Lingwood and Burlingham
This Parish Summary is an overview of the large amount of information held for the parish, and only selected examples of sites and finds in each period are given. It has been beyond the scope of the project to carry out detailed research into the historical background, documents, maps or other sources, but we hope that the Parish Summaries will encourage users to refer to the detailed records, and to consult the bibliographical sources referred to below. Feedback and any corrections are welcomed by email to heritage@norfolk.gov.uk
Lingwood and Burlingham is a fairly large parish, situated in Broadland, and it encompasses the village of Lingwood, and the hamlets of North and South Burlingham. Burlingham comes from the Old English meaning ‘the homestead, or farm, of a man called Byrla’. Lingwood, from the Old English meaning ‘a wood on a bank or slope’ is now the largest settlement in the parish.
There it little evidence for early occupation in the parish, a handful of finds, including a Neolithic axehead (NHER 31996), a flint flake (NHER 36613) and a Neolithic scraper (NHER 41698) have been found scattered throughout the parish.
The remains of a possible Iron Age and Roman settlement (NHER 18299, 20246, 20247, 20249, 29175, 29176) has been discovered near the hamlet of South Burlingham, by the interpretation of a number of metal detecting finds scatters, found over a number of years. Large numbers of Iron Age and Roman coins, pottery and other metalwork in the area around St Edmund’s Church (NHER 10287) suggest that some early settlement in the parish was focused on this area, and has gradually shifted its focus, probably during the medieval period when some settlement began to drift towards the edges of commons and greens.
St Andrew's Church, North Burlingham. (© NCC)
St Peter's Church, Burlingham drawn in 1822. The church is now in ruins.
St Peter's Church, Burlingham. (© NCC)
Systematic metal detecting in this parish has revealed much about its archaeological history, especially the presence of a probable settlement during the Iron Age and Roman periods, about which we might otherwise never have known about.
Sarah Spooner (NLA), 24 August 2005.
Further Reading
Brown, P. (ed.), 1984. Domesday Book: Norfolk (Chichester, Phillimore)
Mills, A. D., 1998. Dictionary of English Place-Names (Oxford, Oxford University Press)
Rye, J., 1991. A Popular Guide to Norfolk Place-names (Dereham, Larks Press)