1 Aerial photographs.
2 Aerial photographs show ridge and furrow and also a disturbed appearance of the ground; there are also pools, possibly the result of quarrying. Site inaccessible due to ...
Aerial photographs have identified an area of ridge and furrow cultivation with disturbed ground and ponds which are probably the result of quarrying. Of Medieval/Post Medieval date, these features are situated at The Holdings, Dunsmore Heath.
1 A trench was dug in the garden of 3 The Butts to try to locate the Medieval town ditch. The ditch was not located. A large quarry of 13th ...
The site of a Medieval quarry. Located behind 3 and 7 The Butts, Warwick.
1 The castle quarry lay 400m S of Kenilworth Castle.
2 On the NW is a rock face 3.3m high. The base of the quarry is uneven with tree and scrub ...
The site of Castle Quarry which dates to the Medieval period and was presumably in use during the building of the castle. It survives as an earthwork and is located 400m south of the castle.
1 The red sandstone quarry of Kenilworth Abbey lay to the N, W of Fieldgate Lane.
2 There appear to be two quarries centred at SP3872 and SP3872.
3 The floors of ...
The site of a quarry dating to the Medieval period. It is believed to have been in use during the building of Kenilworth Abbey. It is still visible as an earthwork and is located 300m north west of the Abbey.
1 A mound at SP33077235 is likely to be the Hundred mound of Motslow.
2On modern OS maps this is shown as a quarry.
The site of a mound which is visible as an earthwork. The mound may have been the Post Medieval meeting place of the hundred of Motslow. It is situated 400m south of Stoneleigh.
12 1966: The site had been much disturbed by Post Medieval buildings and drains and no trace was found of Medieval or earlier buildings. A series of seven large pits, ...
The site of several Medieval pits which were discovered during an excavation. The pits contained fragments of pottery and two coins
1 In the field known as the Vineyard, adjoining the church on the west, are some mounds and ditches which have often been supposed to mark the foundations of ...
A series of earthworks and parchmarks which indicate the site of a moated manor site and related building are visible on Google Earth and LiDAR imagery. Previously interpreted as a quarry site.
1 A number of important earthworks exist outside the castle. Running in a SE direction for a length of about 137m is an artificial bank thrown across the valley from ...
The site of a dam which was created during the Medieval period to create the water defences at Kenilworth castle known as the Mere, which no longer exists. The earthwork bank is still visible and is situated to the south, west and north of the castle.
1 This field contain traces of ridge and furrow in one end which appear to have been disturbed by later quarrying. There is also a lot of ridge and ...
Ridge and furrow cultivation which has been disturbed by later quarrying, possibly for the extraction of gravel. It may date to the Medieval through to the Imperial period. The earthworks are situated 200m northeast of the church at Harborough Magna.
1 Flints and Roman sherds indicate cultivation at some level, also 6 Medieval sherds. Much post-Medieval material could indicate a midden, or housing in, or near, the field – ...
Several quarry pits of unknown date were found at this location as were sherds of Roman, Medieval and Post-Medieval pottery. The site is located 700m north west of Highdown Hill Plantation.
1 A scatter of Modern brick, tile and slate may indicate a building or dumping of occupation material in a hollow. The field also contains a marl pit and the ...
A scatter of modern building debris suggests that the material may have been dumped into an earlier hollow or quarry of unknown date. It is located 800m north west of Tatchbrook Mallory.
1 Site of ‘Potters old claypit’ (1681). Waster potsherds of possible 14th century date found.
The site of a clay pit where clay was extracted for use in the pottery industry. The clay pit might date to the Medieval period. It is situated 600m north west of Collycroft.
1 Earthwork banks and a ditch seen on aerial photographs beside the railway to the north of Brandon Castle were mapped as part of the English Heritage National Mapping ...
Earthwork banks and a ditch can be seen on aerial photographs beside the railway to the north of Brandon Castle.
1 Site of an old quarry shown on the First Edition Ordnance Survey map
Former stone quarry at Wharf Street, Warwick. Exact date of quarrying activity is not known.
1 On the southern bank of the stanford brook a series of pits can be seen on aerial photgraphs. Two linear ditches can be seen extending to the south ...
A series of pits and ditches can be seen in a field to the south of Hopyard Coppice Barton on the Heath.
1 The hollow way seen on aerial photographs on the sothern bank of the River Avon 50m to the east of the B4029 Fosse Way, near to Bretford Bridge ...
A hollow way can be seen on aerial photographs on the sothern bank of the River Avon 50m to the east of the B4029 Fosse Way near to Bretford Bridge.
1 A wide shallow ditch, c.40 x 40m, is evident on LiDAR imagery enclosing a platform measuring c.20 x 20m. It is possible that it represents a moated platform. However, ...
A possible moat ditch surrounding a platform is evident on LiDAR imagery to the north of Welcome Bank Farm. It is alternatively the result of quarrying activity in the area.
1 Possible site of potter’s clay pit suggested by field name Potter’s Pit Close recorded in 1838-9. In 1746 however this was Heath Field.
2 This may be the potters ...
Potter's Pit Close, the possible site of a clay pit which was in use during the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. They site is suggested by documentary evidence and is thought to have been located 500m north of Alcester Lodge.
1 An archaeological evaluation found no significant archaeological features. One part of the site was enclosed by a ditch in the Medieval period. No evidence was recovered for ...
An archaeological excavation uncovered a ditch dating to the Medieval period and a quarry dating to the Medieval and Post Medieval periods. It is located 500m east of the church, Ladbroke.
1 Assumed to be associated with the construction with St Sepulchre’s Priory.
Quarry at St Sepulchre's Priory, Warwick
1 In 1185 ‘the mill at Henlea’ was granted to Wootton Priory by Henry de Montford. There were two mills at Henley in 1296 and three were mentioned in 1326. ...
Henley Mill, the site of a watermill for which there is documentary evidence from the Medieval period onwards. At some time in the Imperial period it was powered by a steam engine. All the machinery has gone. The building survives, east of Johnson Place.
1 A medieval quarry pit, a late 17th- to early 18th-century stone vaulted cellar and a well of possibly similar date were recorded during observation at 9-11 Chapel Street. The ...
A medieval quarry pit was recorded during observation at 9-11 Chapel Street.
1 In 1989 an excavation prior to the construction of Bard’s Walk shopping centre found 52.5 kg of iron slag. This suggests the presence of an iron working site ...
A large quantity of iron slag was found during an excavation in Wood Street, Stratford upon Avon. This suggests that there may have been an iron works in this area during the Medieval period.
1 Iron working slag was recovered from Medieval features during an evaluation carried out be Warwickshire Museum in 1996. The amount found suggests the presence of iron working in ...
Iron slag was recovered from Medieval features, suggesting that there was an iron works in this area. The site is located 250m south west of the church at Pillerton Priors.