1 A hollow way and a 19th century house site recorded in 1982.
The site of a deserted settlement dating to the Imperial period. A hollow way and a house platform are visible as earthworks. The settlement site is situated 500m east of Coughton Court.
1 Coughton, enclosed in 1487. Appears on maps of Saxton and Speed, but has been long disparked.
2 Coughton Park is in the angle of the Ridgeway and ...
Coughton Park, a deer park dating from the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. Much of the park pale is visible as an earthwork. It is located to the south of Sambourne.
Recommended for inclusion on Local List by Lovie.
1 Partly timber framed and partly of stone and brick. It is ranged around three sides of a courtyard. The eastern range was destroyed when the house was ...
Coughton Court, a manor house dating from the Medieval to the Post Medieval period. The manor house was once surrounded by a moat. It is now owned by the National Trust and is situated in Coughton.
1 Along the S side of the grounds an old packhorse road known as Warwick Lane runs down to a ford across the Arrow, beyond which the old road from ...
The site of a ford, a shallow point in a river where people, vehicles and animals would have crossed. The ford is undated but is still in use. It is situated 500m east of Coughton Cross.
1 The grounds of the Grade I Listed house include an avenue, formal garden with circular pond, lawns, kitchen garden, further ponds. New formal gardens have been created since c1990, ...
Gardens and parkland surrounding Coughton Court, with elements dating from the Post Medieval period onwards.
1 Evidence of a rampart embanking the 12th – 13th century moated platform was found in the north east part of the site. The west, east and southern flanks ...
Medieval features and finds recovered during excavations at Coughton Court. Features included evidence for a rampart, the moat, the manor house platform, a drainage ditch and a beam slot.
1 A cobble surface found across the excavated area is likely to have been the original courtyard to the existing house when construction started in the early 16th century. ...
Post Medieval features and finds recovered during excavations at Coughton Court. Features included a yard, walls and floors relating to the construction and occupation of the east range and a revetment at the south part of the moat.
1 A destruction level with 18th century material probably comes from the east range, which was demolished in 1780. Limestone blocks from the north wall are thought to have ...
Excavations at Coughton Court uncovered layers dating from the Imperial period. The features were related to the destruction of the east range and infilling of the moat, a former bridge over the moat, a garden feature and a leat.