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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.
Langham is a small village predominantly set in Norfolk's Area of Outstanding Natural beauty.
The seaside village of Happisburgh (pronouched 'haysbro') is most famous for its red and white lighthouse; the oldest still working in East Anglia.
Houghton St Giles is charming, tiny village on the outskirts of Little Walsingham.
The small village of Morston, on the Norfolk coast, is close to the villages of Blakeney and Cley-next-the-Sea.
Walcott is a small village on the north Norfolk Deep History Coast situated between Mundesley and Happisburgh.
Knapton village is settled on top of a small hill 43m above seal level, in a designated Area of Outstanding Beauty.
Sheringham
This traditional seaside town grew up around its old fishing village, and a band of little boats still bring in the daily catch.
Mundesley
Clifftop village harking back to a bygone age, with its sandy beach and colourful wooden beach huts.
Bale is just a few miles from the Georgian town of Holt, and a few miles further from the north Norfolk coast.
The village of Methwold is a village on the edge of the Fens about 14 miles south east of Downham Market.
Burnham Overy is made up of two settlements, Burnham Overy Town the original village adjacent to the parish church and Burnham Overy Staithe, a rather larger settlement about 1 mile away and next to the creek-side harbour.
Upper Sheringham offers fantastic views over the coast and is home to the National Trust's Sheringham Park with miles of paths to follow and obeservation towers to climb.
Southrepps village consists of two halves, Upper Southrepps and Lower Southrepps.
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.
Largest of the Burnham villages, Burnham Market has grown from the merger of the three of the original Burnham villages, Burnham Sutton, Burnham Ulph and Burnham Westgate.
North Creake lies 3 miles south of Burnham Market and about 5 miles from the coast. The village lies on the River Burn which flows through the centre of the village.
A rural parish, Gresham centres on its medieval church of All Saints with a round tower.
Aldborough lies between Aylsham and Cromer, three miles west of the A140. It is a thriving agricultural village, with houses dating from the 14th - 20th century clustered round a traditional village green, complete with a village pond.
Thornham
Thornham is a small coastal village about 4 miles east of Hunstanton and is situated in the Norfolk Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.