Text only website
Norfolk Heritage Explorations Logo
About this website
Mulbarton Harleston Happisburgh Breckles Reepham
Mulbarton Harleston Happisburgh Breckles Reepham
English Heritage

The National Trust

Tourist Information
Bus travel planner
Train travel planner
Air travel planner
Local event sites
Maps
 
 

 

Homepage
Churches
Band
Cycle Paths
Local characters
The Land
Houses
Mills
Brewing
Shops
Trades
Transport
War
Contact us
Map

 

Level A conformance icon, W3C-WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0
Image Galleries
  Image Galleries
Reepham > Homepage  

Reepham, fourteen miles north-west of Norwich, is one of those attractive Georgian Norfolk towns. It is centred on a south east facing slope of a ridge of land in the heathlands of north Norfolk. The name, Reepham, is Anglo-Saxon - the 'Meadow of the Reeve'. But which reeve? Was it a manorial reeve or a church reeve or even a royal reeve? It is unlikely we shall ever know. Reepham is mentioned in Domesday but only as a part of Kerdiston which no longer exists as a village. Domesday contains references for Kerdiston, Hackford and Whitwell. It remains as the market centre of a group of small parishes and even smaller settlements. Set, as it is, in the clay heathlands this was a pastoral area with open fields clustered round the town, water meadows along the streams and grazing lands stretching across the heaths until enclosed and eventually ploughed up and made into arable in the Wartime.

The Georgian Market Place still centres on the original site of the market. Reepham received its charter in 1277 during the reign of Edward I but we know the market existed earlier from a mention in the diocesan records. The lord of the manor was John de Vaux who owned land across Norfolk including this piece of land which is actually in Hackford parish , yet was always known as 'Reifham market'. The parishes and manors of this area are not at all co-terminus and ownership has been confusing throughout its history. By the Eighteenth century the Reepham brewery was established and the market was supported by a maximum of thirteen public houses catering for man and beast on market day. A service still provided by the King's Arms.

Powered by The Website System™ © 2012 Norfolk Design     
minisite Copyright © 2012 Reepham, all rights reserved     

Norfolk Heritage Explorations Copyright © 2012 Contributors and The Forum Trust Limited, unless specified otherwise. All rights reserved. Written consent to copy, publish, adapt, hire, lend or reproduce, whether in part or in whole, should be obtained from The Forum Trust Limited, 2 Millennium Plain, Bethel Street, Norwich, Norfolk, NR2 1TF.

The material on this site is not a definitive guide to the areas concerned or to their heritage, but is presented as an interpretation of those areas by the contributors.

an initiative led by The Forum Trust
  Funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund
Terms and Conditions Website design by Norfolk Design