1 A quantity of Romano British sherds, including both coarse and Samian sherds, collected by members of University of Warwick Extra-Mural class from ploughed land adjacent to Billesley deserted Medieval ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement suggested by a large scatter of Roman pottery. The site lies 100m east of the church at Billesley.
1 Finds made in 1975/6: a concentration of Roman pottery and a few pieces of Roman tile in the field opposite.
3 Field-walking carried out since 1989, immediately E of the ...
Various finds of Roman date, including pottery and tile fragments, have been found to the north east of Glasshouse Wood. The finds suggest that this might be the site of a Roman settlement.
1 Roman pot and a La Tene III brooch from this area.
2 Samian sherd in a ‘shaft’ 1.52m deep. A small quantity of Roman pot and a coin were also ...
Fragments of Roman pottery, a brooch and a coin have been found 1km east of Bubbenhall. This suggests that this may have been an area of Roman settlement.
1 Fieldwalking in 1986. Sparse scatter of Roman pot over whole area walked. Dense concentration of pot and stone in NW corner of field. Two roof slates ...
The site of a Roman settlement. The site is indicated by numerous finds that have been discovered. These include coins, brooches, pins and pottery. The site is located 400m south west of Staple Hill.
1 Finds made with a metal detector in 1986 at SP099503. Strap end, head of dolphin brooch, fragment of bracelet, three lead weights, eight Roman coins of 3rd – 4th ...
The site of a settlement dating to the Roman period and known from various finds, including coins. It is located 250m south east of Marlcliff.
1 1984: Field survey. 624 sherds of possible Early/Middle Iron Age pottery were recovered. These were predominantly in shell gritted fabrics and included coarse ware jars with shoulders decorated by ...
The possible site of an Iron Age settlement. The site is suggested by a scatter of pottery sherds. It is located 800m south west of Crimscote.
1 A well discovered in a quarry with bones of elk, cow, Roman pottery and a few coins, one of Lucius Aurelianus. Other wells have been found in the same ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement. The site is suggested by the various finds that have been recovered in the area. These include Roman coins, animal bone and pottery. Building remains and a well have also been found, 580m east of Rough Hills.
1 1986: Fieldwork in a field called Allgreen produced quantities of shell gritted pottery probably indicating Iron Age occupation.
The site of a possible Iron Age settlement indicated by finds of pottery. The site is located 300m north east of Idlicote.
1 A quantity of Romano British sherds, including two sherds of Samian, were found during fieldwork at Allgreen in 1983.
2 1986: Fieldwork produced a Roman pottery scatter which is dense ...
The site of a possible Roman settlement identified from finds of pottery and coins. It is located 300m north east of Idlicote.
1 A complex of walls. Much disturbed by ploughing and tree growth, but there appeared to be several buildings covering a long period. The earlier buildings were well-built with mortared ...
The remains of several Roman buildings were found during an excavation. Roman coins and pottery sherds were also found. The site was located in the area of Abbey Fields, Alcester.
1 In the layer beneath the toe of the Roman rampart a number of hearths were uncovered. Two of these consisted of small pits cutting the pre-rampart turf line, and ...
Several hearths of Prehistoric date were found during an excavation and may represent the site of a settlement. Various Prehistoric finds were also recovered. The site was located in the area of Tibbets Close, Alcester.
1 Scatter of Roman pot, tile, worked stone and a coin of the House of Valentinian.
2 Six pieces of pottery collected. All could be Roman, one or two possibly Medieval/Post ...
Findspot - a scatter of Roman pottery, tile, worked stone, and a coin of the House of Valentinian are amongst the finds recovered. The site lies to the north of Chesterton Green.
1 Mr Griffin discovered c673 grammes of Roman pottery including Samian, Nene Valley, Oxfordshire colour-coated ware, mortarium, Severn valley ware and Wappenbury grey wares. Date range of Romano British material ...
The site of a settlement dating to the Roman period has been identified from finds of a vast quantity of Roman pottery. It is located 800m south west of Walton.
1 Gravel pit opened in the 1920s and finds collected on a number of occasions. These included Iron Age pottery and ‘pot boilers’, probably indicating that there was an Iron ...
Fragments of pottery and 'pot boilers' have been found south of Tiddington Road, Stratford upon Avon. The finds suggest that this might have been an Iron Age settlement.
2 Enclosures and linear features show on aerial photographs.
3 A scatter of Roman pottery was discovered during field survey.
Enclosures and linear features, which are visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs, and a scatter of pottery suggest that this is the site of a Roman settlement. The site is located 1km north of King's Coughton.
2 Slight traces of possible rectilinear enclosure show on aerial photographs.
3 Roman pot and a La Tene III brooch were found on the surface, exact location uncertain. Site 97 in ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement. An enclosure is visible on aerial photographs and the remains of a ditch were found during an excavation. Fragments of pottery and a brooch have been found on the site which lies 1km east of Bubbenhall.
1 Area of Roman settlement identified during field survey. The occupation scatter included much Roman pottery, some tile, animal bone, iron objects, one quern fragment and two coins were found ...
The site of a Roman settlement. Fragments of Roman pottery, tile, animal bone have been found here. Post holes, a ditch and two hearths were found during an excavation. The site is located 200m south of Princethorpe.
1 1985: a hole was dug in the back garden of a house on Bleachfield Street to see what could be found. Pottery from this hole was examined and was ...
The remains of a Roman building were found during archaeological work in Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Roman pottery and coins were also found at this site.
1 Roman pottery scatter located. Fairly thick scatter of pottery with one or two pieces of tile, a few pieces of stone and animal bone. Pottery is mostly orange and ...
Various finds of a Roman date, including fragments of pottery, a ring, coins and a glass bead, suggest that this might be the site of a Roman settlement. The site is located 600m east of Bidford Grange.
1 A single residual sherd of Anglo-Saxon pottery was recorded from 77 Tiddington Road. Although too much should not be made of a single sherd, this could represent a further ...
Sherds of Anglo-Saxon pottery and ditches and gullies have been recorded in work at 77 and 79 Tiddington Road. These could represent a further Anglo-Saxon focus along Tiddington Road.
1 During the autumn of 1966, a large number of potsherds were picked up in ploughed fields. In April 1967 an extensive search of fields was conducted and the spread ...
Findspot - a large number of pottery sherds were found 600m north of Lower Brailes suggesting that this might be the site of a Roman settlement.
1 A small field bordering the River Itchen, and lying in the angle between the river and the railway, has regularly turned up Roman sherds when cultivated. Pottery was collected ...
Pottery, tile and a coin dating to the Roman period, which may represent a settlement site, has been found over several years, 700m north of Snowford Bridge.
1 On the N slope of the hill, on what appears to be a levelled area, a heavy scatter of Romano British pottery has been revealed by the plough. Other ...
Numerous pieces of Roman pottery have been found on Blacklow Hill. This may indicate that there may once have been a Roman Settlement there.
1 A large quantity of Roman pottery, including grey and orange coarseware, and metal objects suggest settlement activity in this area. There are cropmarks in the field that could ...
The possible site of a Roman settlement. Various finds, including pottery and metal objects have been found at the location and the area contains cropmarks. The site is located 1km north east of Badesley Clinton.