Information for record number MWA1301:
Lower Radbourne Deserted Medieval Settlement

Summary The site of the Medieval deserted settlement of Lower Radbourne. Earthworks are visible on aerial photographs and documentary evidence exists for the village and its depopulation. It is located 2.5km south east of Ladbroke.
What Is It?  
Type: Deserted Settlement
Period: Medieval (1066 AD - 1539 AD)
Where Is It?  
Parish: Radbourn
District: Stratford on Avon, Warwickshire
Grid Reference: SP 43 57
(Data represented on this map shows the current selected record as a single point, this is for illustrative purposes only and does not represent an accurate or complete representation of archaeological sites or features)
Level of Protection National - Old SMR PrefRef (Grade: )
Sites & Monuments Record
Picture(s) attached

 
Description

 
Source Number  

1 The site can be identified from the 1845 Tithe Award Map which marks two fields to the N of Chapel Bank as 'Chapel field'. The bank seems to have been the church site (PRN 1304). Near the farm are fishponds (PRN 1303). Air photographs show the site to be extensive. Rous records the destruction, and the depopulators appear to have been Catesbys. They presented to the living until 1573, but the church fell down between 1541 and 1544. Dugdale saw only one dwelling there.
2 The village has been under plough for several years.
3 Excellent condition, now under plough (A/P). Excellent documentary evidence (1*).
4 'Three shoe boxes' full of pottery were found by the staff of the East Midlands Electricity Board while digging holes to erect pylons.
6 The site was under plough in the last war and immediately after. It has since been under grass. It was ploughed in 1959 and large quantities of pottery were found. Three areas of possible structures were found.
7 1969: Sherds of Medieval and Roman (PRN 5184) pottery were found during the digging of a trench.
8 'Its farmsteads and cottages seem to have been arranged around the sides of an open village green'. This is not visible today.
11 The site has been descheduled.
12 Correspondence from 1959.
13 Correspondence from 1969.
14 site visit in 1972 unable to identify area of the DMV>.
15 Plan associated with
14.
16 Letter from 1974.
17 Undated record cards.
18 A Medieval deserted settlement with a series of associated fish ponds is visible as earthworks on aerial photographs taken in 1947, though the site has been partially levelled on aerial photos taken in 1971, with further features levelled on aerial photographs taken in 1993. The site comprises a rectilinear enclosure, circa three crofts, a possible building platform, a possible building and several blocks of ridge and furrow. This site has been mapped from aerial photographs as part of the South East Warwickshire and Cotswolds HLS Target Areas National Mapping Programme.
19 The HER polygon has been dratically reduces (to the west) in line with NMP mapping and Warwickshire HER air photo records. Many of the holloways are still faintly visible on lidar imagery. The most north-easterly of these (marked as a ditch (green) on NMP plot) actually appears on the lidar imagery to run on to Upper Radbourne farm, perhaps suggesting that this was the site of the settlement of Upper Radbourne and not Radbourne Manor Farm, where no traces are visible.
 
Sources

Source No: 9
Source Type: Aerial Photograph
Title:
Author/originator: J Pickering
Date: 1962
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet: SP4489 C/D/E/X
   
Source No: 6
Source Type: Bibliographic reference
Title: DMVRG vol 7 1959
Author/originator:
Date: 1959
Page Number: 6
Volume/Sheet: 7
   
