1 165sq.m behind Nos 25, 31 and 33 Brook Street was excavated in summer 1973 prior to redevelopment. There were at least 33 cess and rubbish pits of Medieval ...
A pit cluster of Medieval and Post Medieval rubbish and cess pits was found during an excavation. Two ovens and pottery of the same period was also discovered. A small amount of Neolithic flint was also recovered. The site is situated on Brook Street, Warwick.
1 Excavations carried out in 1972 between Joyce Pool and Barrack Street, in advance of redevelopment, revealed substantial traces of the northern defences of the town. These included a robber ...
Evidence of the Medieval northern defences and suburban occupation of Warwick was uncovered during archaeological work. Ditches, wells, cess and rubbish pits and pottery, some decorated, were found on the north side of Barrack Street.
1 A watching brief at 16 – 18 High Street revealed medieval rubbish pits, potential evidence for copper working, a stone lined well and other stone walls of probable 17th ...
A stone lined well and rubbish pits dating to the medieval period were found behind houses on High Street, Warwick. Several wall foundations of 17th-18th century date were also found.
1 The excavation revealed a series of alluvial layers, a probable palaeochannel, a stone lines drain possibly with an associated sump, three negative features and a stone wall base. ...
Post Medieval features discovered during excavations of the former Potterton Works site.
3 Scheduled as Warwickshire Monument No 172.
4 The Priory (PRN 1958) came after the Dissolution into the hands of Thomas Hawkins, who demolished the greater part of the Priory and ...
The remains of The Priory, a Post Medieval house located in Priory Park. Information about the building has been retrieved from excavation, documents and the remains of the building left in the park. Much of it was dismantled and taken to America to be re-erected in 1925.
2 The foundations of the College (PRN 1984) cut an earlier pathway. Running E-W under the college was a well-built wall, built with re-used stone and including architectural fragments of ...
Archaeological excavations at St Mary's College revealed Medieval structures including walls, pits, buildings and a well.
Excavation of Post Medieval features.
1 Observation during reconstruction of Medieval precinct wall revealed 1 – 1.1m of deposits. A sandstone crosswall was also observed. Finds included fragments of late Medieval ...
Site of a post medieval wall. The wall lies along The Butts, Warwick.
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 Stands on the N side of the High Street immediately inside the W gate. The buildings are set above the level of the High Street. On the High Street ...
The Lord Leycester Hospital on the High Street in Warwick dates from the Medieval period. It is a timber framed building. Some parts were built or rebuilt during the 14th century.
1 Built in 1626 for the Stoughton family on site of St John’s Hospital. The Stoughtons remained in possession until the 18th century, it was retained by the Earl ...
St John's House was originally a family house built in the Post Medieval period. It has subsequently been used as a school room, military record, pay office and the headquarters of the Warwickshire yeomanry. It is now a museum and is situated in St Johns Street, Warwick.
1 Longbridge Manor was the former home of the Staunton family. In 1616 an inventory of the goods of Humphrey Staunton showed the manor house to comprise a hall, parlour ...
Longbridge Manor, a manor house first built during the Medieval period but altered during the Post Medieval period. A fishpond associated with the house is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886. It is situated 1km north east of Sherbourne.
1 Roger, Earl of Warwick (1119-53) granted a small manor beyond the bridge on the S side of Warwick to the Knights Templars. This was eventually transferred to the Knights ...
The site of a preceptory of the Knight Templar during the Medieval period. Documentary evidence notes that a manor house surrounded by a moat was given to the Order in the 1100s. The house had been demolished by 1786 and it stood in Castle Park, Warwick.
1 The fortification of Warwick was complicated by the building of a town wall, possibly placed near Ethelfleda’s rampart (PRN 2191). The earth rampart was located during excavation in 1964. ...
Warwick defences, consisting of a Town Wall and Ditch. Documentary evidence has suggested the line for the Medieval Defences, which has been subject to excavation; in places it survives a a rock-cut ditch with eroded bedrock backfill.
1 A medieval pit with 13th-16th century pottery as well as a possible medieval wall was discovered at the rear of nos. 28-30 Smith Street from an evaluation in ...
A medieval pit with 13th-16th century pottery as well as a possible medieval wall discovered at the rear of nos. 28-30 Smith Street.
1 Arch Eval revealed two Post Medieval pits and a brick structure. The bricks date from the 18th/19th century, however no building was evident on any maps dating from 1610. ...
During an archaeological excavation two Post Medieval pits and brick walls were identified in the area of Bridge End, Warwick.
1 First discovered in 1997, the floor was cleaned by a specialist and then recorded. Twenty -five individual slip decorated tiles were identified, many designs are similar to ...
The remains of a Medieval tiled floor which consists of glazed, decorated ceramic floor tiles, lies in Guy's Tower, Warwick Castle.
1 Documentary research shows that construction of the present tower began in 1380s. The main usage seems to have been high status living accomodation.
Guy's Tower at Wawick Castle dates to the Medieval period. Documentary evidence says that construction of the lower part of the tower began in the 1380's.