Shopping on line can be easy, simple and save you lots of money. It can also take a lot of your time, frustrate you, and result in unwanted purchases. Now the same can be said for regular high street shopping, but with the vast opportunity presented by the Internet it will pay you to spend a few minutes reading this and understanding how to better optimize your Norwich shopping experience:
1. Compare - without doubt the biggest advantage that the Norwich offers shoppers today is the ability to compare thousands of Norwich at a time. This is a great thing, but not necessarily all the time! Too much can be daunting at times so take advantage of the great comparison sites and where possible let them do the hard work for you.
2. Research - if it has been said it will be on the internet. Ignorance is no longer a justifiable reason for buying the wrong thing. Take the time to research in detail everything that you could possible want to know about
3. Testimonials - don't know anybody that has bought a Norwich? Wrong! If the Norwich is good the internet will let you know. Use the Internet as a friend and get testimonials before you buy.
4. Questions - Got a question about Norwich then search the Forums, FAQ's, Blogs etc. Don't be afraid to ask .....
5. Reputation - Never heard of the company selling Norwich? Don't worry, no reason why you should know every company in the world, but you know someone that does! Use the internet to find out what people are saying about Norwich and build up a picture of their reputation for sales, returns, customer service, delivery etc.
6. Returns - still worried that even after all of the above your Norwich wont be what you want? Check out the returns policy. There is so much competition now that someone, somewhere is bound to offer the terms that you are comfortable with.
7. Feedback - happy with your Norwich then let people know, after all you are depending on others people input in your buying decision, so why not give a little back.
8. Security - check for the yellow padlock on the Norwich site before you buy, and the s after http:/ /i.e. https:// = a secure site
9. Contact - got a question about Norwich, or want to leave a comment then check out the sites contact page. Reputable companies have them and respond.
10. Payment - ready to pay for your Norwich, then use your credit card or PayPal! Be aware of companies that don't accept them, there may be genuine reasons but given the huge amount of choice you have when buying online there is no reason at all not to buy via credit card or PayPal.
This article is about the city of Norwich in England. See also Norwich, Connecticut or Norwich (disambiguation).
{| border=1 cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right" width=300 style=margin-left:10px|-!colspan=2 align=center bgcolor="#ff9999"|City of Norwich|-|align=center|{{location map|United Kingdom|label=|position=center|width=115|lat= 52.63|long= 1.30|caption=|float=-->|align=center|
Shown within Norfolk]:||East of England|-|[Surface area:
- Total||List of English districts by area
1 E7 m²
square kilometre|-|Admin. HQ:||Norwich|-| Grid reference: || |-|
ONS coding system:||33UG|-!colspan=2 bgcolor="#ff9999"|Demographics|-|Population:
- Total ()
-
Density
/ km²|-|Ethnicity:||96.8% White
1.08% Mixed race
0.85% South Asian
0.38% Chinese
0.35% Black.|-!colspan=2 bgcolor="#ff9999"|Heraldry|-|colspan=2 align=center|
Arms of the City of Norwich
[Gules a Castle triple-towered and domed Argent in base a
Leopard (heraldry) Or (heraldry).|-!colspan=2 bgcolor="#ff9999"|Politics|-|
Local government in England#Councils and councillors:||Leader & Cabinet|-|Executive:|||-|
MPs elected in the UK general election, 2005:||Charles Clarke,
Ian Gibson (politician)|-!colspan=2 bgcolor="#ff9999"|Post Office and Telephone|-|width="50%"|
Postcode:]|-|width="50%"|
UK telephone numbering plan:||01603|-|}
Norwich (pronounced ) is a city status in the United Kingdom in
East Anglia, in Eastern
England. It is the regional administrative centre and county town of Norfolk.
The suburban area expands beyond its boundary, with extensive suburban areas outside the city on the western, northern and eastern sides, including
Thorpe St. Andrew on the eastern side. The Parliamentary seats cross over into adjacent local government districts. 129,500 (2006 est) people live in the Norwich City Council area. Norwich is the fourth most densely populated Local Authority District within the Eastern Region with 3,319 people per square kilometre (8,592 per square mile).
The
Department for Communities and Local Government recently considered whether Norwich should become a unitary authority, separate from Norfolk County Council. Norfolk County Council web site - Local Government White Paper, Strong and Prosperous Communities Norwich City Council web site - The business case for unitary Norwich Communities and Local Government - Proposals for future unitary structures: Stakeholder consultation It was not selected as one of the new creations in July 2007 as its proposals did not meet the strict criteria.http://www.communities.gov.uk/index.asp?id=1002882&PressNoticeID=2470 Communities.gov.uk Ministers Statement Accessed 26th July 2007
History
Roman
The
Roman Britain had their regional capital at
Venta Icenorum on the river to the south which is near modern day
Caistor St Edmund.
Early English/Norman Conquest
There are two suggested models of development for Norwich. It is possible that three separate early
Anglo-Saxons settlements, one on the north of the river and two either side on the south, joined together as they grew or that one Anglo-Saxon settlement, on the north of the river, emerged in the mid 7th century after the abandonment of the previous three. The ancient city was a thriving centre for trade and commerce in
East Anglia in 1004 AD when it was raided and burnt by
Sweyn I of Denmark the Viking. Mercian coins and shards of pottery from the Rhineland dating to the 8th century suggest that long distance trade was happening long before this. Between 924-939 AD Norwich became fully established as a town due to the fact that it had its own mint. The word
Norvic appears on coins across Europe minted during this period, in the reign of
Athelstan. The Vikings were a strong cultural influence in Norwich for 40-50 years at the end of the 9th century, setting up an Anglo-Scandinavian district towards the north end of present day King Street.
At the time of the
Norman Conquest the city was one of the largest in
England. The Domesday Book states that it had approximately twenty-five churches and a population of between five and ten thousand. It also records the site of an Anglo-Saxon church in Tombland, the site of the Saxon market place and the later Norwich Cathedral. Norwich continued to be a major centre for trade, the
River Wensum being a convenient export route to the sea. Quern stones, and other artifacts, from Scandinavia and the Rhineland have been found during excavations in Norwich city centre which date from the 11th century onwards.
The main area of Saxon settlement south of the Wensum was destroyed by the construction of the Norman castle (see
Norwich Castle) during the 1070s. The Normans established a new focus of settlement around the Castle and the area to the west of it: this became known as the "New" or "France" borough, centred on the Norman's own Market Place which survives to the present day as the City's Provision Market.
In 1096, Herbert de Losinga, then Bishop of Thetford, began construction of Norwich Cathedral. The chief building material for the Cathedral was limestone, imported from Caen in Normandy. To transport the building stone to the cathedral site, a canal was cut from the river (from the site of present-day Pulls Ferry), all the way up to the east wall. Herbert de Losinga then moved his See there to what became the cathedral church for the
Anglican Diocese of Norwich. The bishop of Norwich still signs himself
Norvic.
Middle Ages
By the middle of the 14th century the city walls, about two and a half miles (4 km) long, had been completed. These, along with the river, enclosed a larger area than that of the City of London. However, when the city walls were constructed it was made illegal to build outside them, inhibiting expansion of the city.
In 1144, the Jews of Norwich were accused of ritual murder after a boy (William of Norwich) was found dead with stab wounds. This was the first incidence of
Blood libel against Jews in England. The story was turned into a cult, William acquiring the status of martyr and William was subsequently canonized. The cult of St. William attracted large numbers of pilgrims, bringing wealth to the local church. On
February 6, 1190, all the Jews of Norwich were massacred except for a few who found refuge in the castle.
The wealth generated by the wool trade throughout the
Middle Ages financed the construction of many fine churches and Norwich still has more medieval churches than any other city in Western Europe north of the Alps. Throughout this period Norwich established wide-ranging trading links with other parts of Europe, its markets stretching from Scandinavia to Spain.Around this time, the city was made a county corporate and became capital of one of the most densely populated and prosperous Historic counties of England of England.
The great immigration of 1567 brought a substantial Walloons community of weavers to Norwich. Norwich has been the home of various dissident minorities, notably the French
Huguenot and the Belgian Walloon communities in the
16th century and 17th century centuries. These immigrants were known locally as 'Strangers'. The merchant's house - now a museum - which was their earliest base in the city is still known as 'Strangers' Hall'. It seems that the Strangers were integrated into the local community without a great deal of animosity, at least among the business fraternity who had the most to gain from their skills. The arrival of the Strangers in Norwich bolstered trade with mainland Europe, fostering a movement toward religious reform and radical politics in the city.
English Civil Wars to Victorian Era
The eastern counties were profoundly Parliamentarian in nature and Norwich followed suit, at the cost of some discomfort to the Lord Mayor, a Royalist, and the bishop, Joseph Hall, a moderate but targeted because of his position.
The Canary was first introduced into England by Flemings refugees fleeing from Spain persecution in the
1500s. They brought with them not only advanced techniques in textile working but also their pet canaries, which they began to breed locally. The canary is the emblem of the city's football team,
Norwich City F.C., nicknamed "The Canaries".
