All Places in Norfolk
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Showing Places 1-12 of 98
Holkham Hall is part of the 25,000 acre Holkham Estate that includes the Holkham National Nature Reserve. The Hall was built in the 1750s by Thomas Coke, the 1st Earl of Leicester and is still privately owned by the same family. As well as this beautiful house you also have a museum with vintage cars and working steam engines. Read more…
Castle Rising Castle completed around 1140 AD by the Norman lord William d’Albini for his new wife, the widow of Henry I. This is now one of the largest, best preserved and most lavishly decorated stone keeps in England, surrounded by 20 acres of mighty earthworks. Read more…
The South beach in Hunstanton is part of a long stretch of sand. Facilities include car parking, cafe, restaurants, pubs and toilets. Read more…
Binham Market Cross, 15th-century cross, on the site of an annual fair held from the 1100s until the 1950s. Read more…
The Queen of Iceni is a Wetherspoon pub in Norwich, Norfolk. Our pub offers a range of real ales, craft beers and freshly ground Lavazza coffee. Breakfast is served until noon, with our full food menu available until 11 pm. Read more…
Wellington Pier in Great Yarmouth on the Norfolk coast is an entertainment complex with an amusement arcade, bowling alley and casino hall. The 700ft wooden pier was first opened in October 1853. Today it offers a range of attractions for all the family. There is a gift shop, café and bar on site. Read more…
Norwich Cathedral is a cathedral church situated in central Norwich in Norfolk. It is one of the city of Norwich’s heritage sites. Construction started in 1096 and it is built mainly from flint and mortar with a Caen limestone frontage and 315ft high spire, the second highest in England. The cathedral’s cloister has over 1,000 bosses, many of which are Read more…
The Nelson Museum celebrates the life and times of Admiral Horatio Nelson and is housed in a grade II listed Georgian house in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk. Visitors can explore the many interactive exhibits and galleries and learn about Nelson’s career, the battles he took part in and the story of his tragic death. On site there is also a reference Read more…
Great Yarmouth Row Houses named because of the town’s distinctive ‘Rows’, a network of narrow alleyways linking Yarmouth’s three main thoroughfares. Both now restored Row 111 and the Old Merchant’s House were originally built in the early 17th century as wealthy merchants’ residences, but later sub-divided into tenements. Read more…
Benedictine priory ruins. The nave, with its splendid 13th-century west front and great bricked-up window, is now the parish church. Read more…
Berney Arms Windmill, one of Norfolk’s best and largest marsh mills. Grinding a constituent of cement and in use until 1951, then pumping water to drain surrounding marshland. Read more…
Cromer Pier is at the heart of the Edwardian seaside resort of Cromer with its narrow roads and cliffs. Cromer has had wooden piers since the 1400s and in the mid 1800s the pier was still just a short structure. In 1901 the pier was finally replaced with a more elegant structure. Read more…
Showing Places 1-12 of 98