Number of records found: 3109
(Note: the map is limited to 3000 records)
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Monument record: 0055700000 QUARRENDON I, E OF CHURCH FM (Monument)Hollow-ways, house platforms and enclosure earthworks of a deserted medieval settlement recorded in field survey and on aerial photographs, also known from historical sources
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Monument record: 0056000000 QUARRENDON II (Monument)Medieval hollow-ways, house platforms and enclosure earthworks recorded in field surveys and on aerial photographs, some salvage recording and metal-detecting finds.
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Monument record: 0077000000 FOSCOTT (Monument)Earthworks of possible medieval to post-medieval settlement between church and manor house recorded in field survey.
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Monument record: 0011600000 BRAYS WOOD, BRAYS GREEN: farmstead (Monument)Medieval farmstead in Bray's Wood with enclosing bank and house platforms surviving as earthworks
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Monument record: 0167200000 THORNBOROUGH BRIDGE (Building)Fifteenth century bridge recorded in surveys and in historical sources. Repaired and altered in 1661 and repaired in the 1ate 19th century and 20th century. Scheduled and listed.
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Monument record: 0211400000 WEST OF LAKE END (Monument)Various features such as cropmarks, ring ditches and artefact finds indicating continuous settlement/land use from prehistoric times found at the Marsh Lane East and the Lot's Hole sites in excavations in advance of the Maidenhead, Eton and Windsor Flood Alleviation Scheme
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Monument record: 0018600000 FILLINGTON WOOD (Monument)Twelfth to thirteenth century farmstead enclosure recorded in excavation and survey. An enclosed medieval settlement situated on a south east facing promontory of the Chilterns, known as Old Dashwood Hill. The site is crossed by the old West Wycombe to Oxford turnpike road which is still in use as a minor road. The enclosure has a ditch and bank which define a roughly circular area 60 metres across. The bank is best preserved south of the old turnpike where it stands up to 0.6 metres high and measures circa 3 metres wide. The ditch, despite having become partly infilled over the years, measures up to 7 metres wide and circa 1 metres deep. Within the enclosure lie a series of medieval building foundations, including the remains of an open fronted building measuring 6 metres by 3.4 metres. Also present are a flint lined water reservoir, a flint walled building which has been shown by excavation to have a peg-tile roof, a cobbled courtyard area, a possible kiln and other associated features. A mortared stone dovecote, situated circa 50 metres south east of the enclosure, was also found during the 1975 excavations. Pottery found during the excavations shows that there was Roman activity on the site but that the ditch remained in use in the medieval perod. A nearby shaft provided a well which was later used for the disposal of human remains, believed to be the victims of the Black Death during the 14th century. This is also when the site appears to have been abandoned. Scheduled.
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Monument record: 0022500000 NEAR HOLMAN'S BRIDGE (Monument)Possible site of 'Battle of Aylesbury' a Civil War skirmish of 1642, suggested by burials found in early nineteenth century.
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Monument record: 0034500000 HOGSHAW (Monument)Remains of deserted medieval village known from historical records, visible earthworks and finds made during watching brief - Earthworks of a deserted medieval settlement, moat and fishponds. Field investigations carried out in the 1970s found the moat to have internal dimensions of 52 metres by 40 metres, enclosed by a ditch 11 metres wide and 1.4 metres deep. A former watercourse extends from the southern arm to feed two fish ponds. Settlement earthworks are present to the east of the moat. The site was the location of the Preceptory of Knights Hospitallers, which was founded in 1180 and dissolved in 1470, and a nunnery cell of the the Sisters of St John which was moved to Buckland Priory in 1180. The church was in use until 1650 and in a ruinous state by the end of the 17th century. No traces of the church have been recorded.