In 1797 Thomas Bignold, a 36-year-old wine merchant and banker, founded the first Norwich Union. Some years earlier, when he moved from Kent to Norwich, Bignold had been unable to find anyone willing to insure him against the threat from highwaymen. With the entrepreneurial thought that nothing was impossible, and aware that in a city built largely of wood the threat of fire was uppermost in people's minds, Bignold formed the "Norwich Union Society for the Insurance of Houses, Stock and Merchandise from Fire". The new business, which became known as the Norwich Union Fire Insurance Office, was a "mutual" enterprise. Norwich Union was later to become the country's largest insurance giant.
Until the industrial revolution, as the capital of England's most populous and prosperous county, Norwich vied with Bristol as England's second city.
Norwich's geographical isolation was such that until 1845 when a railway connection was established, it was often quicker to travel to
Amsterdam by boat than to London. The railway was introduced to Norwich by Samuel Morton Peto, who also built the line to Great Yarmouth.
From 1808 to 1814 Norwich hosted a station in the Semaphore chain which connected the Admiralty in London to its naval ships in the port of
Great Yarmouth.
20th Century
In the early part of the 20th century Norwich still had several major manufacturing industries. Among these were the manufacture of shoes (for example the Start-rite brand), clothing, joinery, and structural engineering as well as aircraft design and manufacture. Important employers included Boulton & Paul, Barnards (inventors of machine produced
wire netting), and electrical engineers Laurence Scott and Electromotors.
Norwich also has a long association with chocolate manufacture, primarily through the local firm of
Caley's, which began as a manufacturer and bottler of mineral water and later diversified into making chocolate and Christmas crackers. Caley's was acquired by Mackintosh in the 1930s. It merged with Rowntree's in 1969 to become Rowntree-Mackintosh; it finally was bought by Nestlé and closed down in 1996 with all operations moved to
York, ending a 120-year association with Norwich. The factory existed on the site of what is now the Chapelfield development. Caley's chocolate has since made a reappearance as a brand, and is still produced in Norwich.
HMSO, once the official publishing and stationery arm of the British government and one of the largest print buyers, printers and suppliers of office equipment in the UK, moved most of its operations from London to Norwich in the 1970s.
Jarrolds, established in 1810, was a well-known printer and publisher.
Norwich suffered extensive bomb damage during
World War II, affecting large parts of the old city centre and Victorian terrace housing around the centre. Industry and the rail infrastructure also suffered. The heaviest raids occurred on the nights of 27/28th and 29/
30 April 1942; as part of the
Baedeker raids (so called because Baedeker's series of tourist guides to the British Isles were used to select propaganda rich targets of cultural and historic significance rather than strategic importance). Lord Haw-Haw made reference to the imminent destruction of Norwich's new City Hall (completed in 1938), although in the event it survived unscathed. Significant targets hit included the Morgan's Brewery building, Colman's Wincarnis works, City Station, the Mackintosh chocolate factory, and shopping areas including St. Stephen's Street, St. Benedict's Street, the site of Bonds department store and Curls department store (now
Debenhams).
Economy
Shopping
Norwich was the eighth most prosperous shopping destination in the UK in 2006 CACI web site - CACI Retail Footprint, 2006. Norwich has an ancient market place, established by the Normans between 1071 and 1074, which is today the largest six-days-a-week open-air market in England. The market has recently been downsized and undergone redevelopment, and the new market stalls have proved controversial: with 20% less floorspace than the original stalls, higher rental and other charges, and inadequate rainwater handling, they have been unpopular with many stallholders and customers alike. Indeed, the local Norwich Evening News characterises Norwich Market as an ongoing conflict between the market traders and Norwich City Council, which operates the market Norwich Evening News web site - Market is hit by new cash blow.
The Mall Norwich (Castle Mall until 2007), a shopping mall designed by local practice Lambert, Scott & Innes and opened in 1993, presents an ingenious solution to the problem of sensitively accommodating new retail space in a historic city-centre environment - the building is largely concealed underground and built into the side of a hill, with a public park created on its roof in the area south of the Castle.
The new
Chapelfield shopping mall has been built on the site where the Caleys (later Rowntree Mackintosh and Nestlé) chocolate factory once stood. Chapelfield opened in September 2005, and is described as 'a major new shopping experience', featuring a new flagship department store
House of Fraser. Detractors have criticised Chapelfield as unnecessary and damaging to local businesses; its presence has prompted smaller retailers to band together to promote the virtues of independent shops. Despite this in August 2006 it was reported by the Javelin Group that Norwich was one of the top five retail destinations in the UK, and in October 2006 the city centre was voted the best in the UK, in a shopping satisfaction survey run by Goldfish Credit Card.
Business
The city's economy, originally chiefly industrial with shoemaking a large sector, has changed throughout the eighties and nineties to a service-based economy.
Norwich Union, an Aviva company, still dominates these, but has been joined by other insurance and financial services companies.
New developments on the former
Boulton and Paul site include the Riverside entertainment complex with nightclubs and other venues featuring the usual national leisure brands. Nearby, the football stadium is being upgraded with more residential property development alongside the river Wensum.
Archant, formerly known as Eastern Counties Newspapers (ECN) is a national publishing group that has grown out of the city's local newspaper, the Norwich Evening News and the regional
Eastern Daily Press (EDP).
Norwich has long been associated with the manufacture of
Mustard (condiment).
Colman's was founded in 1814 and continues to operate from its factory at Carrow.
Culture
The
University of East Anglia on the outskirts of Norwich was one of the
New Universities founded in 1963, following the
Robbins Report. UEA adopted the city's motto of independence
Do different and is especially well-known for its creative writing programme; established by Malcolm Bradbury and
Angus Wilson, its graduates including
Kazuo Ishiguro and
Ian McEwan. The university campus houses the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts. The city also has an art college, the Norwich School of Art & Design, located in the city centre. Additionally, the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital on the city's periphery at
Colney was opened in 2001.Norwich Theatre Royal has been on its present site for nearly 250 years, the Act of Parliament in the tenth year of the reign of George II having been rescinded in 1761. The 1300-seat theatre hosts a mix of national touring productions including musicals, dance, drama, family shows, stand-up comedians, opera and pop.
Each year the
Norfolk and Norwich Festival celebrates the arts, drawing many visitors into the city from all over eastern England.
The Forum, Norwich, designed by
Michael Hopkins and Partners and opened in 2002 is a building designed to house the Millennium Library, a replacement for the Norwich Central Library building which burned down in 1994, and the regional headquarters and television centre for BBC East. The building provides a venue for Art exhibitions,
concerts and events, although the city still lacks a dedicated concert venue.
The Millennium Library contains the
2nd Air Division Memorial Library, a collection of material about American culture and the American relationship with East Anglia, especially the role of the
United States Air Force on UK air bases throughout the Second World War and Cold War. Much of the collection was lost in the 1994 fire, but the collection has been restored by contributions from many veterans of the war, both European and American.
Recent attempts to shed the backwater image of Norwich and market it as a popular tourism destination, as well as a centre for science, commerce, culture and the arts, have included the refurbishment of the
Norwich Castle and the opening of the Forum. The proposed new slogan for Norwich,
England's Other City, has been the subject of much discussion and controversy - and it remains to be seen whether it will be finally adopted.A number of signs at the approaches to the city still display the traditional phrase - "Norwich - a fine city."
Media
Satirical comedian
Steve Coogan decided to base his unbearably vain, cheesy broadcaster character 'Alan Partridge' in Norfolk, specifically hosting the pre-breakfast show on the fictitious independent station 'Radio Norwich'. It exploited the county's (undeserved) reputation as being somewhat detached from modern trends, past its prime, and rather peripheral to national life. Since then Radio Norwich has ceased to be a fictitious station - it began broadcasting in 2006 - although not surprisingly "Up With The Partridge" does not feature in its schedule.
Other comic entertainers who have drawn comedy from that stereotype include Allan Smethurst '
The Singing Postman' and The Kipper Family lately represented by 'son'
Sid Kipper, though these are associated with Norfolk in general and not just the City. These have been joined by
The Nimmo Twins.
Independent radio stations include
Radio Broadland (formerly Broadland 102),
Classic Gold Amber, and new station 99.9 Radio Norwich which was launched at the end of June 2006.
BBC Radio Norfolk and the University of East Anglia's Livewire 1350 also broadcast to the city.
There is also a thriving Community Radio station which has recently become Norwich's newest independent broadcaster. Called Future Radio and broadcasting on 96.9 FM, it launched on August 6, 2007. at
Carrow Road.
Norwich has a thriving music scene based around local venues such as the University of East Anglia,
Norwich Arts Centre, The Waterfront, The Queen Charlotte and the Marquee. The city is host to many artists that have achieved national and international recognition such as
Goober Patrol,
Bearsuit, Cord (band),
Tim Bowness, Sennen (band),
Magoo (band),
KaitO, Mantoid and The Sadtowns. There are also some established record labels in Norwich such as Hungry Audio, Burning Shed, MQ Projects, Wilde Club Records and Mummy Where's The Milkman.
