2 Earthworks of shrunken Medieval settlement to the W of Dassett Northend show on aerial photographs.
3 A watching brief was to be carried out during the excavation of foundation trenches ...
The remains of a settlement to the west of Northend are visible as earthworks. They may be the remains of the Medieval shrunken village.
12 A small area of earthworks were identified, from Google Earth satellite imagery, by the AOC Assessment of Local Services Villages for Stratford-on-Avon District Council in 2012.
3 This feature possibly ...
A series of earthworks visible on satellite imagery; these features are related to the former extent of medieval settlement at Northend.
1 Site description. Ongoing work by the Feldon Archaeological Society has recorded a settlement site, first indicated by a wall uncovered by the farmer. The pottery assemblage spans the middle ...
Iron Age and Romano-British occupation site.
1 Excavation in advance of destruction by the M40. The main part of the excavation covers a row of buildings along the N side of a street, running E-W ...
The site of a Medieval deserted settlement at Dassett Southend. The settlement was excavated and the first buildings on the site date from the 13th century. The site was located 100m north west of the chapel at Little Dassett.
1 The name ‘Burton’ implies some kind of fortified centre, which is likely to have been on the high ground near the church. The Medieval earthworks around the church ...
The possible site of an Early Medieval settlement at Burton Dassett. The remains of a substantial enclosure suggest that a settlement may have existed here before the Norman Conquest.
1 The village used to surround the church near the summit of the hill, where there is now only a farm and vicarage. The main village is now ...
The site of the Medieval shrunken village of Burton. The remains of the village survive as earthworks, some of which have been excavated. The site lies to the west of the church at Burton Dassett.
1 In ploughed field pottery and coin of George III picked up. Features have been ploughed out but it was possible to pick up the line of shallow hollow ways ...
An area of shrunken village at Knightcote which dates to the Post Medieval period. It is known from the earthwork remains of house platforms and hollow ways. A Post Medieval coin was also found.