1 Listed by Dugdale as the largest and chief village of Wolfhampcote. Dugdale also mentions a chapel (PRN 6372).
2 The area behind Flecknoe Farm at SP5163 contains house platforms, hollow ...
The site of a Medieval shrunken settlement, with four areas of desertion. House platforms, hollow ways, trackways, and a pond are visible as earthworks and on aerial photographs. It is situated to the west of Flecknoe.
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 house started life as a farmhouse. In 1681 John Knight was the possessor of what was described as a manor house surrounded by a 400 acre estate. ...
A house originally built during the Post Medieval period and is surrounded by a park. There were additions and alterations made to the house in the Imperial period. It has recently been renovated and restored and is situated in Ullenhall.
1 The excavation of trial trenches at Abbey Works, Bleachfield Street, Alcester recorded a number of features associated with Roman occupation of the site including a hearth with metalworking slag, ...
A road, hearth, metalworking slag, pits, postholes, gullies, beam slots, ditches,a well, and foundations of stone buildings were recorded during evaluation and subsequent excavation at the former Abbey Works, Bleachfield Street, Alcester. Finds included: pottery, amphora, bone, metal objects including jewellery and glass.
1 Archaeological evaluation revealed the reoccupation of the site (following the site’s abandonment to cultivation in the late medieval period), in the course of the expansion of the town in ...
Features reflecting the 19th century housing developments along Dugdale Street and Chapel Street, as depicted on the 1887 OS map, were recorded at The Ropewalk, Chapel Street, Nuneaton.
1 An earthwork survey of Church Field in 2002 recorded a possible building platform which may have been the site of a cottage mentioned in a survey dating to 1589 ...
A possible building platform, which may have been the site of a cottage mentioned in 1589 and mapped in 1736. The site is located 100m west of The Vicarage, Wootton Wawen.
1 A salvage recording undertaken during the groundworks for a detached dwelling recorded part of a masonry well or soakaway. These remains were thought to date to either the ...
Part of a medieval or post-medieval masonry well or soakaway and a post-medieval boundary wall and associated 20th century wall were recorded during the redevelopment of the site. The site is located in the southwest corner, The Old School House, Flecknoe.
1 Archaeological evaluation within the SAM of Tiddington Roman Settlement identified four broad phases of activity.
In Phase 1, the Late Iron Age-early Roman period, a co-axial field system appeared to ...
Evaluation trenching recorded a field system laid out during the Late Iron Age-early Roman period, with a possibly associated building. A second phase of activity dated to the 2nd century AD. The site is located north of Tiddington Road, Tiddington.
1 A building is shown here on a 1781 Estate map, and two pieces of land immediately adjoining and behind it are called ‘Workhouse Close’ and ‘Workhouse Land’.
2 The South ...
The site of the workhouse which housed the poor of the parish during the Imperial period. A building and two fields called 'Workhouse Close' and 'Workhouse Land' are marked on an Estate Map of 1781. The probable remains of the workhouse were revealed during excavation at The Blundells, Albion Street, Kenilworth.
1 1928: A shallow trench was cut just S of the crest of the N embankment of the ‘camp’. This revealed traces of the rampart.
2 Plan.
3 1954-5. A section was ...
The site of the defences of the Roman fort at Mancetter, which were excavated in 1927, 1954-56.
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.
1 Work started on an unoccupied garden site behind the school house. Results up to date are a complex of small post holes with later pits. Among other pits found ...
Part excavation at this site uncovered evidence of occupation, possibly a Medieval shrunken village. The site is at Baginton, 50m east of the church.
1 A small round mound, which has recently been disturbed by a tree being uprooted in its centre. No surface indications of date or function.
2 This mound is similar ...
The possible site of a Post Medieval gazebo is marked by mound of earth. Alternatively, this might be the remains of a round barrow. It is situated 200m south of Combe Abbey.
1 An archaeological evaluation at Acorn House, Evesham Street, Alcester within the southern suburb of the Roman town found extensive, well preserved Roman deposits just below the modern garden soil. ...
An archaeological evaluation at Acorn House, Evesham Street, Alcester within the southern suburb of the Roman town found extensive, well preserved Roman deposits just below the modern garden soil. Pottery analysis suggests that the main occupation phase was mid-1st - early 2nd-century AD.
1 Close to Atherstone Hill Farm. ‘At the extreme north-west angle of the Park pale is a curious mound, which may be a tumulus … but it is far more ...
The site of a mound which is possibly the remains of the summerhouse dating to the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1924 and is situated 600m north west of Preston on Stour.
1 A lofty erection (the Rotunda) stood on a mound of earth still remaining to the E of the footpath across the park leading to Atherstone. It had an octagonal ...
A mound is visible as an earthwork within Alscot Park. It has been suggested that an octagonal tower or rotunda of Post Medieval date stood on the mound. It is situated 600m south west of the church at Atherstone on Stour.
2 An undated subrectangular enclosure shows on aerial photographs.
3 In 1962 several trenches were cut and revealed the lower course of a dry-built limestone wall on clay foundations. The wall ...
The site of an enclosure of unknown date that is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs. The enclosure was partially excavated and the remains of a wall were found. The enclosure is situated 500m south of Fulham Wood.
1 Withybrook has shrunk and expanded at intervals, earthworks mirroring its fluctuations in prosperity and changing farming techniques. It is not recorded until the 12th century. By 1327 it had ...
The site of the Medieval shrunken village of Withybrook. Remains of the village survive as earthworks.
1 In July 1966 earth-moving equipment was noted at Chesterton Camp and it was discovered that the farmer had received permission from MPBW to plough the site.
2 Ten weeks were ...
The archaeological excavation of the north west corner of the Roman Camp at Chesterton. The remains of a rampart and ditch were found. These were followed in the first half of the fourth century by a stone wall, ditches and counterscarp.
1 Trench produced evidence for a Medieval house with a wall of sandstone and pebbles and a floor of beaten clay. Quantities of coarse and green-glazed pottery of 11th – ...
The site of a shrunken village dating to the Medieval period. It was excavated and revealed a house, a wall and pottery. It was situated 500m north east of Dean's Green.
2 Possible ring ditch or enclosure, other enclosures and linear features show on air photographs. Some of these marks are probably natural. The crop marks are impossible to plot because ...
The site of a Roman settlement. During partial excavation of the site, enclosures, ditches, houses and a possible corn drying kiln were found. The site was located 1km east of Bidford on Avon.
1 A possible gully or beam slot associated with earlier occupation of extension to the Churchyard St Nicholas Church found during a archaeological observation in 2009/2010 for a soakaway and ...
A possible 19th century or earlier gully or beam slot associated with occupation of southern extension to the Churchyard of St Nicholas Church, Nuneaton
1 A flat-based pit was recorded during strip, map and sample excavation at Middleton, measuring 2.7m by 2.65m, with three stakeholes within this pit. It was interpreted as a sunken-featured ...
A flat-based pit was recorded during strip, map and sample excavation at Middleton; it was interpreted as a sunken-featured building of likely Anglo-Saxon date, although the chronology of the feature was not clear.
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.