Sport
The principal local football (soccer) team is
Norwich City F.C., also known as the Canaries (majority-owned by celebrity chef
Delia Smith); their ground is at Carrow Road. They have a strong East Anglian rivalry with
Ipswich Town F.C.. Norwich City are not to be confused with Norwich United F.C. who actually play their games at Plantation Park,Blofield some 5 miles east of the city.Norwich also has a rugby club, the Norwich Lions and two hockey clubs, Norwich City Hockey Club and Norwich Union Hockey Club.
Outside the city boundary, the Norfolk Ski and Snowboarding club is located at Whitlingham Lane ,
Trowse the club has currently a membership of 5000.Close by at
Whitlingham is the 280 acre Whitlingham Country Park.The Great Broad is home to the Whitlingham Outdoor Education Centre.
Perception
Norwich is sometimes portrayed in the UK media as a place which is remote, unsophisticated, gauche, and out-of-step with national trends (see
Alan Partridge). This reputation is perhaps primarily due to its geographical isolation, and an identification of Norwich as the epitome of Norfolk, a largely rural county. However, Norwich was the second city of England (after London) for several centuries prior to industrialisation, which was slow to occur due to its isolation.
Despite this perception, Norwich has a long history of political radicalism and is by no means a conservative city. With 10 seats, Norwich City Council has a significant proportion of Green Party of England and Wales councillors. The largest number of seats, however, is held by the Labour Party with 15; the Liberal Democrats are in second place with 11. The Conservative Party is currently in fourth place with 3 councillors.
In November 2006 the city was voted the greenest in the UK.
According to the 2001 census, 27.8% of respondents in Norwich stated that they were of "no religion", the highest percentage in England.
There has always been a general tolerance of "incomers" by the "native" population of Norwich and Norfolk, though becoming a "local" is still reckoned to take decades. There are good rail links from
Norwich railway station to Peterborough and
London, and direct services to
Cambridge were added in 2004.
A large proportion of the population of Norwich are users of the
Internet. A recent article has suggested that, compared with other UK cities, it is top of the league for the percentage of population who use the popular Internet auction site eBay. The city has also unveiled the biggest free Wi-Fi network in the UK, which opened in July 2006.. Openlink will be undergoing essential work during august
In August 2007 Norwich was shortlisted as one of nine finalists its population group for the International Awards for Liveable Communities | LivCom Awards
Transport
||-||}
Road
Norwich is connected to Great Yarmouth (to the east) and
Kings Lynn and
Peterborough (to the west) by the A47 road, which bypasses the city. It is linked to
Cambridge via the
A11 road, which leads to the M11 motorway for London and the
M25 motorway. It is linked to Ipswich (to the south) by the
A140 road and to Lowestoft (to the south-east) by the
A146 road. Norwich is currently the largest population centre in the UK not to be connected to any other centre by an unbroken
dual carriageway. Norwich is also the only English city not to feature on a single motorway sign anywhere in the country.
Rail
Rail links to the rest of the country are via Liverpool Street station and Peterborough. Local lines also run to destinations including
Great Yarmouth, Lowestoft and
Sheringham and Cambridge. Norwich formerly had three stations running to a number of other local destinations, but now the rail terminus is at Norwich railway station.
Bus and coach
Norwich is served by many bus operators. The main bus operator is First East Anglia with their Overground network served by low floor buses and other routes served with a mixture of low floor and standard floor vehicles. Destinations throughout Norfolk are served and some beyond including
Peterborough,
Lowestoft and Thetford. National Express also run ten coaches a day to
Stansted Airport, five a day to London, and one a day to
Birmingham. Most bus and coach services, run from
Norwich bus station in Surrey Street.
Park and Ride
As of 2005, Norwich had the biggest
Park and Ride operation in the UK. Run by Norfolk County Council it runs from six purpose-built sites into Norwich bus station using colour-coded buses :
- Norwich International Airport (off the A140 road) to the north via Aylsham Road; 620 spaces, yellow buses.
- Sprowston (off the A1151 road) to the northeast via Wroxham Road; 788 spaces, purple buses.
- Postwick (off the A47 road) to the east via Thorpe, Norfolk Road; 525 spaces, red buses.
- Harford (off the A140 road) to the south via Ipswich Road; 1088 spaces, blue buses.
- Thickthorn (of the A11 road) to the southwest via Newmarket Road; 786 spaces, pink buses.
- Costessey (off the A47 road) to the west via Dereham Road; 110 spaces, green buses.
Altogether nearly 5000 parking spaces are provided and in 2006 3.4 million passengers used the service. Services begin running into the city at 06:40 Monday to Friday, with the last buses returning from 19:25 (20:30 on Thursday).
Air
Norwich International Airport is a feeder to
KLM's
Schiphol Airport hub. FlyBe, Air Southwest, Eastern Airways, and
Bristow Helicopters all serve Norwich, in addition to a strong holiday charter flight business. The airport was originally the Royal Air Force airfield at
Horsham St Faith. This was once the home of
Air UK, which grew out of Air Anglia and was then absorbed by the Dutch airline KLM.
Bicycle
National Cycle Route
National Cycle Route#Main routes passes through Norwich, linking Beccles and
Fakenham (and eventually
Dover and the Shetland Islands!). A map of cycle routes in and around Norwich is available here
Water
The
River Yare is navigable from the sea at Great Yarmouth all the way to Trowse, south of the city. From there the
River Wensum is navigable into Norwich, and is crossed by the Novi Sad Friendship Bridge. Scheduled trips through the city and out to the nearby Broads are run by City Boats from outside Norwich Station and also Elm Hill.
Tourism
||-||-||}Norwich is a popular destination for a city break; attractions include
Norwich Cathedral, the cobbled streets and museums of old Norwich, the castle, Cow Tower,
Dragon Hall (Norwich) and the Forum. Norwich is also one of the UK's top ten shopping destinations, with a mix of chain retailers and independent stores as well as one of the largest outdoor markets in England. It is currently ranked the 147th biggest city in Europe.
Travellers' comments
In
1507 the poet
John Skelton (1460–1529) wrote of two destructive fires in his
Lament for the City of Norwich.
All life is brief, and frail all man's estate. City, farewell: I mourn thy cruel fate.
Thomas Fuller in his
The Worthies of England described the City in
1662 as -
Either a city in an orchard or an orchard in a city, so equally are houses and trees blended in it, so that the pleasure of the country and the populousness of the city meet here together. Yet in this mixture, the inhabitants participate nothing of the rusticalness of the one, but altogether the urbanity and civility of the other.
Celia Fiennes (1662–1741) visited Norwich in 1698 and described it as
a city walled full round of towers, except on the river side which serves as a wall; they seem the best in repair of any walled city I know.
She also records that held in the City three times a year were-
great fairs...to which resort a vast concourse of people and wares a full trade.
Norwich being
a rich, thriving industrious place full of weaving, knitting and dyeing.
Daniel Defoe in his Tour of the whole Island of Great Britain (1724) wrote of the City-
the inhabitants being all busy at their manufactures, dwell in their garrets at their looms, in their combing-shops, so they all them, twisting-mills, and other work-houses; almost all the works they are employed in being done within doors.
John Evelyn (1620–1706) Royalist, Traveller and Diarist wrote to
Sir Thomas Browne-
I hear Norwich is a place very much addicted to the flowery part.
He visited the City as a courtier to
Charles II of England in 1671 and described it thus -
The suburbs are large, the prospect sweet, and other amenities, not omitting the flower-garden, which all the Inhabitants excel in of this City, the fabric of stuffs, which affords the Merchants, and brings a vast trade to this populous Town.
George Borrow in his semi-autobiographical novel
Lavengro (1851) wrote of Norwich as-
A fine old city, perhaps the most curious specimen at present extant of the genuine old English Town. ..There it spreads from north to south, with its venerable houses, its numerous gardens, its thrice twelve churches, its mighty mound....There is an old grey castle on top of that mighty mound: and yonder rising three hundred feet above the soil, from amongst those noble forest trees, behold that old Norman master-work, that cloud-enriched cathedral spire ...Now who can wonder that the children of that fine old city are proud, and offer up prayers for her prosperity?
Borrow wrote far less favourably of the City in his translation of Faust-
They found the people of the place modelled after so unsightly a pattern, with such ugly figures and flat features that the devil owned he had never seen them equalled, except by the inhabitants of an English town, called Norwich, when dressed in their Sunday's best.
In 1812, Andrew Robertson wrote to the painter
Constable-
I arrived here a week ago and find it a place where the arts are very much cultivated....some branches of knowledge, chemistry, botany, etc. are carried to a great length. General literature seems to be pursued with an ardour which is astonishing when we consider that it does not contain a university, as is merely a manufacturing town.
In 1962, Nikolaus Pevsner stated in his North-West Norfolk and Norwich volume of 'The Buildings of England' that
Norwich is distinguished by a prouder sense of civic responsibility than any other town of about the same size in Britain," praising its monumental and bravely modernist City Hall.
Notable residents
Throughout its history, Norwich has been associated with
Radicalization politics,
nonconformist religion, political dissent and
liberalism. Between 1790 and 1840, many of the famous names associated with the City flourished. These include:
- Michael Andrews (artist) (1928-1995)
- Elizabeth Bentley 1767-1839.Authoress wrote " Tales for Children in Verse".Lived at 45 St St. Stephen's Square.
