add ref from west mids hereĀ
Revealed by excavation, the medieval church of St Lawrence had at least one aisle on the north side. Part of the chancel was also uncovered and a tower is mentioned in documentary sources. The ruinous church building was used as a barn for a short period.
1 At the E entrance to town, the Hospital of St John the Baptist. It was founded by Henry, Earl of Warwick, in the time of Henry II (1154-89), for ...
The remains of a Medieval chapel associated with the Medieval Hospital of St John. The site is now in use as a museum.
1 St Michael’s Church was associated with the hospital (PRN 1927). The hospital was founded in the early 12th century. The chapel was probably rebuilt in the 15th century, after ...
The remains of St Michael's Church. The original chapel is probably of the same time as St Michael's Leper Hospital. The surviviing structure dates to the later Medieval period with Post Medieval alterations. The building lies along the Birmingham Road, Saltisford, Warwick.
2 The domestic buildings of Warwick Castle included the church of All Saints, founded by Henry de Beaumont before 1119. The church was served by secular canons and was united ...
The site of the Medieval Church of All Saints at Warwick Castle which was founded before 1119. In 1128 it fell out of use because the Bishop of Worcester felt a castle was an inappropriate site for a church. Its exact location within the castle is unknown.
1 A church-like building is marked at roughly SP2864 on Speed’s map of 1610. Foundations have been uncovered at SP2864 and in dry weather the outline of a building is ...
One of two possible sites for the Church of St Helena dating to the Medieval period. A church appears on Speed's map of 1610 abd building foundations have been discovered here. The outline of a church like building is sometimes visible as a cropmark in the Castle Park.
1 The church was granted in 1123 to St Mary’s College. In 1367 it was united with St Mary’s. By the late 15th century the church housed the grammar school ...
The site of the Church of St John the Baptist which was built during the Medieval period and is mentioned in documentary sources. It was leased to a tanner after the Dissolution and appears to have been demolished by 1711. It stood in the present Market Place, Warwick.
1 The church was granted to St Mary’s College in 1123 and was united with it in 1367. It apparently continued in use as a church for some time after ...
The site of the Medieval Church of St Lawrence. It was united with St Mary's in 1367 and ceased to be a church some time after this date. The churchyard was rediscovered in 1839 during road widening. It stood in West Street, Warwick.
1 In the suburb on the W of the town there was a house of Dominican or Black Friars, established towards the end of the reign of Henry III, but ...
The site of a Dominican Friary established in the Medieval period, it stood in the vicinity of Friar Street, Warwick. The friary was demolished after the Dissolution around 1551. Recent archaeological excavation has found several burials possibly from the friary cemetery.
1 The church of ‘St Sepulchre and St Helen’ was granted to St Mary’s College in 1123, but no more is heard of St Helen’s. It stood on the site ...
There is documentary evidence to suggest that a Medieval church stood on the site of St Sepulchre's Priory before the 11th century. The site of the church is in Priory Park, Warwick.
1 The inner precinct area limits appears to be defined by the multiple bank and ditch surviving best to the south and east of the priory.
2 Reappraisal of evidence ...
The inner precinct area of St. Sepulchre's Priory in Warwick
1 An appraisal was carried out of the undercroft of Warwick Castle. In the medieval period the undercroft was of fairly high status, but later it was used as a ...
An archaeological survey of the domestic range undercroft at Warwick Castle noted its architectural history. The domestic range undercroft was built in the Medieval period and has largely escaped alteration and retains many original features.
1 This is the more likely location for the site of the Church of St Helena than the grid reference given by WA 1954. The site is clearly shown ...
One of two possible sites for the church of St Helena which stood in the Medieval period. This site is believed to be the more likely because Speed's map of 1610 marks it as standing quite far from the river. The site is located in Castle Park.
1 On the site of a former parochial church of St Helen (PRN 1961) Henry de Newburgh began in 1109 to erect the Priory of St Sepulchre. The priors and ...
The site of the Priory of St Sepulchre, which was founded in the Medieval period. Archaeological work uncovered evidence of some of the buildings and burials. The site lies in Priory Park, Warwick.
1 The Medieval church was first recorded in 1123. The present building was erected in 1779-80 (PRN 5472). Little is known of the old church, which consisted of nave, chancel, ...
The site of the church of St Nicholas which dated to the Early Medieval and Medieval periods, though little is known about it. The present church was built around 1780 and stands on St Nicholas Church Street, Warwick.