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Suffolk History

  • Early History
    • Physiographic And Prehistoric
    • The Roman Occupation-Earlier Section
    • The Roman Occupation – Later Section
    • Earlier Saxon Times
    • Later Saxon Times.
  • The Normans
    • The Norman Period.
    • Early Plantagenet Times.
    • Early Plantagenet Times – Continued
    • Edward III. And Richard II.
    • Colleges, Lollards, Pilgrimages, Etc.
    • Perpendicular Architecture-Domestic Life-Sir Tames Tyrell-Trentals-Lord Mayors.
  • The Tudors And Stuarts
    • Henry VIII. And Edward VI.
    • Queen Mary.
    • Queen Elizabeth.
    • Early Stuart Period.
    • From The Long Parliament To The Revolution.
  • The Glorious Revolution
    • Suffolk During The Reigns Of William III., Anne, And George I.
    • Later Days.
  • Ethnology, Surnames, Dialect, Folk-Lore.

colneis

Earlier Saxon Times

26th November 2009 By colneis 1 Comment

From the recall of the legions to the foundation of the kingdom of East Anglia, we are left much to the guidance of that alluring but untrustworthy companion -Imagination.

Filed Under: The History Of Suffolk

The Roman Occupation – Later Section

23rd November 2009 By colneis Leave a Comment

Our business now lies with the Route IX. in Antonine’s Itinerary…

Filed Under: The History Of Suffolk

The Roman Occupation-Earlier Section

21st November 2009 By colneis Leave a Comment

In order that the small contribution to the history of the Roman occupation of Great Britain which is allowed in this work may have any value, it is necessary that its sources should be indicated and their reliability estimated.

The ‘Commentaries’ of Julius Caesar bear the impress of truth, as plain, straightforward relations of fact, destitute of those literary attractions which give liveliness and take trustworthiness from a narrative.

Filed Under: The History Of Suffolk

Physiographic And Prehistoric

21st November 2009 By colneis 1 Comment

There is hardly a county in England which surpasses Suffolk in simplicity of form and boundary. Save for a considerable deflexion in the north-east, now containing three hundreds, the form of the county is an irregular oblong, about sixty miles by thirty, diversified in most parts by gentle undulations, and containing many varieties of soil. Along the east side it is washed by the German Ocean, and there is but little of the artificial element in the boundaries which divide it from Norfolk on the north, Essex on the south, and Cambridgeshire on the west; for Nature has supplied as limits the Waveney and Little Ouse on the north, and the Stour on the south; while even on the west the Lark and its tributary the Kennet divide Suffolk from Cambridgeshire for some miles.

Filed Under: The History Of Suffolk

The History Of Suffolk

21st November 2009 By colneis Leave a Comment

This section contains the text of THE HISTORY OF SUFFOLK by the Reverend John James Raven one of the Popular County Histories series published by Elliot Stock of London in 1895.

Filed Under: The History Of Suffolk

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