- George Borrow (1803–1881), writer and traveller. In his youth Borrow was resident at Willow Lane. He attended the Norwich King Edward school. Borrow recollects his youth in the city and conversations with the philologist and translator of German Romantic literature, William Taylor in his semi-autobiographical novel Lavengro.
- Sir Thomas Browne (1605–1682). medical doctor, polymath scholar, encyclopedist and philosopher with interests in Bible scholarship and the esoteric. The stylistic purity and stupendous learning displayed in Browne's varied prose in the spheres of religion, science and art are minor classics of World literature.
- Edith Cavell (1865–1915) was born in Swardeston, 4 miles south of Norwich. She was a World War I nurse who was Execution by firing squad by the Germans for helping allied prisoners escape in violation of military law. She is buried on Life's Green, on the east side of Norwich Cathedral.
- John Crome and Joseph Stannard, along with John Sell Cotman, established the first art movement outside of London. The Norwich school of painters were influenced by the achievements of The Netherlands landscape painting and the beauty of the rural hinterland surrounding Norwich.
- William Crotch (1775–1847). Composer, artist and teacher. Norwich's Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. He gave daily public organ recitals aged two and a half. Crotch played God Save the King before the King aged three. He had performed at every major town in England and Scotland by the age of seven. Crotch became Organist of Christ Church, Oxford, University of Oxford and for fifty years he was University of Oxford's Professor of Music. Unlike Mozart, however, his precocious musical talents failed to mature to genius.
- Pablo Fanque (1796–1871). The first Black people Circus Proprietor in Britain was born in the city.
- Elizabeth Fry (1780–1845). The prison reformer and leading Religious Society of Friends was born in Gurney Court in Magdalen Street and was one of several philanthropists associated with the city. Her portrait is upon the Series E (2005) Bank of England £5 note.
- Joseph John Gurney (1788–1847) was a banker and philanthropist who worked with his sister Elizabeth Fry (see above) in prison reform. He was also active in the movement to abolish the slave trade and a member of the temperance movement.
- Robert William Bilton Hornby (1821–1884) was a noted local antiquarian, priest and lord of the manor from the City of York. He was ordained a deacon at Norwich in 1844.
- Julian of Norwich. Medieval Christian mysticism and contemporary of Chaucer. Julian is the author of The revelations of Divine Love the first book written by a woman in the English language. Julian's writings are well-represented by the scholarly website www.umilta.net.
- Robert Kett. Norwich's very own Robin Hood or Wat Tyler. Kett was a Norfolk landowner from Wymondham who lead the peasant's revolt in 1549 in the name of the common man against the corrupt Norfolk landowners. This eventually lead to the Battle of Dussindale against the King's forces on the 27 August 1549 in which 3000 of Kett's men were killed. He was hanged for Treason at Norwich Castle on the 7 December 1549.
- James Martineau (1805–1900) Philosopher and brother to Harriet.
- Harriet Martineau (1802–1876). The daughter of a Norwich manufacturer of Huguenot descent, she suffered from ill-health and deafness throughout her life. A devout Unitarian, her writings include Illustrations of political economy (1832-1834). Harriet Martineau supported the abolitionist campaign in the United States writing Society in America (1837). She translated writings by Auguste Comte. Her first novel was entitled Deerbrook (1839). A radical in religion she published the anti-theological Laws of Man's Social Nature (1851) and Biographical sketches (1869).
- Bernard Meadows,(1915–2005) Modernist Sculptor
- R. H. Mottram (1883-1971)- novelist and Lord Mayor of Norwich
- Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson attended the Norwich School (educational institution) from 1767 to 1768. He was born in nearby Burnham Thorpe.
- Amelia Opie (1769–1853), Norwich author and Religious Society of Friends. In 1825 she drastically changed her life as a socialite, party-goer, and attendant at literary soirees, to become a Quaker.
- Sir James Edward Smith botanist, natural historian and one-time owner of the Linnean collection of Carolus Linnaeus
- William Smith (1756 – 1835), British Whig Party politician, dissenter and abolitionist, Member of Parliament for Norwich from 1807.
Contemporary names associated with Norwich include:
- Bill Bryson, American writer and humorist, lives near Wymondham, near Norwich.
- Martin Burgess, builder of the famous Gurney Clock in the Castle Mall
- Charles Clarke, Labour MP and former Home Secretary, lives in Norwich.
- Cathy Dennis, Singer/Songwriter who was born in Norwich in 1969.
- Ralph Firman, former Formula 1 Driver was born in Norwich in 1975. He and his family live in nearby Attleborough, and he was educated at Gresham's School. Currently racing in the A1 Grand Prix series for Republic of Ireland, for which he qualifies through his Mother's Irish nationality.
- Stephen Fry, comedian, author, actor and filmmaker, studied at Norwich City College, and is a Norwich City F.C. fan.
- Trisha Goddard, talk show host lived in Norwich.
- Andy Green Order of the British Empire, a Wing Commander in the Royal Air Force, is the current holder of the world land speed record, having piloted the ThrustSSC to the first ever supersonic speed on land in the Black Rock Desert, USA on 25 September 1997.
- Greg James (DJ), BBC Radio 1 presenter, studied at UEA.
- Paul Jones (singer), blues singer and BBC Radio 2 presenter.
- Becky Mantin, ITV Weather presenter and This Morning (TV series) reporter.
- Bernard Matthews, founder of the eponymous meat company.
- Sir John Mills, born in North Elmham in Norfolk. Mills was educated at the Norwich High School for Boys. He also had Football (Soccer) trials with Norwich City F.C. in the 1920s before moving into acting.
- Beth Orton, Award-winning singer/songwriter, was born in Dereham and spent much of her childhood in Norwich.
- Philip Pullman, British writer was born in Norwich on 19 October 1946. Best-selling author of the His Dark Materials trilogy of fantasy novels and a number of other books.
- Delia Smith, Celebrity chef and joint majority owner of Norwich City F.C.
- Chris Sutton, Football player (striker); joint top scorer for the Premier League in 1997/8; formerly the record English transfer (at £5 million from Norwich to Blackburn in 1994).
- Tim Westwood, BBC Radio 1 Rap DJ and presenter of popular MTV show "Pimp My Ride (UK)". Grew up in and around Norwich (his father was the bishop of Peterborough, in the neighbouring county of Cambridgeshire) and went to Norwich School.
Architecture
Norwich has a wealth of historical architecture. The medieval period is represented by the 11th-century
Norwich Cathedral, 12th-century castle (now a museum) and a large number of
parish churches. During the Middle Ages, 57 churches stood within the city wall; 31 still exist today. This gave rise to the common (in the city) saying that it had a church for every week of the year, and a pub for every day. Most of the medieval building is in the city centre. From the 18th century the pre-eminent local name is Thomas Ivory, who built the Assembly Rooms (1776), the Octagon Chapel (1756), St Helen's House (1752) in the grounds of the
Great Hospital, and innovative speculative housing in Surrey Street (c. 1761). Ivory should not be confused with the Irish architect of the same name and similar period.
The 19th century saw an explosion in Norwich's size and much of its housing stock, as well as commercial building in the city centre, dates from this period. The local architect of the
Victorian era and
Edwardian era periods who has continued to command most critical respect was
George Skipper (1856-1948). Examples of his work include the headquarters of
Norwich Union on Surrey Street; the
Art Nouveau Royal Arcade; and the Hotel de Paris in the nearby seaside town of Cromer. The neo-Gothic Roman Catholic
cathedral on
Earlham Road, begun in 1882, is by George Gilbert Scott Junior and his brother, John Oldrid Scott.
The city continued to grow through the 20th century and much housing, particularly in areas further out from the city centre, dates from that century. The first notable building post-Skipper was the city hall by CH James and SR Pierce, opened in 1938. Bombing during the
World War II, while resulting in relatively little loss of life, caused significant damage to housing stock in the city centre. Much of the replacement postwar stock was designed by the local authority architect, David Percival. However, the major postwar development in Norwich from an architectural point of view was the opening of the University of East Anglia in 1964. Originally designed by Denys Lasdun (his design was never completely executed), it has been added to over subsequent decades by major names such as
Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank and
Rick Mather.
In Popular Culture
- In Harry Turtledove's Timeline-191 of alternate history novels, Norwich is destroyed by a German nuclear bomb in 1944.
- In the 24th episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus, Just the Words, one of the prizes a person can win for joining "Crackpot Religions Ltd." is "the entire Norwich City Council."
Twinned cities
The city is twinned with the following cities:
References
External links
Media
- Norwich Evening News
- Eastern Daily Press
- Radio Broadland
- Radio Norwich
- BBC Norfolk
- Livewire1350
- Totally Norwich - local's guide to Norwich
- Norwich Darkside
Official
- Norwich City Council
- Your Norwich - Online guide
- Visit Norwich - Official visitor guide
- Visit Norfolk - Official tourism site for Norfolk's guide to Norwich
- Norwich rivers Heritage Group
History
- Norwich The Old City
- Norwich Cathedral and History of the See (King's Handbook, 1862)
- Norwich Watermills & Windmills from the Norfolkmills website
Tourism and pictures
- Photographs of old Norwich - Photographs of Norwich from the 1930s to the 1950s.
