1 The junction of the Coventry Canal (1768) and the Oxford Canal (1769) has several interesting features: The junction lock which preserves the respective levels of the two canals ...
Hawkesbury Junction Houses. At the junction of the Coventry and Oxford canals there is a lock-keeper's cottage and two houses that were built during the Imperial period. They are situated 300m north east of Coney Lane Bridge.
1 Geophysical survey revealed garden features, consisting of walls, a pit and a possible well.
Garden features of unknown date, including walls, a pit and a well, were found during a geophysical survey. The site was located 400m north east of Coney Lane Bridge.
1 The excavation of two trial trenches prior to the erection of 23 dwellings recorded the remains of 19th and 20th century buildings overlying a depth of subsoil and natural ...
The remains of 19th and 20th century buildings were recorded during evaluation trenching. The site is located at 50 Coventry Road, Warwick.
1 A manorial history exists. In 1410 the Prior of Coventry had ‘a manor surrounded with pools’.
2 The moated site containing the Medieval manor was Scheduled as an Ancient Monument ...
The site of a moated manor house dating to the Medieval period. The house is known from documentary evidence. It is situated 100m west of the church at Packwood. A post hole was found during an archaeological works. It is likely to have held a large timber upright probably forming part of the timber-framing from a long demolished section of the house. Glazed ridge tile fragments were found inside the posthole suggesting the medieval buildings high status.
1 Cawston Lodge is a modern house which is on the site of and incorporates material from an Elizabethan mansion demolished 50-60 years ago.
2 In 1546 the grange was granted ...
The site of a manor house that was built during the Post Medieval period. It is situated 300m north east of Fox Covert.
1 During the watching brief of an extension a wall and Post Medieval pottery were found. The wall follows a boundary within the grounds of Baginton Hall. The boundary is ...
The remains of a wall were discovered during archaeological work. It follows a former boundary within the grounds of Baginton Hall and is probably of Post Medieval date.
1 In 1787 there was apparently a larger house (called “The Lunt House”) on this site, which was still there in 1831, and the present Lunt Cottages are supposed to ...
The results of archaeological work at The Lunt Cottages, Baginton, suggest that they were once part of a larger building, possibly dating back to the Medieval period.
1 Information on the manorial history exists from 1267 and the place appears to have been a possession of Coventry Priory, possibly from its foundation. In 1542 the capital messuage ...
A manor house which dates from the Post Medieval period with extensions added during the 17th century. Two wings of the house were demolished during the 1950s but the central part still stands. It is situated 700m east of Newbold Comyn Park.
1 The manor of Southam belonged to Coventry Priory, and the Grange or Manor House, in all probability, stood in what is now called the Bury Orchard, a name highly ...
The site of a possible manor house dating to between the Medieval and Post Medieval period. It is known from documentary evidence which refers to Berry House in 1625 and from the discovery of the foundations of a large building. The site is at Bury Orchard, Southam.
1 Lower Itchington. At Old Town Farm traces of buildings once existed. Lower Itchington was once more important than Bishops Itchington and contained the church (PRN 829), but Thomas Fisher ...
The deserted settlement of Nether Itchington which dates to the Medieval period. It is known from documentary sources. Earthworks survive which may represent house platforms and cropmarks are visible on aerial photographs. It is located 1km south of Bishop's Itchington.
I have very hazy memories of the camp. I was born there in the early 1950s, and my parents must have moved in only a little while earlier. Mum always ...
1 Originally one house, now two, of 18th century date, two storeys and attic, brick on a stone base. The building has toothed eaves and an old tile roof.
2 ...
Marton House, a house which was built during the Imperial period. It is still in use as a dwelling but has been divided into two houses. It is situated on Coventry Road, Marton.
1 Limited access for brief archaeological observation and recording on the site of The White Lion revealed the remains of a timber-framed building at SP3586. The structure was identified by ...
The site of a timber framed building, probably a barn, was found during archaeological work. It was of Post Medieval or later date. The site was located on Coventry Road, Bedworth.
1 Late 17th century brick and stone dressings. Two storeys and attics, side stone pilasters with moulded capitals. Stone plinth, string courses and moulded eaves cornice. Windows with ...
Teachers House dating from the Post Medieval period onwards, built of brick with stone dressings. It is situated on Coventry Road, Kingsbury.
1 A roughly E-shaped building of the 16th century, altered in the 17th and 19th. Of two storeys, part timber framed in the centre of the south front and ...
The site of a manor house that was originally built during the Medieval period. Alterations were made to the building during the Post Medieval and Imperial periods. The manor house is located in Princethorpe.
1 Cryfield Grange, situated off the west side of the Kenilworth-Coventry road about half a mile north of Crackley, is an L-shaped house and although almost entirely rebuilt in the ...
Cryfield Grange was almost entirely rebuilt during the Imperial period on its original Post Medieval foundations. It retains some architectural features from its earlier history. It is situated 1km north of Crackley.
1 1567: Ludovic Grevell obtained Royal Licence to build and embattle a new house at Milcote and call it Mountgrevell. This he began but never completed. The ruins were still ...
The site of a Post Medieval manor house which may have been destroyed in the Civil War. It is located 1km south east of Luddington. The footings are visible on lidar.
1 Dugdale states that the original Honington estates existed in the days of Edward the Confessor, and the manor was one of those with which Earl Leofric had endowed his ...
A manor house, the site of which dates to the Medieval period. The present country house dates to the Post Medieval period, with 20th century alterations. It is located 400m north west of Honington.
1 16th century house, probably earlier, and two storeys and attic, timber-framed with brick infilling, 17th century, part stone, old black tile roof. West front has gable roughly ...
Barnacle Hall, a house which was built during the Post Medieval period with later alterations. It is situated 300m south east of Barnacle.