Possible watermill in vicinity of Grandborough.
1 A deed of 1280 mentions two watermills, Cuttole and Baggole in Grandborough Parish.
2 One of these was probably Grandborough Mill (WA 3018).
3 There is ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a watermill in the area of Grandborough in the Medieval period. A sluice is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1884, but any traces of a mill have now gone.
1 There are bridges across the Itchen east to Marton, and across the Leam north to Princethorpe, and west to Wappenbury. This last named bridge crosses by Eathorpe corn mill, ...
Documentary, Place Name
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 The chapel of Blackwell was in existence before 1240. It was a demesne chapel of the Prior of Worcester, but belonged to the church of ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel in Blackwell in the Medieval period.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 A chapel at Armscote belonging to the church of Tredington was granted in 1549 to Richard Field and others and probably demolished. The date of ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel at Armscote during the Medieval period.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 A chapel at Darlingscott belonging to the church of Tredington was granted in 1549 to Richard Field and others and was probably demolished. The date ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a chapel at Darlingscott during the Medieval period.
Site of a Medieval watermill.
1 The mill mentioned in the Domesday Survey was no doubt on the Swift. A mill was attached to the manor of Churchover in 1600 but ...
The Domesday survey records a watermill at Churchover. There are no records after the Post
Site of a Medieval windmill.
1 Post mill. Kirby Windmill (Priory of Monks Kirby). Built by 1291. Exact location not known.
2 In 1291 the Priory of Monks Kirby had a windmill ...
Documentary sources suggest that there was a windmill at Monks Kirby belonging to the Priory. It was of the post mill type, and in use from the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. Its exact location is unknown.
Site of a possible Medieval watermill.
1 The River Avon forms the N boundary of the parish of Church Lawford, and on it, no doubt, was the mill recorded in 1086 ...
The Domesday survey has two mills in the parish of Church Lawford, but this does not correlate with later records. The location is unknown.
Site of Medieval and Post Medieval park.
1 In 1165 and 1187 the Pipe Rolls contain references to the park which surrounded Kenilworth Castle. Further references occur in the 13th century. ...
The site of Queens Park which formed part of the deer park belonging to Kenilworth Castle during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. The earthwork remains of the park pale are still visible. It is located at Chase Wood.
Site of a Medieval chapel.
1 Among lands bought of the Crown by Edward Chamberlayn in 1550 was the late chapel called ‘Sainte Leonardes Chapell’ in Little Wolford. No other reference ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a Medieval Chapel of St Leonard at Little Wolford.
Site of a watermill.
1 A watermill in the manor of Upton is recorded in 1284 and 1394, and a mill is included in the lease of the Manor Place in ...
A watermill at Upton/Haselor for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period. Its exact location is unknown.
Possible site of Medieval chapel.
1 Two private chapels are mentioned in the parish in the C14. In 1344 a licence was granted to Agnes Austin for a chapel in her ...
Documentary evidence suggests that there was a Medieval Chapel at Salford Priors.
1 Earthworks show on air photographs borrowed from NMR – reference numbers not recorded. These have been plotted on the ridge and furrow plot for Ansley Parish (PRN 3935).
An unidentified site, which might be Medieval in date, is visible as an earthwork and on aerial photographs. It is situated on the south side of Ansley.
A watermill.
1 A mill is recorded towards the end of the C13. Information on ownership exists for the latter half of the C19 and early part of the C20. It ...
The site of a watermill dating from the Medieval to the Imperial period, it was located 500m south west of Mere Furlong Coppice.
Possible dovecote.
1 A dovecote is referred to in the manorial possessions of Long Itchington in 1352.
There is evidence from a fourteenth century document for a dovecote, a building for the breeding and housing of doves or pigeons, at a locaton in the parish of Long Itchington.
Site of a Medieval deerpark.
1 There were evidently two parks in Lapworth by the end of the C13, when ‘the greater park’ is recorded. In 1420 ‘the Little Park’ is ...
Documentary records indicate that this was possibly the site of a medieval deer park.
Castle Hill placename.
1 A field adjacent to the holy well (WA 7390) was known locally as Castle Hill field.
Place Name