Source No: 12
Source Type: Correspondence
Title: Lower Radbourne
Author/originator: Various
Date: 1959
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 13
Source Type: Correspondence
Title: Lower Radbourne
Author/originator: WCC
Date: 1969
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 16
Source Type: Correspondence
Title: The Radbournes
Author/originator: Usher, H.
Date: 1974
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 11
Source Type: Correspondence
Title: Lower Radbourne
Author/originator: EH
Date: 1989
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 18
Source Type: Desk Top Study
Title: SE Warwickshire and Cotswolds NMP Project
Author/originator: Amanda Dickson
Date: 2010-2012
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 8
Source Type: Descriptive Text
Title: The Radbournes
Author/originator: Usher H
Date: Unknown
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 7
Source Type: Note
Title: Warwickshire Archaeology/RB1-M2, Lower Radbourne
Author/originator: WJF
Date: 1970
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 4
Source Type: Newspaper/Magazine Article
Title: Lower Radbourne DMS
Author/originator: Coventry Evening Telegraph
Date: 1959
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 13
Source Type: Plan
Title: Lower Radbourne
Author/originator: East Midlands Electricity Board
Date: 1969
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 14
Source Type: Plan
Title: Lower Radbourne
Author/originator:
Date: 1972
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 17
Source Type: Record Card/Form
Title: Lower Radbourne
Author/originator: Usher, H.
Date:
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 2
Source Type: Record Card/Form
Title: OS Card 25NE6
Author/originator: Ordnance Survey
Date: 1968
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 1
Source Type: Serial
Title: TBAS vol 66
Author/originator: Beresford M W
Date: 1945
Page Number: 99
Volume/Sheet: 66
   
Source No: 10
Source Type: Scheduling record
Title: SAM List 1983
Author/originator: DoE
Date: 1983
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 5
Source Type: Scheduling record
Title: AM7
Author/originator: DoE
Date:
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 14
Source Type: Site Visit
Title: Lower Radbourne
Author/originator:
Date: 1972
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Source No: 3
Source Type: Unpublished document
Title: Deserted Medieval Villages Research Group
Author/originator:
Date: 1958
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet: 6
   
Source No: 19
Source Type: Verbal communication
Title: Pers. Comm.
Author/originator: B Gethin
Date: 2013 onwards
Page Number:
Volume/Sheet:
   
Images:  
Lower Radbourn deserted settlement near Radbourn
Copyright: Warwickshire County Council
Date: 1991
Click here for larger image  
 
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Glossary

 
Word or Phrase
Description  
source OS Card Ordnance Survey Record Card. Before the 1970s the Ordnance Survey (OS) were responsible for recording archaeological monuments during mapping exercises. This helped the Ordnance Survey to decide which monuments to publish on maps. During these exercises the details of the monuments were written down on record cards. Copies of some of the cards are kept at the Warwickshire Sites and Monuments Record. The responsibility for recording archaeological monuments later passed to the Royal Commission on Ancient and Historic Monuments. back
source SAM List Scheduled Ancient Monument List. A list or schedule of archaelogical and historic monuments that are considered to be of national importance. The list contains a detailed description of each Scheduled Ancient Monument (SAM) and a map showing their location and extent. By being placed on the schedule, SAMs are protected by law from any unauthorised distrubance. The list has been compiled and is maintained by English Heritage. It is updated periodically. back
source TBAS Transactions of the Birmingham and Warwickshire Archaeological Society is a journal produced by the society annually. It contains articles about archaeological field work that has taken place in Birmingham and Warwickshire in previous years. Copies of the journal are kept by the Warwickshire Sites and Monuments Record. back
technique Documentary Evidence Documentary evidence is another name for written records. The first written records in Britain date back to the Roman period. Documentary evidence can take many different forms, including maps, charters, letters and written accounts. When archaeologists are researching a site, they often start by looking at documentary evidence to see if there are clues that will help them understand what they might find. Documentary evidence can help archaeologists understand sites that are discovered during an excavation, field survey or aerial survey. back
technique Earthwork Earthworks can take the form of banks, ditches and mounds. They are usually created for a specific purpose. A bank, for example, might be the remains of a boundary between two or more fields. Some earthworks may be all that remains of a collapsed building, for example, the grassed-over remains of building foundations.

In the winter, when the sun is lower in the sky than during the other seasons, earthworks have larger shadows. From the air, archaeologists are able to see the patterns of the earthworks more easily. Earthworks can sometimes be confusing when viewed at ground level, but from above, the general plan is much clearer.

