A Guide and History of the Norfolk Broads, Suffolk Broads and Broadland
in East Anglia UK in the East of England from the Norfolk Broads directory
web site.
Broadland is truly unique - there is simply nowhere quite like it in
the British Isles or Europe. The overwhelming appeal of the Broads area, to
the visitor, is its relaxing charm and almost intoxicating beauty. All who
visit it are captivated.
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Many centuries ago mediaeval, East Anglian-man dug peat to fuel his fires.
The excavations created then filled with water and give us a unique inheritance
- the Broadland area of Norfolk and north Suffolk. Within this environment
wildlife flourished amongst the abundance of reed beds and the many miles of
waterways.
Over the centuries dwellers settled in the area, to benefit from the
numerous Broads and their connecting river-ways, providing as they did a convenient
and cheap means of transportation. There was the abundance of fish, within
the waters; wild-fowlers, using specially adapted punts, found plenty to live
off. Modern-man now harvests the reed for roof-thatching and enjoys the Broads
for his recreational, holiday and educational pursuits.
That part of Norfolk & north Suffolk, known universally as the 'Broads',
is far more extensive than just a collection of inland, water-filled broads.
They are connected by over 200 miles of gently flowing, navigable rivers, dykes
and cuts that offer ideal cruising conditions at between 5 & 7 mph. You
can cruise right into the heart of the city of Norwich, or travel east as far
as Great Yarmouth, where the Broads eventually affords access, (for those with
suitable craft), to the North Sea. Providing you're not in a hurry you can
travel many leisurely miles throughout the Broads region, for days on end.
We've already mentioned the historic Norwich, Norfolk's capital city,
with its 11th century cathedral and Norman castle. The river played a vital
part in the building of the Cathedral, over 900 years ago, providing the means
by which barges transported the vast quantities of Caen stone used to built
it. Throughout Broadland, and immediately beyond, are literally hundreds of
historic churches; more numerous than are to be found anywhere in the British
Isles. Churches Together on the Broads.
Everywhere you look bears witness to the rich history of the Broadland
region. On the edge of the vast expanse of Breydon Water stands the Roman remains
of the once mighty Burgh Castle, whilst further upstream, on the river Bure,
are the remains of St. Benet's Abbey. Throughout the Broads are found examples
of ancient windmills and windpumps. Some regrettably now in ruins, but there
are many which have been lovingly restored to their former glory.
History and beauty go hand-in-hand in Broadland and is far more extensive
than can ever be conveyed to you within these few paragraphs. Seeing is believing,
so do just that - please come and see it. You're guaranteed a warm welcome.
This is England's largest stretch of wetlands, and the Broads are a unique
combination of broads or shallow lakes, rivers and dykes which can be found
in the area bounded by Norwich,, Stalham, Lowestoft and Beccles. Famous for
the magnificent boating they afford, with over 125 miles of navigable waterways
they also play host to a wide variety of plants, animals, insects and birds.
The Broads originated in the Middles Ages, during the 9th to 13th centuries,
as shallow pits from which generations of Norfolk people dug peat for heating
and cooking purposes. Roman mercenaries, Saxon settlers and Norman conquerors
all took what they needed, but it was not until the Middles Ages that peat-cutting
became organized. The monks of St. Benet's acquired all the rights as well
as the services of the peasants, to the peat-cutting, consequently the Abbey
became very wealthy. The amount of fuel needed was massive. For example, the
episcopal monastery of Norwich required 200,000 bales of peat a year and within
two hundred years, nine million cubic feet of peat had been cut from the area,
creating great holes and deep scars. During the 14th century the sea level
rose, the area flooded, and this natural accident formed the broads as we know
them today. Forty-one shallow lakes, fed and interconnected by the rivers Bure,
Yare and Waveney and their tributaries the Ant, Thurne and Chet, together make
up the 200 kilometre lockfree waterway.
Today those vast diggings of earlier times are a holiday recreation area
for thousands of visitors every summer and a source of fascination for naturalists
all the year round.
The Broads are many things to many people; for holidaymakers and local
people they provide a setting for waterborne rest and recreation which is unique
in Europe. For naturalists they provide and endless source of interest as a
haven for many plants and animals found in few other places in Britain. For
ornithologists, they and the surrounding areas, offer exceptional opportunities
for bird-watching; bell-like sounds of the bearded reedling seems inappropriate
in a bed of giant reeds until the bird appears delicately swaying on the fragile
stems. High above, the marsh harrier may be harrying the smaller birds and
wildfowl, whilst in the reeds, obvious only because of its distinctive 'boom'
(reminiscent of a fog-horn) the bittern freezes. With care, patience and a
degree of luck, one may be rewarded with sightings of these fascinating birds.
For Some, the broads are not for holidaying, they provide a living for
many hundreds of Norfolk and Suffolk people. Catering for the needs of the
holidaymakers provides jobs and brings money into the towns and villages which
border and surround the broads, either directly by providing and servicing
accommodation ashore and afloat, or by supplying the need for food and entertainment.
The 'Caretaker' of the broads is the Broads Authority - a unique statutory
body brought into being by the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads Act 1988. Prior to
this act the Broads Authority had delegated powers only, but in 1983 the Countryside
Commision carried out a review of the situation, and recommended to the government
that the broads should be looked after by one body with adequate powers and
money to look after the broads as a whole.
The Authority, whose 35 members are drawn from local authorities, conservation
bodies and navigation and commercial interests, has three distinct functions
which have to be balances. These are the maintenance and enhancement of:-
a) the natural beauty of the area
b) the public's enjoyment of it and
c) the navigation, thus enabling it to balance the needs of conserving
wildlife with the needs and requirements of local residents and visitors to
the broads.
For further details contact:-
The Broads Authority,
Thomas Harvey House,
18 Colegate,
Norwich, Norfolk NR3 1BC
Tel: 01603 610734