Descriptive gazetteer entries

In 1870-72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described Castle Rising like this:

CASTLE-RISING, a decayed town, a parish, and a subdistrict in Freebridge-Lynn district, Norfolk. The town stands 2¼ miles NE of Wootton r. station, and 4¾ NE by N of Lynn; and has a post office under Lynn. A Roman station and a Saxon fort probably were here; and a great castle was erected on their site some time before 1176 by William de Albini, first Earl of Sussex. Remains of the castle still exist; and show it to have been a place of much importance. The interior is greatly dilapidated, but is lea...


st so in the room where the court leet was held. The walls of the keep are 9 feet thick; the encompassing ditch is deep, and the rampart bold; a strong wall, with three towers, formerly surmounted the rampart; and the entire place was on a similar plan to Norwich castle, and nearly as large. Several kings made visits to it; and Isabel, the queen of Edward III., was confined in it from 1330, after the murder of her husband, till her death in 1358. The town is now a paltry village; but was formerly a seat of great markets, a centre of political influence, a borough by prescription, and probably a seaport; and it sent two members to parliament, till disfranchised by the act of 1832. Tradition assumes that the sea came up to it in the same manner that it now does to Lynn; and an old rhyme says,-

Rising was a seaport town,
When Lynn was but a marsh;
Now Lynn it is a seaport town,
And Rising fares the worse!

The parish comprises 2,096 acres. Real property, £2,298. Pop., 377. Houses, 79. The property all belongs to the Howard family. The living is a rectory, united with the rectory of Roydon, in the diocese of Norwich. Value, £419.* Patrons, the Heirs of the late Hon. Col. Howard. The church is partly Norman, partly early English; and was restored in 1844 and 1857. There are a national school and an alms-house-hospital, and the latter was founded, in the time of James II., by Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton, and has £100 a year.-The subdistrict contains seven parishes. Acres, 19,006. Pop., 2,420. Houses, 529.

This is the only descriptive gazetter entry we have found, but you may be able to find further references to Castle Rising by doing a full-text search here.


Travel writing

This website includes the complete texts of books describing journeys around Britain, written between the twelfth and nineteenth centuries. Selecting one of the links below will take you to the first reference to Castle Rising within the selected text. This will not always be a description of a visit: travellers often mention places other than where they are, for example as a basis for comparison.

Traveller Section No. of Refs.
William Camden Norfolk and Cambridgeshire 1
Daniel Defoe Letter 1, Part 3: Norfolk and Cambridgeshire 1

This website includes two large libraries, of historical travel writing and of entries from nineteenth century gazetteers describing places. We have text from these sources available for these places near your location:

Place Mentioned in Travel Writing Mentioned in Hist. Gazetteer
Babingley 1 2
Roydon 0 1
South Wootton 0 3
Gaywood 0 3
Bawsey 0 2
Sandringham 0 2
West Newton 0 3
Wolferton 0 3
Appleton 0 2
Grimston 0 3
Mintlyn 0 2
Congham 0 2
North Wootton 0 4
Leziate 0 2
North Lynn 0 1
Ashwicken 0 2
Hardwick 0 2
Flitcham 0 2
Dersingham 0 2
Kings Lynn 42 6