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Number of results: 65
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Pentney is located about 8 miles south east of King’s Lynn. It is in the valley of the River Nar, a tributary of the River Great Ouse.
Knapton village is settled on top of a small hill 43m above seal level, in a designated Area of Outstanding Beauty.
The seaside village of Happisburgh (pronouched 'haysbro') is most famous for its red and white lighthouse; the oldest still working in East Anglia.
The village with the church of St Mary The Virgin at its centre is surrounded by stunning coastline. It is a popular stopping point for exploring the Norfolk Coast Path.
South Creake, a pretty village, is tucked into the valley of the little river Burn is about 15 miles east of Hunstanton and 6 miles north of Fakenham.
Cley-next-the-Sea
Picturesque coastal village, noted for its fine 18th century windmill and nature reserve.
Southrepps village consists of two halves, Upper Southrepps and Lower Southrepps.
Near Burnham Market
The village of Burnham Thorpe, close to Burnham Market, is the birthplace of Horatio Nelson.
The small village of Morston, on the Norfolk coast, is close to the villages of Blakeney and Cley-next-the-Sea.
Worstead is a pretty village with a history dating back to the Middle Ages.
Thriving market town, set on the River Wensum.
The pretty historic village of Trunch is close to the coastal resort of Mundesley.
The village of Methwold is a village on the edge of the Fens about 14 miles south east of Downham Market.
Sheringham
This traditional seaside town grew up around its old fishing village, and a band of little boats still bring in the daily catch.
Norfolk
The Village of Salle in Norfolk UK, is a small rural village with a famous church, located half way between the city of Norwich and the sandy beaches of Sheringham and Cromer.
Aylsham
Picturesque market town, which for 500 years was an important linen, then worstead cloth making centre.
Overstrand is a village on the north coast of Norfolk in England, two miles east of Cromer.
Norfolk
Old Hunstanton is a village settlement adjacent to the larger resort of Hunstanton or New Hunstanton. The quiet character of Old Hunstanton remains distinct from and complements that of its busy sibling.
Located halfway between Cromer and Sheringam, this seaside village boasts a sand and pebble beach, plus the highest point in Norfolk at 328 feet above sea level. Made famous in 1995 by the excavation of an entire mammoth skeleton.