Great Ryburgh

Great Ryburgh

Great Ryburgh St. Andrew
Great Ryburgh
 Great Ryburgh shown within Norfolk
Civil parishRyburgh
DistrictNorth Norfolk
Shire countyNorfolk
RegionEast
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town Fakenham
Postcode district NR21
EU Parliament East of England
UK ParliamentBroadland
List of places
UK
England
Norfolk

Coordinates: 52°49′00″N 0°55′00″E / 52.8166°N 0.9166°E / 52.8166; 0.9166

Great Ryburgh is a village in the English county of Norfolk. Administratively the village is within the civil parish of Ryburgh (where the population is included) along with Little Ryburgh, in the district of North Norfolk.

It is located about two miles south-east of the market town of Fakenham. The River Wensum flows through the village. The village has a large maltings which has been producing malt on a traditional malting floor for two centuries.[1] The village and maltings were formerly served by Ryburgh station on the Great Eastern Railway branch from Wymondham and East Dereham to Fakenham and Wells-next-the-Sea. This line is proposed for restoration, as far as Fakenham, by the Mid-Norfolk Railway.

The church of Great Ryburgh St. Andrew is one of 124 existing round-tower churches in Norfolk.

The Boar Inn is located in Great Ryburgh and is a traditional English country inn, with low-beamed ceilings and an inglenook fireplace in the bar.

An Anglo-Saxon cemetery was discovered in 2016 by an Historic England excavation.[2][3] The waterlogged conditions of the site led to the remarkable preservation of burials including 6 plank-lined graves and 81 hollowed tree-trunk coffins dating from the 7th-9th century AD. The evidence is this may have been a community of early Christians, including a timber structure thought to be a church or chapel

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Great Ryburgh.

References

  1. Pollitt, Michael (24 January 2004). "Norfolk's maltsters to the world" (PDF). Hidden Norfolk. Retrieved 2009-03-09.
  2. "Great Ryburgh dig finds 81 'rare' Anglo-Saxon coffins". BBC News. England. 16 November 2016. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  3. "Exceptional Survival of Rare Anglo-Saxon Coffins". Historic England. Historic England. 16 November 2016. Retrieved 16 November 2016.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.