· Transactions of the Society ·

RANSACTIONS, published annually, are received by members paying the full ordinary subscription. Each volume contains a range of articles, ranging from reports of excavations and surveys, to details of recent museum acquisitions and book reviews.
Volume 106 (Transactions for 2002) has been published. W. J. Ford's paper, 'The Romano-British and Anglo-Saxon Settlement and Cemetaries at Stretton-on-Fosse, Warwickshire', was partly funded by English Heritage. A note by Margaret Gelling to accompany George Demidowicz's paper on 'The Hersum Ditch' will be included within the next volume.
Volume 107 is currently being prepared for publication. It will contain a report by W. J. Ford on his excavations a Charlecote, together with a series of papers daling with excavations throughout the Birmingham region and Warwickshire.
- Volume 104 consists of reports on excavations of Roman remains at Alcester and of medieval buildings at Kenilworth Abbey. This is followed by a historical article on Ralph Lord Basset of Drayton (c.1333-83) as a religious benefactor and patron.
- Volume 103 (again funded by the Highways Agency) consists of reports on excavations carried out in the Arrow valley in advance of road building south of Alcester, covering Neolithic, Late Bronze Age, Roman and Anglo-Saxon sites. The volume ends with a synthesis on the landscape of the valley through these periods.
- Volume 102 a major report on the 1st century Romans fortress at Mancetter in north Warwickshire, together with a shorter report on excavations of a section across the Fosse Way and of Romano-British features at Princethorpe and on the moat and landscape at Baddesley Clinton.
- Voume 101 for 1997 was a monograph entirely funded by the Highways Agency. It contained an excavation report and analysis of work carried out in the outer enclosure of Boteler's Castle, Oversley, Alcester, in 1992 and 1993.
- To mark the Society's 125th anniversary, Volume 100 was dedicated to the archaeology of Warwickshire. English Heritage made a generous grant towards to cost of its publication. The volume covers a broad period of time; it contains reports on Warwickshire in the prehistoric and Roman periods, Anglo-Saxon cemetaries along the Avon Valley, reconstructing Anglo Saxon landscapes, rural settlement in medieval Warwickshire and innovation in 17th and 18th century Warwickshire houses.
Society publications are available for purchase at a reduced rate for members, as are offprints of individual articles.