- Yarmouth Portal
- An online guided tour of Norwich in pictures
- The Norwich Guide - for residents and visitors
- Photos of Norwich - Flickr Collection from a local
- Videos of Norwich - Collection Of Videos From Norwich including the Cathedral and Castle
- Hotels and Inns in Norwich - Includes Guest Feedback
This article is about the city of Norwich in England. See also Norwich, Connecticut or Norwich (disambiguation).
{| border=1 cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right" width=300 style=margin-left:10px|-!colspan=2 align=center bgcolor="#ff9999"|City of Norwich|-|align=center|{{location map|United Kingdom|label=|position=center|width=115|lat= 52.63|long= 1.30|caption=|float=-->|align=center|
Shown within Norfolk]:||
East of England|-|[Surface area:
- Total||
List of English districts by area1 E7 m² square kilometre|-|Admin. HQ:||Norwich|-| Grid reference: || |-|ONS coding system:||33UG|-!colspan=2 bgcolor="#ff9999"|Demographics|-|
Population:
- Total ()
- Density
/ km²|-|Ethnicity:||96.8% White
1.08% Mixed race
0.85% South Asian
0.38% Chinese
0.35% Black.|-!colspan=2 bgcolor="#ff9999"|Heraldry|-|colspan=2 align=center|
Arms of the City of Norwich
[Gules a Castle triple-towered and domed
Argent in base a
Leopard (heraldry) Or (heraldry).|-!colspan=2 bgcolor="#ff9999"|Politics|-|Local government in England#Councils and councillors:||Leader & Cabinet|-|Executive:|||-|
MPs elected in the UK general election, 2005:||
Charles Clarke,
Ian Gibson (politician)|-!colspan=2 bgcolor="#ff9999"|Post Office and Telephone|-|width="50%"|
Postcode:]|-|width="50%"|UK telephone numbering plan:||01603|-|}
Norwich (pronounced ) is a city status in the United Kingdom in
East Anglia, in Eastern England. It is the regional administrative centre and county town of
Norfolk.
The suburban area expands beyond its boundary, with extensive suburban areas outside the city on the western, northern and eastern sides, including
Thorpe St. Andrew on the eastern side. The Parliamentary seats cross over into adjacent local government districts. 129,500 (2006 est) people live in the Norwich City Council area. Norwich is the fourth most densely populated Local Authority District within the Eastern Region with 3,319 people per square kilometre (8,592 per square mile).
The
Department for Communities and Local Government recently considered whether Norwich should become a
unitary authority, separate from Norfolk County Council. Norfolk County Council web site - Local Government White Paper, Strong and Prosperous Communities Norwich City Council web site - The business case for unitary Norwich Communities and Local Government - Proposals for future unitary structures: Stakeholder consultation It was not selected as one of the new creations in July 2007 as its proposals did not meet the strict criteria.http://www.communities.gov.uk/index.asp?id=1002882&PressNoticeID=2470 Communities.gov.uk Ministers Statement Accessed 26th July 2007
History
Roman
The Roman Britain had their regional capital at
Venta Icenorum on the river to the south which is near modern day
Caistor St Edmund.
Early English/Norman Conquest
There are two suggested models of development for Norwich. It is possible that three separate early
Anglo-Saxons settlements, one on the north of the river and two either side on the south, joined together as they grew or that one Anglo-Saxon settlement, on the north of the river, emerged in the mid 7th century after the abandonment of the previous three. The ancient city was a thriving centre for trade and commerce in
East Anglia in 1004 AD when it was raided and burnt by
Sweyn I of Denmark the Viking. Mercian coins and shards of pottery from the Rhineland dating to the 8th century suggest that long distance trade was happening long before this. Between 924-939 AD Norwich became fully established as a town due to the fact that it had its own mint. The word
Norvic appears on coins across Europe minted during this period, in the reign of Athelstan. The Vikings were a strong cultural influence in Norwich for 40-50 years at the end of the 9th century, setting up an Anglo-Scandinavian district towards the north end of present day King Street.
At the time of the
Norman Conquest the city was one of the largest in
England. The Domesday Book states that it had approximately twenty-five churches and a population of between five and ten thousand. It also records the site of an Anglo-Saxon church in Tombland, the site of the Saxon market place and the later Norwich Cathedral. Norwich continued to be a major centre for trade, the
River Wensum being a convenient export route to the sea. Quern stones, and other artifacts, from Scandinavia and the Rhineland have been found during excavations in Norwich city centre which date from the 11th century onwards.
The main area of Saxon settlement south of the Wensum was destroyed by the construction of the Norman castle (see
Norwich Castle) during the 1070s. The Normans established a new focus of settlement around the Castle and the area to the west of it: this became known as the "New" or "
France" borough, centred on the Norman's own Market Place which survives to the present day as the City's Provision Market.
In 1096, Herbert de Losinga, then Bishop of Thetford, began construction of Norwich Cathedral. The chief building material for the Cathedral was limestone, imported from Caen in Normandy. To transport the building stone to the cathedral site, a canal was cut from the river (from the site of present-day Pulls Ferry), all the way up to the east wall. Herbert de Losinga then moved his See there to what became the cathedral church for the
Anglican Diocese of Norwich. The bishop of Norwich still signs himself
Norvic.
Middle Ages
By the middle of the 14th century the city walls, about two and a half miles (4 km) long, had been completed. These, along with the river, enclosed a larger area than that of the City of London. However, when the city walls were constructed it was made illegal to build outside them, inhibiting expansion of the city.
In 1144, the Jews of Norwich were accused of ritual murder after a boy (William of Norwich) was found dead with stab wounds. This was the first incidence of
Blood libel against Jews in England. The story was turned into a cult, William acquiring the status of martyr and William was subsequently
canonized. The cult of St. William attracted large numbers of pilgrims, bringing wealth to the local church. On February 6,
1190, all the Jews of Norwich were massacred except for a few who found refuge in the castle.
The wealth generated by the
wool trade throughout the Middle Ages financed the construction of many fine churches and Norwich still has more medieval churches than any other city in Western Europe north of the Alps. Throughout this period Norwich established wide-ranging trading links with other parts of Europe, its markets stretching from Scandinavia to Spain.Around this time, the city was made a county corporate and became capital of one of the most densely populated and prosperous Historic counties of England of England.
The great immigration of 1567 brought a substantial
Walloons community of weavers to Norwich. Norwich has been the home of various dissident minorities, notably the French
Huguenot and the Belgian Walloon communities in the 16th century and
17th century centuries. These immigrants were known locally as 'Strangers'. The merchant's house - now a museum - which was their earliest base in the city is still known as 'Strangers' Hall'. It seems that the Strangers were integrated into the local community without a great deal of animosity, at least among the business fraternity who had the most to gain from their skills. The arrival of the Strangers in Norwich bolstered trade with mainland Europe, fostering a movement toward religious reform and radical politics in the city.
English Civil Wars to Victorian Era
The eastern counties were profoundly Parliamentarian in nature and Norwich followed suit, at the cost of some discomfort to the Lord Mayor, a Royalist, and the bishop,
Joseph Hall, a moderate but targeted because of his position.
The
Canary was first introduced into England by Flemings refugees fleeing from
Spain persecution in the
1500s. They brought with them not only advanced techniques in textile working but also their pet canaries, which they began to breed locally. The canary is the emblem of the city's football team, Norwich City F.C., nicknamed "The Canaries".
In 1797 Thomas Bignold, a 36-year-old wine merchant and banker, founded the first Norwich Union. Some years earlier, when he moved from Kent to Norwich, Bignold had been unable to find anyone willing to insure him against the threat from highwaymen. With the entrepreneurial thought that nothing was impossible, and aware that in a city built largely of wood the threat of fire was uppermost in people's minds, Bignold formed the "Norwich Union Society for the Insurance of Houses, Stock and Merchandise from Fire". The new business, which became known as the Norwich Union Fire Insurance Office, was a "mutual" enterprise. Norwich Union was later to become the country's largest insurance giant.
Until the industrial revolution, as the capital of England's most populous and prosperous county, Norwich vied with Bristol as England's second city.
Norwich's geographical isolation was such that until 1845 when a railway connection was established, it was often quicker to travel to
Amsterdam by boat than to London. The railway was introduced to Norwich by
Samuel Morton Peto, who also built the line to Great Yarmouth.
From 1808 to 1814 Norwich hosted a station in the
Semaphore chain which connected the Admiralty in
London to its naval ships in the port of
Great Yarmouth.
20th Century
In the early part of the 20th century Norwich still had several major manufacturing industries. Among these were the manufacture of shoes (for example the Start-rite brand), clothing, joinery, and structural engineering as well as aircraft design and manufacture. Important employers included Boulton & Paul, Barnards (inventors of machine produced
wire netting), and electrical engineers Laurence Scott and Electromotors.