Archaeologists often carry out an aerial survey or an earthwork survey to help them understand the lumps and bumps they can see on the ground.
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technique Aerial Photograph Aerial photographs are taken during an aerial survey, which involves looking at the ground from above. It is usually easier to see cropmarks and earthworks when they are viewed from above. Aerial photographs help archaeologists to record what they see and to identify new sites. There are two kinds of aerial photographs; oblique and vertical. back
period Roman About 43 AD to 409 AD (the 1st century AD to the 5th century AD)

The Roman period comes after the Iron Age and before the Saxon period.

The Roman period in Britain began in 43 AD when a Roman commander called Aulus Plautius invaded the south coast, near Kent. There were a series of skirmishes with the native Britons, who were defeated. In the months that followed, more Roman troops arrived and slowly moved westwards and northwards.
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period Medieval 1066 AD to 1539 AD (the 11th century AD to the 16th century AD)

The medieval period comes after the Saxon period and before the post medieval period.

The Medieval period begins in 1066 AD.
This was the year that the Normans, led by William the Conqueror (1066 – 1087), invaded England and defeated Harold Godwinson at the Battle of Hastings in East Sussex.
The Medieval period includes the first half of the Tudor period (1485 – 1603 AD), when the Tudor family reigned in England and eventually in Scotland too.

The end of the Medieval period is marked by Henry VIII’s (1509 – 1547) order for the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the years running up to 1539 AD. The whole of this period is sometimes called the Middle Ages.
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monument VILLAGE * A collection of dwelling-houses and other buildings, usually larger than a hamlet but smaller than a town with a simpler organisation and administration than the latter. back
monument MANOR FARM * A farm on the estate of a manor. back
monument SITE * Unclassifiable site with minimal information. Specify site type wherever possible. back
monument FISHPOND * A pond used for the rearing, breeding, sorting and storing of fish. back
monument SETTLEMENT * A small concentration of dwellings. back
monument RECTILINEAR ENCLOSURE * A monument consisting of an area of land enclosed by a ditch, bank, wall, palisade or similar barrier, where the barrier consists of several straight or near straight sections. back
monument BUILDING * A structure with a roof to provide shelter from the weather for occupants or contents. Use specific type where known. back
monument RIDGE AND FURROW * A series of long, raised ridges separated by ditches used to prepare the ground for arable cultivation. This was a technique, characteristic of the medieval period. back
monument FEATURE * Areas of indeterminate function. back
monument DWELLING * Places of residence. back
monument POND * A body of still water often artificially formed for a specific purpose. Use specifc type where known. back
monument CHURCH * A building used for public Christian worship. Use more specific type where known. back
monument FARMSTEAD * The homestead of a farm consisting of a farmhouse and working farm buildings, with yards, other working areas and usually a garden to the house. back
monument DESERTED SETTLEMENT * An abandoned settlement, usually of the Medieval period, often visible only as earthworks or on aerial photographs. back
monument BUILDING PLATFORM * A site where a building once stood as identified by a level area of ground, often compacted or made from man-made materials. Use only where specific function is unknown, otherwise use more specific term. back
monument FIELD * An area of land, often enclosed, used for cultivation or the grazing of livestock. back
monument VILLAGE GREEN * An area of common grassland in a village used for grazing cattle, recreational purposes, etc. back
monument TRENCH * An excavation used as a means of concealment, protection or both. back
monument DITCH * A long and narrow hollow or trench dug in the ground, often used to carry water though it may be dry for much of the year. back
monument CHAPEL * A freestanding building, or a room or recess serving as a place of Christian worship in a church or other building. Use more specific type where known. back
monument CROFT * An enclosed piece of land adjoining a house. back
monument STRUCTURE * A construction of unknown function, either extant or implied by archaeological evidence. If known, use more specific type. back
monument FARM * A tract of land, often including a farmhouse and ancillary buildings, used for the purpose of cultivation and the rearing of livestock, etc. Use more specific type where known. back
monument TARGET * Any structure or object, used for the purpose of practice shooting by aerial, seaborne or land mounted weapons. back
monument EARTHWORK * A bank or mound of earth used as a rampart or fortification. back

* Copyright of English Heritage (1999)

English Heritage National Monuments Record