1 10 sherds of pottery and glass from pit H of the Shire Hall excavations. Also a bone domino.
21956 Rescue excavation and salvage during building work led to the ...
During excavations at Shire Hall, Warwick,Medieval and Post Medieval pottery sherds, a bone domino and other finds were discovered from a number of rubbish pits.
1 The stone castle is built on the remains of an earlier mount and court fort, some of the earth foundations of which are still traceable. The spot where the ...
Phase one of the building of Kenilworth Castle shows that it was originally built as a motte and bailey castle from 1122 onwards . The motte is still visible as an earthwork, inside the later great keep.
1 In 1154, when monks were settled at Cryfield Grange (PRN 2852-3) the village was moved to Hurst. Hurst was anciently a village consisting of nineteen houses, of which by ...
The possible site of the Post Medieval shrunken village of Hurst. It is situated to the east of Broadwells Wood.
1 A large ditch runs across the Birch Abbey site following the contour and may have served a dual purpose as a drainage and a boundary ditch. In places the ...
A ditch was found during an excavation. It was Roman in date and numerous human burials were found within it. Sherds of Roman pottery were also found. The site was located in the area of Newport Drive, Alcester.
1 A mound in the SW corner of the field was destroyed 10+ years ago and according to the farmer a watching brief was maintained by the Museum. A ...
The site of a mound of unknown date. Fragments of worked flint and sherds of Roman and Medieval pottery were also found in this location, 300m south east of Tatchbrook Mallory.
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 A rectangular enclosure, partly double-ditched, and linear features show on air photographs.
3 Field survey indicated scatters of Roman pottery and tile in three main areas. 1: Over the rectangular ...
A rectangular enclosure and linear features are visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. A field survey found a Roman building and occupational debris that suggested a prosperous villa, possibly overlying an Iron Age site. The site is situated south east of Bidford on Avon.
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 Archaeological evaluation of land off Waterloo Road, Bidford on Avon produced no significant evidence for Romano-British or Anglo-Saxon activity. One gully in Trench 27 produced a single sherd ...
One sherd of pottery, dating to the Roman period, was found in a gully during archaeological trial trenching. The site is located 500m north of Bidford Bridge, on land off Waterloo Road, Bidford-on-Avon.
1 An archaeological evaluation at Hunter’s Moon, Flecknoe, in the centre of the medieval village, revealed RB pottery, a possible RB gully, and Medieval boundary gullies dating from the 11th ...
During archaeological work fragments of Roman pottery were found. Several gullies dating to the Roman and Medieval periods were also recorded. They were found 200m south east of the church at Flecknoe.
1 An evaluation which included trenching and a geophysical survey was undertaken by the Warwickshire Museum. Trial trenches uncovered a series of Medieval gullies some of which contained pottery. ...
Gullies and pottery dating to the Medieval period were found during an archaeological excavation. They are located 200m north east of Salford Priors.
1 By damming two streams Geoffrey de Clinton or his son created the Mere or Great Pool. This was 1.2km long and in places 152m wide and defended Kenilworth Castle ...
The site of Kenilworth Mere, a Medieval pool created as part of Kenilworth Castle's defences, and of its associated dam. Field boundaries still mark the area it covered, which was to the west of the Castle.