2 Part of a treble-ditched rectangular enclosure, possibly a Roman fort, shows on air photographs.
3 Map showing the crop marks.
The site of an enclosure, possibly a Roman fort. The site is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs and it is situated 100m east of Grove Park House.
1 Grove Park is first mentioned as a manor distinct from Budbrook in 1284. A public coach road formerly ran across the park in an east-north-easterly direction from Norton ...
Grove Park is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887. A manor was established here in the Medieval period. It is located west of Hampton on the Hill.
1 Silver penny of Edward I/II, 1296 – 1318. Minted in Berwick- upon- Tweed.
Findspot - a Medieval coin was found 200m west of Hampton Magna.
1 Find of a purse frame in, or before, 1997, by a metal detector. Grid reference given of 253643.
Find of a purse frame 100m east of the Roman Catholic Church in Hampton on the Hill.
1 Post medieval items found in the area of Stanks Hill in 1997. Grid reference given of SP265652. Method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of items which date from the post medieval or Imperial periods in the area of Stanks Hill, Budbrooke, Warwick.
1 Find of a post medieval coin. Grid reference given of SP259653 approx. Method of recovery unrecorded.
Find of a post medieval coin south of the church at Budbroke.
1 Find of a denarius of Antoninus in 1996. Method of recovery unrecorded. Grid reference given of SP257655.
Find of a Roman coin 140m southwest of the church at Budbrooke.
1 Find of a denarius of Hadrian, possibly a forgery, in 1996. Method of recovery unrecorded. Grid reference given of SP261655.
Find of a Roman denarius 250m southeast of the chruch at Budbrooke.
1 The probable extent of the medieval settlement based on the second edition map of 1887 32SE.
2 Extent changed using HER lidar layer
The probable extent of the medieval settlement at Hampton on the Hill based on the Ordnance Survey map of 1887
1 Upper stone of a quern, found in Budbrooke and donated to Warwick Museum by Mr Henry Pratt.
2 OS card.
Findspot - the upper stone of a quern of unknown date was found in Budbrooke.
1 Two coins of Henry I found in Budbroke in March 1996. No grid reference was given and the method of recovery was unrecorded.
Find of two coins of Henry I in Budbrooke. The exact location is unknown.
1 The brick basement of Grove Park House opens onto lower ground, said to be the remains of an ancient moat.
2 1951: A rectangular, modern brick revetted, moat-like depression exists. ...
The site of a possible Medieval moat, a wide ditch which usually surrounded a building. The moat is partially visible as an earthwork and it is situated at Grove Park House.
1 A moulded stone Tudor doorway reset in the N revetting wall of the moat may be a relic of the earlier house on the site. It forms the entrance ...
The site of an icehouse, a structure built partially underground and used to store ice during the warmer months. It dates to the Imperial period and is situated 100m north of Grove Park House.
1 A quite considerable bank used to run parallel to, and N of, the road. Bed shows two banks which were suggested to be mill-weirs?
2 1951: At the S end ...
The site of Medieval fishponds, used for the breeding and storage of fish. They are partly visible as earthworks, and are situated south west of St Michael's church, Budbrooke.
1 1951: At the N end of the field is a ditch and bank which run across the field from E to W, the bank turning S for about 60m ...
The site of a Medieval moat, a wide ditch usually surrounding a building. It survives as an earthwork, and the interior is marked by ridge and furrow. It is situated to the south east of the church at Budbrooke.
1 The destruction of a church is noted at Norton Lindsey between 1581-90.
2 ‘Chapel Meadow’ on the Tithe Map suggests a possible site for the chapel, but there are no ...
The site of a possible church dating to the Medieval period. It was probably associated with the deserted settlement of Norton Lindsey. This site is known from documentary and place name evidence. It is located 700m north of the present church.
1 Medieval pottery – handle of jar found. Note stating ‘Bronze Age pottery, W A Seaby’ crossed out.
2 No further information. The owner of the field, was questioned but knew ...
Findspot - fragments of pottery, dating to the Medieval period, were found 400m north west of Horsley Plantation, Norton Lindsey.
1 Arrowhead in field.
2 Dating extended from the Neolithic/Bronze Age, to between the Mesolithic and the Bronze Age.
Findspot - an arrowhead of Mesolithic/ Bronze Age date was found 600m west of Horsley Plantation, Norton Lindsey.
1 Finds made with a metal detector: i) small seal for a fob chain 18th/ 19th century; ii) very worn coin, 12 sols piece of Louis XVI c.1774-90.
Findspot - a small seal for a fob chain, and two coins of Imperial date, were found 110m south east of Middle Lock Bridge.
1 Asylum Wharf on the Warwick and Birmingham Canal is reported to be near bridge 53. There are no signs of this on the OS 25″, even though it ...
Documentary evidence suggests that this was the site of Asylum Wharf, where vessels would have loaded and unloaded goods during the Imperial period. It is located at Middle Lock Bridge, 700m south east of Hatton Hill.
1 A building called ‘Lock House’ marked on 1926 6″ OS map at this point.
2 It is a modernised 19th century two-storey lock cottage.
A canal lock keepers cottage, dating to the Imperial period. It is marked on the Ordnance Survey map of 1926. It is located 600m west of Budbrooke.
1 A Warwickshire Museum Waterways survey shows a wharf at this point, south of the Warwick and Birmingham Canal.
2 The wharf is difficult to discerne; there is however a lockkeepers ...
The site of a canal wharf, where vessels would have loaded and unloaded goods during the Imperial period. The wharf was found during a Waterways Survey in 1976. It was located 600m south west of Warwick Cemetery.
1 Turnpike road from Birmingham to Warwick and Banbury, established between 1725 and 1750. Under the control of the same trust which ran the Birmingham to Edgehill route. The stretch ...
A toll road, where travellers had to pay a toll to use the route. The road was built during the Post Medieval period. It runs from Warmington to Birmingham via Warwick.
Earthworks of Medieval dam.
1 Earthwork of a possible dam cuts across the course of a stream on the S edge of Wedgnock Park. The earthwork is well preserved in the ...
Earthwork