Number of records found: 3451
(Note: the map is limited to 3000 records)
-
Monument record: MCC9359 Graveyard of St Mary's Church, Peldon (Monument)Graveyard of St Mary's Church, Peldon.
-
Monument record: MCC9360 Graveyard of St Stephen's Church, Great Wigborough (Monument)Graveyard of St Stephen's Church, Great Wigborough.
-
Monument record: MCC10387 Four pits, land to the west of Chitts Hill, Stanway (Element Group)Four pits were defined in a discrete area on land to the west of Chitts Hill, Stanway, two by trial-trenched evaluation in 2017 (one was initially interpreted as the remains of a ring ditch) and two by excavation in 2019. One, containing undiagnostic burnt bone, has been radiocarbon-dated to the late Iron Age. Two contained charcoal-rich fills, one of which has been radiocarbon-dated to the middle-late Saxon period.
-
Monument record: MCC1750 Colchester Castle Bailey Rampart, Colchester (Monument)Norman, Castle Bailey Rampart.
-
Monument record: MCC24 Church of St Leonard-at-the-Hythe, Hythe Hill, Colchester (Building)14th century church with later additions and alterations, located on the north side of Hythe Hill.
-
Monument record: MCC4361 Church of St Mary the Virgin, Wick Road, Layer Marney (Building)Early C16 rebuilt church, containing very fine C14 and C16 monuments, C16 wall painting and early C16 stained glass.
-
Monument record: MCC7805 St James' Church, Colchester (Monument)Walls are of flint and septaria rubble, partly faced with knapped flints, tower has a large admixture of Roman brick.
-
Monument record: MCC10058 Two inhumation burials, Silvanus Close, Colchester (Element Group)Two intercutting unfurnished inhumation burials, cutting Roman road MCC10057, recorded by Colchester Archaeological Group between 1996-98, Silvanus Close, Colchester.
-
Monument record: MCC10074 Civil War siegeworks, former Meeanee & Hyderabad Barracks (Site A), Colchester (Monument)Two substantial ditches, recorded during excavations in 2011 in advance of the redevelopment of the former Meeanee & Hyderabad Barracks, Mersea Road, interpreted as part of a fort constructed in the Civil War of 1648.