Norwich also has a long association with chocolate manufacture, primarily through the local firm of
Caley's, which began as a manufacturer and bottler of mineral water and later diversified into making chocolate and Christmas crackers. Caley's was acquired by Mackintosh in the 1930s. It merged with
Rowntree's in 1969 to become Rowntree-Mackintosh; it finally was bought by
Nestlé and closed down in 1996 with all operations moved to
York, ending a 120-year association with Norwich. The factory existed on the site of what is now the Chapelfield development. Caley's chocolate has since made a reappearance as a brand, and is still produced in Norwich.
HMSO, once the official publishing and stationery arm of the British government and one of the largest print buyers, printers and suppliers of office equipment in the UK, moved most of its operations from London to Norwich in the 1970s.
Jarrolds, established in 1810, was a well-known printer and publisher.
Norwich suffered extensive bomb damage during World War II, affecting large parts of the old city centre and Victorian terrace housing around the centre. Industry and the rail infrastructure also suffered. The heaviest raids occurred on the nights of 27/28th and 29/
30 April 1942; as part of the
Baedeker raids (so called because Baedeker's series of tourist guides to the British Isles were used to select propaganda rich targets of cultural and historic significance rather than strategic importance). Lord Haw-Haw made reference to the imminent destruction of Norwich's new City Hall (completed in 1938), although in the event it survived unscathed. Significant targets hit included the Morgan's Brewery building, Colman's Wincarnis works, City Station, the Mackintosh chocolate factory, and shopping areas including St. Stephen's Street, St. Benedict's Street, the site of Bonds department store and Curls department store (now Debenhams).
Economy
Shopping
Norwich was the eighth most prosperous shopping destination in the UK in 2006 CACI web site - CACI Retail Footprint, 2006. Norwich has an ancient market place, established by the Normans between 1071 and 1074, which is today the largest six-days-a-week open-air market in England. The market has recently been downsized and undergone redevelopment, and the new market stalls have proved controversial: with 20% less floorspace than the original stalls, higher rental and other charges, and inadequate rainwater handling, they have been unpopular with many stallholders and customers alike. Indeed, the local
Norwich Evening News characterises Norwich Market as an ongoing conflict between the market traders and
Norwich City Council, which operates the market Norwich Evening News web site - Market is hit by new cash blow.
The Mall Norwich (Castle Mall until 2007), a shopping mall designed by local practice Lambert, Scott & Innes and opened in 1993, presents an ingenious solution to the problem of sensitively accommodating new retail space in a historic city-centre environment - the building is largely concealed underground and built into the side of a hill, with a public park created on its roof in the area south of the Castle.
The new
Chapelfield shopping mall has been built on the site where the Caleys (later
Rowntree Mackintosh and Nestlé) chocolate factory once stood. Chapelfield opened in September 2005, and is described as 'a major new shopping experience', featuring a new flagship department store
House of Fraser. Detractors have criticised Chapelfield as unnecessary and damaging to local businesses; its presence has prompted smaller retailers to band together to promote the virtues of independent shops. Despite this in August 2006 it was reported by the Javelin Group that Norwich was one of the top five retail destinations in the UK, and in October 2006 the city centre was voted the best in the UK, in a shopping satisfaction survey run by Goldfish
Credit Card.
Business
The city's economy, originally chiefly industrial with shoemaking a large sector, has changed throughout the eighties and nineties to a service-based economy.
Norwich Union, an Aviva company, still dominates these, but has been joined by other insurance and financial services companies.
New developments on the former Boulton and Paul site include the Riverside entertainment complex with nightclubs and other venues featuring the usual national leisure brands. Nearby, the football stadium is being upgraded with more residential property development alongside the river Wensum.
Archant, formerly known as Eastern Counties Newspapers (ECN) is a national publishing group that has grown out of the city's local newspaper, the Norwich Evening News and the regional
Eastern Daily Press (EDP).
Norwich has long been associated with the manufacture of
Mustard (condiment). Colman's was founded in 1814 and continues to operate from its factory at Carrow.
Culture
The University of East Anglia on the outskirts of Norwich was one of the New Universities founded in 1963, following the
Robbins Report. UEA adopted the city's motto of independence
Do different and is especially well-known for its creative writing programme; established by
Malcolm Bradbury and
Angus Wilson, its graduates including Kazuo Ishiguro and
Ian McEwan. The university campus houses the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts. The city also has an art college, the Norwich School of Art & Design, located in the city centre. Additionally, the
Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital on the city's periphery at Colney was opened in 2001.Norwich Theatre Royal has been on its present site for nearly 250 years, the Act of Parliament in the tenth year of the reign of George II having been rescinded in 1761. The 1300-seat theatre hosts a mix of national touring productions including musicals, dance, drama, family shows, stand-up comedians, opera and pop.
Each year the Norfolk and Norwich Festival celebrates the arts, drawing many visitors into the city from all over eastern England.
The Forum, Norwich, designed by Michael Hopkins and Partners and opened in 2002 is a building designed to house the Millennium Library, a replacement for the Norwich Central Library building which burned down in 1994, and the regional headquarters and television centre for
BBC East. The building provides a venue for Art exhibitions, concerts and events, although the city still lacks a dedicated concert venue.
The Millennium Library contains the 2nd Air Division Memorial Library, a collection of material about American culture and the American relationship with East Anglia, especially the role of the
United States Air Force on UK air bases throughout the
Second World War and
Cold War. Much of the collection was lost in the 1994 fire, but the collection has been restored by contributions from many veterans of the war, both European and American.
Recent attempts to shed the backwater image of Norwich and market it as a popular tourism destination, as well as a centre for science, commerce, culture and the arts, have included the refurbishment of the Norwich Castle and the opening of the Forum. The proposed new slogan for Norwich,
England's Other City, has been the subject of much discussion and controversy - and it remains to be seen whether it will be finally adopted.A number of signs at the approaches to the city still display the traditional phrase - "Norwich - a fine city."
Media
Satirical comedian
Steve Coogan decided to base his unbearably vain, cheesy broadcaster character '
Alan Partridge' in Norfolk, specifically hosting the pre-breakfast show on the fictitious independent station 'Radio Norwich'. It exploited the county's (undeserved) reputation as being somewhat detached from modern trends, past its prime, and rather peripheral to national life. Since then Radio Norwich has ceased to be a fictitious station - it began broadcasting in 2006 - although not surprisingly "Up With The Partridge" does not feature in its schedule.
Other comic entertainers who have drawn comedy from that stereotype include Allan Smethurst '
The Singing Postman' and
The Kipper Family lately represented by 'son'
Sid Kipper, though these are associated with Norfolk in general and not just the City. These have been joined by
The Nimmo Twins.
Independent radio stations include Radio Broadland (formerly Broadland 102),
Classic Gold Amber, and new station
99.9 Radio Norwich which was launched at the end of June 2006.
BBC Radio Norfolk and the University of East Anglia's
Livewire 1350 also broadcast to the city.
There is also a thriving Community Radio station which has recently become Norwich's newest independent broadcaster. Called Future Radio and broadcasting on 96.9 FM, it launched on August 6, 2007. at
Carrow Road.
Norwich has a thriving music scene based around local venues such as the
University of East Anglia,
Norwich Arts Centre, The Waterfront,
The Queen Charlotte and the Marquee. The city is host to many artists that have achieved national and international recognition such as
Goober Patrol,
Bearsuit, Cord (band), Tim Bowness, Sennen (band), Magoo (band), KaitO, Mantoid and The Sadtowns. There are also some established record labels in Norwich such as Hungry Audio, Burning Shed, MQ Projects, Wilde Club Records and Mummy Where's The Milkman.
Sport
The principal local
football (soccer) team is
Norwich City F.C., also known as the Canaries (majority-owned by celebrity chef
Delia Smith); their ground is at Carrow Road. They have a strong East Anglian rivalry with Ipswich Town F.C.. Norwich City are not to be confused with
Norwich United F.C. who actually play their games at Plantation Park,Blofield some 5 miles east of the city.Norwich also has a rugby club, the Norwich Lions and two hockey clubs, Norwich City Hockey Club and Norwich Union Hockey Club.
Outside the city boundary, the Norfolk Ski and Snowboarding club is located at Whitlingham Lane ,Trowse the club has currently a membership of 5000.Close by at
Whitlingham is the 280 acre Whitlingham Country Park.The Great Broad is home to the Whitlingham Outdoor Education Centre.
Perception
Norwich is sometimes portrayed in the UK media as a place which is remote, unsophisticated, gauche, and out-of-step with national trends (see Alan Partridge). This reputation is perhaps primarily due to its geographical isolation, and an identification of Norwich as the epitome of Norfolk, a largely rural county. However, Norwich was the second city of England (after London) for several centuries prior to industrialisation, which was slow to occur due to its isolation.
Despite this perception, Norwich has a long history of political radicalism and is by no means a conservative city. With 10 seats, Norwich City Council has a significant proportion of Green Party of England and Wales councillors. The largest number of seats, however, is held by the Labour Party with 15; the Liberal Democrats are in second place with 11. The Conservative Party is currently in fourth place with 3 councillors.
In November 2006 the city was voted the greenest in the UK.
According to the 2001 census, 27.8% of respondents in Norwich stated that they were of "no religion", the highest percentage in England.
