Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-12T20:42:08.728Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Peddar's Way

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2013

Get access

Extract

The longest, best preserved, and best known of the early trackways of Norfolk, Peddar's Way can still be traced, with one or two doubtful sections, from Holme-next-the-Sea, near Hunstanton, in a south-easterly direction to Blackwater, the ford of the Little Ouse between Rushford and Riddlesworth, and thence for a few miles into Suffolk. Notwithstanding that most of this course is marked on the Ordnance Survey maps, that it was correctly given by Samuel Woodward in 1830, and that a pedestrian who essays (as I have done) to walk the fifty miles of this most interesting primitive route can have little doubt that it is correctly indicated, yet in 1872 it was referred to as the “Roman road which leads from Brancaster to Swaffham,” in 1904 as going from Brancaster to Castleacre, Swaffham, Ickburgh and Brandon, and thence to Exning, Bishop's Stortford and Stratford-le-Bow, while in 1908 § it was stated that it connected “the two Branodunums, that to the south, now Brandon, with that to the north, now Brancaster.” Of the various places mentioned Castleacre is the only one on its course.

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1915

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 51 note * Archæologia”, vol. XXIII., p. 361Google Scholar.

page 51 note † Norfolk Archæology”, vol. VIII., p. 17Google Scholar,

page 51 note ‡ Marr, & Shipley's, Natural History of Cambridgeshire”, p. 234Google Scholar.

page 51 note § “Memorials of Old Norfolk,” p. 85,

page 52 note * “Peddar's Way and its attendant Roads,” p. 7.

page 53 note * “Random Roamings,” p. 50.

page 54 note * “Folk-Memory.”

page 54 note † Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia”, vol. I., pp. 427434Google Scholar.

page 56 note * “Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia,” Vol. I., Plate XCVII.

page 57 note * Victoria History of Norfolk”, Vol. I., p 274Google Scholar.

page 57 note † Ibid. p. 303.