, together with a number of small post holes which may represent a rectangular building. Evidence ...
A pit cluster and post holes, which may represent a rectangular building, were found during an excavation. Flints and pottery dating to the Neolithic period were also found. The site probably represented a Neolithic settlement and was located around Brook Street, Warwick.
1 1967: Neolithic occupation was attested by two small pits containing sherds of the same type found during the 1965-6 excavations.
Two small pits were excavated. They contained sherds of pottery which dated to the Neolithic period. They were found at Brook Street, Warwick.
2 Adjacent to the cursus (MWA1921) is an oval or D-shaped enclosure which has a W entrance and appears to enclose two penannular gullies. This may, on morphological grounds, be ...
The site of a possible settlement dating to the Iron Age. Enclosures are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs. It is located 1km north east of the church, Sherbourne.
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 1980: Excavation in advance of redevelopment located on Site D a 17th-18th century cesspit and structures of 18th-19th century date including a house platform possibly associated with the vanished ...
Archaeological excavation revealed evidence for a settlement dating to the Imperial period south of Castle Hill, Warwick. The evidence included a cess pit, a house platform, cellars and former roads.
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 During archaeological observation of a new sewage pipe in 1997 (WA 8249) a scatter of 13th-14th century pottery was recovered in Castle Park. Subsequent excavation revealed unexpectedly well-preserved remains ...
An archaeological excavation in Castle Park revealed evidence of a settlement dating to the Medieval period. Plot boundaries, post holes and three stone lined pits were discovered. Medieval pottery and a leather knife scabbard were among the finds recovered.
1 The suburb of Bridge End developed at the southern end of the Medieval Old Castle Bridge (WA 1963) at a road junction and crossing point. The suburb, which was ...
Bridge End developed as a suburb of the town of Warwick during the Medieval/Post Medieval period. It is depicted on Post Medieval maps. The old road, chapel and Knight's Templar perceptory are visible as cropmarks in Castle Park.
1 Walls dating to the 13th/14th/15th centuries, suggesting the presence of Medieval occupation along the east side of Coventry Road, abandoned in the later Medieval period.
Archaeological trial trenches at this site revealed walls dating to the Medieval period. The site was abandoned in the later Medieval period. The site is now a housing development on Coventry Road, Warwick.
1 Archaeological evaluation in advance of development. Trench 4 contained a series of medieval contexts dating back to the 13th century and including a yard surface, a ditch/pit and a ...
The results of an excavation showed that considerable remains of medeival settlement survive in this part of Castle Park. Evidence included 13th century pottery, pits and a yard surface belonging to that period.
1 A desktop assessment of the Woolpack Hotel identified an area on the south side of the market place which covered three Medieval properties. The Woolpack has been ...
Documentary evidence suggests three buildings stood here in the Medieval period. Archaeological work found two Medieval/Post Medieval wells and several walls.
1 17 pieces of pottery, 14 Roman and 3 possibly Iron Age/Roman found at this location.
2 Noted during the M40 survey. Roman finds dating from the 1st century AD to ...
Findspot - several pieces of Iron Age and Roman pottery were found at 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 Likely that the suburb was well developed by 1123.
The earliest mapping from the 1610 Speed map shows built up frontage of the streets within the suburb while the ...
Medieval suburb stretching out east from Warwick including Smith Street, Church Street, Chapel Road, Priory Road, Gerrard Street, St Johns, Coten End and Mill Street.
1 1965: One sherd of ‘Saxon’ pottery was discovered after the site was cleared down to bedrock. A 0.9m layer of dark grey clay, not from the immediate locality, was ...
Two possible post holes were discovered during an archaeological excavation. Fragments of pottery of Neolithic date were also found. These discoveries probably represent a Neolithic settlement and were found at Market Street, Warwick.
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.