There has always been a general tolerance of "incomers" by the "native" population of Norwich and Norfolk, though becoming a "local" is still reckoned to take decades. There are good rail links from
Norwich railway station to
Peterborough and
London, and direct services to
Cambridge were added in 2004.
A large proportion of the population of Norwich are users of the Internet. A recent article has suggested that, compared with other UK cities, it is top of the league for the percentage of population who use the popular Internet auction site eBay. The city has also unveiled the biggest free Wi-Fi network in the UK, which opened in July 2006.. Openlink will be undergoing essential work during august
In August 2007 Norwich was shortlisted as one of nine finalists its population group for the International Awards for Liveable Communities | LivCom Awards
Transport
||-||}
Road
Norwich is connected to Great Yarmouth (to the east) and Kings Lynn and
Peterborough (to the west) by the
A47 road, which bypasses the city. It is linked to
Cambridge via the
A11 road, which leads to the
M11 motorway for
London and the M25 motorway. It is linked to Ipswich (to the south) by the A140 road and to
Lowestoft (to the south-east) by the A146 road. Norwich is currently the largest population centre in the UK not to be connected to any other centre by an unbroken
dual carriageway. Norwich is also the only English city not to feature on a single motorway sign anywhere in the country.
Rail
Rail links to the rest of the country are via Liverpool Street station and Peterborough. Local lines also run to destinations including Great Yarmouth, Lowestoft and
Sheringham and Cambridge. Norwich formerly had three stations running to a number of other local destinations, but now the rail terminus is at
Norwich railway station.
Bus and coach
Norwich is served by many bus operators. The main bus operator is First East Anglia with their Overground network served by low floor buses and other routes served with a mixture of low floor and standard floor vehicles. Destinations throughout Norfolk are served and some beyond including
Peterborough,
Lowestoft and Thetford.
National Express also run ten coaches a day to Stansted Airport, five a day to London, and one a day to Birmingham. Most bus and coach services, run from
Norwich bus station in Surrey Street.
Park and Ride
As of 2005, Norwich had the biggest
Park and Ride operation in the UK. Run by Norfolk County Council it runs from six purpose-built sites into Norwich bus station using colour-coded buses :
- Norwich International Airport (off the A140 road) to the north via Aylsham Road; 620 spaces, yellow buses.
- Sprowston (off the A1151 road) to the northeast via Wroxham Road; 788 spaces, purple buses.
- Postwick (off the A47 road) to the east via Thorpe, Norfolk Road; 525 spaces, red buses.
- Harford (off the A140 road) to the south via Ipswich Road; 1088 spaces, blue buses.
- Thickthorn (of the A11 road) to the southwest via Newmarket Road; 786 spaces, pink buses.
- Costessey (off the A47 road) to the west via Dereham Road; 110 spaces, green buses.
Altogether nearly 5000 parking spaces are provided and in 2006 3.4 million passengers used the service. Services begin running into the city at 06:40 Monday to Friday, with the last buses returning from 19:25 (20:30 on Thursday).
Air
Norwich International Airport is a feeder to
KLM's
Schiphol Airport hub. FlyBe,
Air Southwest,
Eastern Airways, and
Bristow Helicopters all serve Norwich, in addition to a strong holiday charter flight business. The airport was originally the Royal Air Force airfield at
Horsham St Faith. This was once the home of
Air UK, which grew out of Air Anglia and was then absorbed by the Dutch airline KLM.
Bicycle
National Cycle Route
National Cycle Route#Main routes passes through Norwich, linking
Beccles and Fakenham (and eventually
Dover and the Shetland Islands!). A map of cycle routes in and around Norwich is available here
Water
The River Yare is navigable from the sea at
Great Yarmouth all the way to Trowse, south of the city. From there the
River Wensum is navigable into Norwich, and is crossed by the Novi Sad Friendship Bridge. Scheduled trips through the city and out to the nearby
Broads are run by City Boats from outside Norwich Station and also Elm Hill.
Tourism
||-||-||}Norwich is a popular destination for a city break; attractions include
Norwich Cathedral, the cobbled streets and museums of old Norwich, the castle, Cow Tower, Dragon Hall (Norwich) and the Forum. Norwich is also one of the UK's top ten shopping destinations, with a mix of chain retailers and independent stores as well as one of the largest outdoor markets in England. It is currently ranked the 147th biggest city in Europe.
Travellers' comments
In
1507 the poet
John Skelton (1460–1529) wrote of two destructive fires in his
Lament for the City of Norwich.
All life is brief, and frail all man's estate. City, farewell: I mourn thy cruel fate.
Thomas Fuller in his
The Worthies of England described the City in
1662 as -
Either a city in an orchard or an orchard in a city, so equally are houses and trees blended in it, so that the pleasure of the country and the populousness of the city meet here together. Yet in this mixture, the inhabitants participate nothing of the rusticalness of the one, but altogether the urbanity and civility of the other.
Celia Fiennes (1662–1741) visited Norwich in 1698 and described it as
a city walled full round of towers, except on the river side which serves as a wall; they seem the best in repair of any walled city I know.
She also records that held in the City three times a year were-
great fairs...to which resort a vast concourse of people and wares a full trade.
Norwich being
a rich, thriving industrious place full of weaving, knitting and dyeing.
Daniel Defoe in his Tour of the whole Island of Great Britain (1724) wrote of the City-
the inhabitants being all busy at their manufactures, dwell in their garrets at their looms, in their combing-shops, so they all them, twisting-mills, and other work-houses; almost all the works they are employed in being done within doors.
John Evelyn (1620–1706) Royalist, Traveller and Diarist wrote to
Sir Thomas Browne-
I hear Norwich is a place very much addicted to the flowery part.
He visited the City as a courtier to Charles II of England in 1671 and described it thus -
The suburbs are large, the prospect sweet, and other amenities, not omitting the flower-garden, which all the Inhabitants excel in of this City, the fabric of stuffs, which affords the Merchants, and brings a vast trade to this populous Town.
George Borrow in his semi-autobiographical novel
Lavengro (1851) wrote of Norwich as-
A fine old city, perhaps the most curious specimen at present extant of the genuine old English Town. ..There it spreads from north to south, with its venerable houses, its numerous gardens, its thrice twelve churches, its mighty mound....There is an old grey castle on top of that mighty mound: and yonder rising three hundred feet above the soil, from amongst those noble forest trees, behold that old Norman master-work, that cloud-enriched cathedral spire ...Now who can wonder that the children of that fine old city are proud, and offer up prayers for her prosperity?
Borrow wrote far less favourably of the City in his translation of Faust-
They found the people of the place modelled after so unsightly a pattern, with such ugly figures and flat features that the devil owned he had never seen them equalled, except by the inhabitants of an English town, called Norwich, when dressed in their Sunday's best.
In 1812, Andrew Robertson wrote to the painter
Constable-
I arrived here a week ago and find it a place where the arts are very much cultivated....some branches of knowledge, chemistry, botany, etc. are carried to a great length. General literature seems to be pursued with an ardour which is astonishing when we consider that it does not contain a university, as is merely a manufacturing town.
In 1962, Nikolaus Pevsner stated in his North-West Norfolk and Norwich volume of 'The Buildings of England' that
Norwich is distinguished by a prouder sense of civic responsibility than any other town of about the same size in Britain," praising its monumental and bravely modernist City Hall.
Notable residents
Throughout its history, Norwich has been associated with
Radicalization politics, nonconformist religion, political dissent and
liberalism. Between 1790 and 1840, many of the famous names associated with the City flourished. These include:
- Michael Andrews (artist) (1928-1995)
- Elizabeth Bentley 1767-1839.Authoress wrote " Tales for Children in Verse".Lived at 45 St St. Stephen's Square.
- George Borrow (1803–1881), writer and traveller. In his youth Borrow was resident at Willow Lane. He attended the Norwich King Edward school. Borrow recollects his youth in the city and conversations with the philologist and translator of German Romantic literature, William Taylor in his semi-autobiographical novel Lavengro.
- Sir Thomas Browne (1605–1682). medical doctor, polymath scholar, encyclopedist and philosopher with interests in Bible scholarship and the esoteric. The stylistic purity and stupendous learning displayed in Browne's varied prose in the spheres of religion, science and art are minor classics of World literature.
- Edith Cavell (1865–1915) was born in Swardeston, 4 miles south of Norwich. She was a World War I nurse who was Execution by firing squad by the Germans for helping allied prisoners escape in violation of military law. She is buried on Life's Green, on the east side of Norwich Cathedral.
- John Crome and Joseph Stannard, along with John Sell Cotman, established the first art movement outside of London. The Norwich school of painters were influenced by the achievements of The Netherlands landscape painting and the beauty of the rural hinterland surrounding Norwich.
- William Crotch (1775–1847). Composer, artist and teacher. Norwich's Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. He gave daily public organ recitals aged two and a half. Crotch played God Save the King before the King aged three. He had performed at every major town in England and Scotland by the age of seven. Crotch became Organist of Christ Church, Oxford, University of Oxford and for fifty years he was University of Oxford's Professor of Music. Unlike Mozart, however, his precocious musical talents failed to mature to genius.
