1 The possible extent of the medieval settlement based on the OS map of 1887, 33SE.
2 Domesday lists Radford Semele in Stoneleigh Hundred. The Phillimore edition gives a grid ref ...
The possible extent of the medieval settlement based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887.
2 Linear crop marks show on aerial photographs. Some of these marks appear to form an enclosure.
Linear features, of unknown date, appear as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are located 100m north of Parlour Spinney.
1 A worked flake was found in an unstratified context.
Find of a prehistoric worked flake in Southam Road, Radford Semele.
1 Find of a seal matrix in, or before 1992. No grid reference was given and the method of recovery was not recorded.
Find of a medieval seal matrix in Radford Semele. The exact location is not known
1 The Manor House is mainly modern, but has a 16th century timber-framed nucleus. It was never used as a manor house, but was the Greswalde-Williams hunting lodge at ...
A manor house which was originally built during the Post Medieval period but later additions were made during the Imperial period. It is situated on Southam Road, Radford Semele.
1 Radford was known for miles around for its beer. In 1900 a new brewery was constructed. Owing to a greatly increasing demand the building was extended in 1907. A ...
The site of Thornley's Brewery which was in use towards the end of the Imperial period. The brewery was demolished during the 1970s but it had been situated 100m south of Radford Road, Radford Semele.
Find of Iron Age coin.
1 ‘Catuvellauni’, billon unit, of Cunobeline. Metal detector find by Mr. S. Gaskins at Radford Semele, January 1994.
Find
1 Smithy marked on 1886 map.
The site of a blacksmiths workshop which was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated at Radford Hall and is marked on the Ordnance Survey Map of 1886.
1 The village stocks were on the W side of Church Lane at the top of Southam Road. J Hitchcox never saw them, but his father pointed out their position ...
The site of a pillory or stocks, a wooden frame through which criminals would put their hands and heads and be exposed to public ridicule. The pillory was in use during the Imperial period and was situated at the junction of Church Land and Southam Road, Radford Semele.
1 Fragment of Medieval decorated floor tile from here presented to Museum. This site square with trees around it, a raised area. ‘They always say there used to be an ...
The possible site of a Medieval building, the evidence for which is an earthwork. A Medieval floor tile was found at the site which lies 400m south west of Furlong Pit Spinney.
1 The pound is on the turnpike E of the village. It was used about twelve times earlier this century for stray cattle etc. It was last used by the ...
The site of a pound which was used for penning livestock during the Imperial period. It was located on Southam Road, Radford Semele.
1 Tollhouse marked at the junction of the Fosse and Southam Road.
2 A gentleman wrote in 1913 that he could remember a toll bar on the Fosse.
The site of a toll house, where tolls were collected from travellers using the toll road. The toll house is marked on the Tithe Award Map of 1843. It was situated at the junction of Southam Road and Fosse Way, Radford Semele.
1 In 1969 a concentration of Medieval pottery was found in the corner of a field between St Nicholas Church and the modern village. A trench, about 1m by 7m ...
The possible site of a shrunken village of Medieval date. The site is located 200m south of the church at Radford Semele. It was partially excavated in 1969.
1 W J Hitchcox says that the tollgate was situated on the turnpike about 25m E of the White Lion. In the 1920s the footings were discovered and again in ...
The site of a toll gate, where travellers would have paid a toll to use the turnpike road. It dated to the Imperial period and was located on the southern side of Southam Road, Radford Semele.
1 Chancel with N vestry, nave with N aisle and S porch, and W tower. The Medieval church was probably built early in the C12 and enlarged in the C14, ...
The Parish Church of St. Nicholas which has its origins in the Medieval period but which was largely rebuilt during the Imperial period. Several finds of Medieval date have been found in the churchyard. The church is situated 100m east of Radford Hall.
1 Of brick and concrete construction, in good condition.
A Second World War pillbox. It is situated on the former railway embankment at the west end of the viaduct over the canal at Radford Locks.
1 Pottery, glass, tile, clay pipe fragments found during field survey.
Find spot - various finds of Imperial and modern date were found during a field walking survey 300m south of Crown Hill.
1 SP 34566 63600 Area of Ridge and Furrow 200m south east of Hill Farm visible on Aerial Millenium Mapping.
2 SP 33874 63175 Area of Ridge and Furrow identified of ...
Medieval ridge and furrow cultivation in the parish of Radford Semele. In some areas is is visible as an earthwork. Elsewhere it is visible on aerial photographs.
2 Undated linear cropmarks, including a square enclosure with what appears to be an entrance to the west, show on aerial photographs.
Linear features including a square enclosure, of unknown date, appear as cropmarks on aerial photographs. They are situated 900m north west of Parlour Spinney.
1 Six Roman coins found in Spring 1996. Method of recovery unrecorded. Grid reference given of SP347617.
Six Roman coins found in Radford Semele northwest of Leamington Hall Farm.
1 Portable Antiquities Scheme find provenance information:
Date found (2): 2011-11-29T00:00:00Z
Methods of discovery: Metal detector
Scatter of Romano-British finds associated with a Roman Villa 300m W of Pounce Hill Farm, Radford Semele.
1 Gravel pit marked on 1886 map.
The site of a gravel pit from which gravel was extracted during the Imperial period. It was situated 200m east of Lewis Road, Radford Semele, and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1886.
1 Excavation revealed the poorly-preserved remains of a Roman villa, probably of the courtyard type, with stone and timber buildings, pits and ditches, dated from the early C2 to early ...
The site of a Roman villa which is visible on aerial photographs as a crop mark and which has been partially excavated. The site is located 700m south west of Crown Hill.
1 Smithy marked on 1885 map.
The site of a blacksmiths workshop which was in use during the Imperial period. It was situated at Pounce Hill Farm and is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1885.