, i"1111!'.LTrsG j4.-+...1';r1* pp...' ----' tt,,z. : .1.-1----1- ,-----------i.-0 1-,; , --; f '..4-4 .1 . /l!... 7: lt-- --; . ' ; I ;.--,11 i --4 ;i-----.i ; . .2 : 1 ; -------.x ,,-H-r-hli& f egur...; .........; .. -..+ : . .. .1., i' , ;4. .I :...E. 'el§k5b. "..J.:PondA v, ..,./4ufeA1,..54 ///:4t ./, - -r- ,.. ...,.) 11-4t...:s 4. 1 ..4.,':,.. r- . r.r. ,-.. -:. ;* ,..;.,...!..:.,,,s. . . . s . .0, 0GREAT LINFORD 1977CROFT L.' Late 13th - mid 17th century'.!..b- ' -. 4 -,'0JY4/ 's.Ay/11...:_k-J....7>Ifke_-r:7-E At 41.".:' A'-.2B.31/..,. ."r 4'. ....-. i -...1-,,:. ,oaç,.., ' sc.,'I/ ,/
55Building 27This also lay alongside the lane at the N end of Building 26. Itmeasured 10.4 x 7.5m., aligned EW, and was divided internally into aElargeroom, 5 x 5.5m., and two smaller rooms, each 2.5m. square, at its WTheend.E room contained three hearths, and a rectangular depression 1.5 x 1.8m.in itsN-E corner, which probably marked the site of an oven. Theearthcompactedfloor was sealed by a layer of charcoal, probably the result ofsiveextenuseof the building, which appears to have been a kitchen. A gap inS walltheof the SW room marked a connecting doorway leading into the house.Building 27 had been badly damaged by stone-robbing, the N, S and E wallsbeing represented by robber trenches about 15-20cm. deep and at least lm. wide.From this depth of foundation and the thickness of surviving parts of the Wwall, it appears that the building may have had an upper storey.Building 28This structure was situated 2m. east of Building 26, beingitseparatedby afromroughly gravelled area suggesting a passageway. It measuredand7.5 x 6m.like the structures described above, had been damaged byonly the SEstone-robbing,corner surviving to its full width. There were no internalthe floorfeatures,being of roughly cobbled clay. A large limestone slab by the Nmay havewallmarked an entrance.Building 29This lay immediately E of Building 28, and the E wall of which itbuttedwason to. Building 29 measured 11 x 6m. and, like the otherbeenbuildings,damagedhadby stone robbing, about all its N wall having been removed.S wall, theThemost substantial surviving wall, was found to have beenF36.built intoInternally, the W half of the floor was of clay, whilst the Esurfacedhalf wasin cobbles and pitched stone. Two stone-lined beamtheslotslineadjacent toof the N wall suggested the presence of an entrance into the N yard.Building 30This was a small structure 2.7 x 3.5m. built onto the SW corner ofBuilding 29, and the E side of the wall <strong>for</strong>ming the E boundary of the STheyard.internal floor of the building was surfaced with limestone cobbles,two smallwithareas of pitched stone. The function of the structurecertainremained un-- one notably absent feature was a doorway!To the S of Building 30 was a stone-lined drain, parallel with the Swall of the structure running through the boundary wall of the yard, which itapparently helped to drain.Building 31This building, measuring 19.5 x 6.5m., aligned NS, lay on the Ethesideyard.ofHere again, stone robbing had taken place and only the Sportionswall andof the E and N walls survived. The only internal featurea dividingnotedwallwas3m. from the N end, and from this and the building'ssizegreatit would appear to have been a barn. Eavesdrip gullies were foundalongside the N and E walls, and a more elaborate stone-lined drainlelranto theparal-S wall, apparently draining the yard into a fieldtheboundaryS ofditch tothe barn.
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fce&A.J.COUNCIL FOR BRITISH ARCHAEO
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2PREHISTORICMARSWORTH,Buckinghamshi
- Page 8 and 9: L'The number of flints illustrated
- Page 10 and 11: .DORt$1FiTER.:577S(144.50Otel Stree
- Page 12 and 13: 8Key for Figure 4No. 1 Beaker with
- Page 14 and 15: 10EXCAVATIONS AT MIDDLETON STONEY,
- Page 16 and 17: 12ANGLO-SAXONNORTHAMPTONSHIRE CEMET
- Page 18 and 19: 14RAUNDS, Northamptonshire (SP 9987
- Page 20 and 21: GROVE PRIORYf,,,,,,,,,,,,,Figure 6
- Page 22 and 23: 18The decay of this church was inev
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- Page 30 and 31: AERIAL SURVEYS - Jim PickeringA num
- Page 32 and 33: 28traction site at Newnham near Bed
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- Page 38 and 39: 34of owner and condition of site; f
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- Page 42 and 43: 38sites and five sites at which Rom
- Page 44 and 45: 40NORTHAMPTON CASTLE (Site Code M13
- Page 46 and 47: 142MILTON KEYNES,DEVELOPMENT CORPOR
- Page 48 and 49: small area beyond the water main wa
- Page 50 and 51: salvage operations which took place
- Page 52 and 53: THE ROMAN FEATURESIn its earliest p
- Page 54 and 55: DIAGRAM SHOWING THE LIMITATIONS OF
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- Page 62 and 63: 58POST EXCAVATIONRomanThe Bradwell
- Page 64 and 65: 60twenty early maps of villages wit
- Page 66 and 67: 62OXFORDSHIRE COUATY COUNCIL DEPART
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- Page 71 and 72: 67route across the Chil Brook strea
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- Page 77 and 78: 73MINSTER LOVELL , Oxon.DOVECOTE AT
- Page 81 and 82: 77known within the parish at presen
- Page 83 and 84: 79number of smaller closes by 1620.
- Page 85 and 86: 810 Metres 100L:C1111:177STANTONHOU
- Page 87 and 88: 83The two surviving pubs in the vil
- Page 89 and 90: 85Stone-quarry (PRN 1021) and limek
- Page 91 and 92: 87Richard, R.L. (ed)The progress no
- Page 93 and 94: 894. Central village nucleusEarthwo
- Page 95 and 96: 91BUILDINGSThe oldest surviving bui
- Page 97 and 98: 93interior has suffered badly from
- Page 99 and 100: 95OXFORDSHIRE ARCHAEOLOGICAL UNIT 1
- Page 101 and 102: 97the Unit's publication programme
- Page 103 and 104: 99the University continue to grow n
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- Page 107 and 108: 103Shrivenham (SU 263877) ? Field S
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105FINSTOCK, Topples - Richard Cham
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Figure 31ABINGDON/RADLEY, BARTON CO
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1094s...ISiII.II11..0.0 ..... .....
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,et/11,11MMMU/ f Pitt WU? eimtI:,.,
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113HARDWICK with YELFORDAMMISMVA00M
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water features filled insince 1810o
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117St. Helen's Church and the adjac
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1surface119OXFORD, St. Mary's Colle
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121of some arable land (V.C.H. Oxon
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123Opportunities for archaeologists
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125Luton MuseumThe Curator, Wardown
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127Oxford University Institute of A