- Pablo Fanque (1796–1871). The first Black people Circus Proprietor in Britain was born in the city.
- Elizabeth Fry (1780–1845). The prison reformer and leading Religious Society of Friends was born in Gurney Court in Magdalen Street and was one of several philanthropists associated with the city. Her portrait is upon the Series E (2005) Bank of England £5 note.
- Joseph John Gurney (1788–1847) was a banker and philanthropist who worked with his sister Elizabeth Fry (see above) in prison reform. He was also active in the movement to abolish the slave trade and a member of the temperance movement.
- Robert William Bilton Hornby (1821–1884) was a noted local antiquarian, priest and lord of the manor from the City of York. He was ordained a deacon at Norwich in 1844.
- Julian of Norwich. Medieval Christian mysticism and contemporary of Chaucer. Julian is the author of The revelations of Divine Love the first book written by a woman in the English language. Julian's writings are well-represented by the scholarly website www.umilta.net.
- Robert Kett. Norwich's very own Robin Hood or Wat Tyler. Kett was a Norfolk landowner from Wymondham who lead the peasant's revolt in 1549 in the name of the common man against the corrupt Norfolk landowners. This eventually lead to the Battle of Dussindale against the King's forces on the 27 August 1549 in which 3000 of Kett's men were killed. He was hanged for Treason at Norwich Castle on the 7 December 1549.
- James Martineau (1805–1900) Philosopher and brother to Harriet.
- Harriet Martineau (1802–1876). The daughter of a Norwich manufacturer of Huguenot descent, she suffered from ill-health and deafness throughout her life. A devout Unitarian, her writings include Illustrations of political economy (1832-1834). Harriet Martineau supported the abolitionist campaign in the United States writing Society in America (1837). She translated writings by Auguste Comte. Her first novel was entitled Deerbrook (1839). A radical in religion she published the anti-theological Laws of Man's Social Nature (1851) and Biographical sketches (1869).
- Bernard Meadows,(1915–2005) Modernist Sculptor
- R. H. Mottram (1883-1971)- novelist and Lord Mayor of Norwich
- Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson attended the Norwich School (educational institution) from 1767 to 1768. He was born in nearby Burnham Thorpe.
- Amelia Opie (1769–1853), Norwich author and Religious Society of Friends. In 1825 she drastically changed her life as a socialite, party-goer, and attendant at literary soirees, to become a Quaker.
- Sir James Edward Smith botanist, natural historian and one-time owner of the Linnean collection of Carolus Linnaeus
- William Smith (1756 – 1835), British Whig Party politician, dissenter and abolitionist, Member of Parliament for Norwich from 1807.
Contemporary names associated with Norwich include:
- Bill Bryson, American writer and humorist, lives near Wymondham, near Norwich.
- Martin Burgess, builder of the famous Gurney Clock in the Castle Mall
- Charles Clarke, Labour MP and former Home Secretary, lives in Norwich.
- Cathy Dennis, Singer/Songwriter who was born in Norwich in 1969.
- Ralph Firman, former Formula 1 Driver was born in Norwich in 1975. He and his family live in nearby Attleborough, and he was educated at Gresham's School. Currently racing in the A1 Grand Prix series for Republic of Ireland, for which he qualifies through his Mother's Irish nationality.
- Stephen Fry, comedian, author, actor and filmmaker, studied at Norwich City College, and is a Norwich City F.C. fan.
- Trisha Goddard, talk show host lived in Norwich.
- Andy Green Order of the British Empire, a Wing Commander in the Royal Air Force, is the current holder of the world land speed record, having piloted the ThrustSSC to the first ever supersonic speed on land in the Black Rock Desert, USA on 25 September 1997.
- Greg James (DJ), BBC Radio 1 presenter, studied at UEA.
- Paul Jones (singer), blues singer and BBC Radio 2 presenter.
- Becky Mantin, ITV Weather presenter and This Morning (TV series) reporter.
- Bernard Matthews, founder of the eponymous meat company.
- Sir John Mills, born in North Elmham in Norfolk. Mills was educated at the Norwich High School for Boys. He also had Football (Soccer) trials with Norwich City F.C. in the 1920s before moving into acting.
- Beth Orton, Award-winning singer/songwriter, was born in Dereham and spent much of her childhood in Norwich.
- Philip Pullman, British writer was born in Norwich on 19 October 1946. Best-selling author of the His Dark Materials trilogy of fantasy novels and a number of other books.
- Delia Smith, Celebrity chef and joint majority owner of Norwich City F.C.
- Chris Sutton, Football player (striker); joint top scorer for the Premier League in 1997/8; formerly the record English transfer (at £5 million from Norwich to Blackburn in 1994).
- Tim Westwood, BBC Radio 1 Rap DJ and presenter of popular MTV show "Pimp My Ride (UK)". Grew up in and around Norwich (his father was the bishop of Peterborough, in the neighbouring county of Cambridgeshire) and went to Norwich School.
Architecture
Norwich has a wealth of historical architecture. The medieval period is represented by the 11th-century
Norwich Cathedral, 12th-century
castle (now a museum) and a large number of parish churches. During the Middle Ages, 57 churches stood within the city wall; 31 still exist today. This gave rise to the common (in the city) saying that it had a church for every week of the year, and a pub for every day. Most of the medieval building is in the city centre. From the 18th century the pre-eminent local name is Thomas Ivory, who built the Assembly Rooms (1776), the Octagon Chapel (1756), St Helen's House (1752) in the grounds of the
Great Hospital, and innovative speculative housing in Surrey Street (c. 1761). Ivory should not be confused with the Irish architect of the same name and similar period.
The 19th century saw an explosion in Norwich's size and much of its housing stock, as well as commercial building in the city centre, dates from this period. The local architect of the Victorian era and
Edwardian era periods who has continued to command most critical respect was
George Skipper (1856-1948). Examples of his work include the headquarters of
Norwich Union on Surrey Street; the Art Nouveau Royal Arcade; and the Hotel de Paris in the nearby seaside town of
Cromer. The
neo-Gothic Roman Catholic cathedral on
Earlham Road, begun in 1882, is by
George Gilbert Scott Junior and his brother, John Oldrid Scott.
The city continued to grow through the 20th century and much housing, particularly in areas further out from the city centre, dates from that century. The first notable building post-Skipper was the city hall by CH James and SR Pierce, opened in 1938. Bombing during the
World War II, while resulting in relatively little loss of life, caused significant damage to housing stock in the city centre. Much of the replacement postwar stock was designed by the local authority architect, David Percival. However, the major postwar development in Norwich from an architectural point of view was the opening of the
University of East Anglia in 1964. Originally designed by
Denys Lasdun (his design was never completely executed), it has been added to over subsequent decades by major names such as Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank and
Rick Mather.
In Popular Culture
Twinned cities
The city is twinned with the following cities:
References
External links
Media
- Norwich Evening News
- Eastern Daily Press
- Radio Broadland
- Radio Norwich
- BBC Norfolk
- Livewire1350
- Totally Norwich - local's guide to Norwich
- Norwich Darkside
Official
- Norwich City Council
- Your Norwich - Online guide
- Visit Norwich - Official visitor guide
- Visit Norfolk - Official tourism site for Norfolk's guide to Norwich
- Norwich rivers Heritage Group
History
- Norwich The Old City
- Norwich Cathedral and History of the See (King's Handbook, 1862)
- Norwich Watermills & Windmills from the Norfolkmills website
Tourism and pictures
- Photographs of old Norwich - Photographs of Norwich from the 1930s to the 1950s.
- Yarmouth Portal
- An online guided tour of Norwich in pictures
- The Norwich Guide - for residents and visitors
- Photos of Norwich - Flickr Collection from a local
- Videos of Norwich - Collection Of Videos From Norwich including the Cathedral and Castle
- Hotels and Inns in Norwich - Includes Guest Feedback
Norwich City Council: Home
Local authority covering issues such as housing, local services, tourism and transport.
Norwich City Council: Home
Norwich City Council home page ... Norwich City Council is giving residents the chance to win £250 by simply registering to vote. Click here to find out more
BBC SPORT | Football | My Club | Norwich
News, match reports, results, fixtures, tables, and live text commentary.
Home | Norwich City
The official Norwich City FC website with news, transfer rumours, online ticket sales, live match commentary, video highlights, player profiles, mobile content, wallpapers and more
Rivals - Home - Norwich City - Norwich City Club Home
Fanzine style pages offering news stories and fans opinions, reviews of matches, club guide, player profiles and fixtures.
Visit Norwich, Norfolk or the Norfolk Broads. City breaks, walking ...
A selection of hotels, bed and breakfast's, guest houses or self catering, in Norwich, the Norfolk Broads or in the heart of the Norfolk countryside.
Norwich International Airport (NWI)
Official Norwich Airport website - live flight arrivals, international and national destinations, travel information, services and company information
Norwich International Airport (NWI)
Provides a selection of worldwide destinations. Includes information on facilities and services, flights, parking, ground transport and community links.
norwich.htm
norwich.org.uk
Norwich Arts Centre - Home
Venue aiming to provide access to, encourage participation in and promote a broad and challenging programme of performing and media arts. Includes event and booking information.