Norwich, United Kingdom
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Norvic (historical Latin form); Northwic (Old English)
England's most complete medieval city, Norwich has more pre-Reformation churches per square mile than any other city north of the Alps — 32 medieval churches survive within the ancient walls, most of them now serving as arts venues, community spaces, and cultural centres rather than active congregations, their flint-built towers punctuating a skyline that has barely changed since the 15th century. It is a city of extraordinary architectural survival, intellectual independence, and a creative and food scene that has quietly become one of the best in provincial England. The city's historic core — centred on the Norman castle mound, the cathedral close, the medieval Elm Hill lane (the most photographed street in East Anglia, a perfectly preserved cobbled lane of timber-framed buildings), and the large and excellent market square — is one of the finest surviving medieval urban environments in England, rivalling York or Chester for completeness without the tourist infrastructure of either. Norwich Cathedral, with its Norman nave and the second-tallest spire in England, and the Romanesque castle keep (now the Castle Museum, with an outstanding collection of Norwich School of Painters landscapes) are the architectural anchors. Norwich was designated England's first UNESCO City of Literature in 2012 — a recognition of a literary culture that produced writers from Sir Thomas Browne to W.G. Sebald and which sustains the UEA Creative Writing programme, the most influential in Britain. The Norfolk and Norwich Festival in May is one of England's oldest and most respected arts festivals. The Colman's mustard heritage (the company was founded here in 1814) and the city's independent food scene — particularly the excellent covered market, operating since the Norman period, and the growing restaurant quarter around the Golden Triangle neighbourhood — reflect a strong culinary identity. The Norfolk Broads — the UK's largest protected wetland, a network of navigable rivers, broads (shallow lakes), and marshes of outstanding natural beauty and biodiversity — begin at the city's eastern edge, and the North Norfolk Coast (with the wide, wild beaches of Holkham, Wells-next-the-Sea, and Brancaster) is 45 minutes north.
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Population
97,000
Weather
Set in the heart of East Anglia — one of England's driest and flattest regions — Norwich has a temperate continental-influenced climate with lower rainfall than most English cities, cold easterly winds in winter that blow in directly from Siberia across the North Sea, and warm, often sunny summers that have earned the region the nickname the Sunshine Coast. Spring (March–May): 5–16°C (41–61°F). Cool and brightening. East Anglian springs can be cold and dry, with cold easterly winds persisting into April. Summer (June–August): 13–23°C (55–73°F). Warm and often the sunniest region in England. Long, pleasant days. The Norfolk Broads and coast are easily accessible. Autumn (September–November): 7–16°C (45–61°F). Cooling. Norfolk's flat agricultural landscape takes on beautiful golden tones in October. Winter (December–February): 1–8°C (34–46°F). Cold and dry. Easterly winds make it feel colder than the temperature suggests. Snow is possible and sometimes significant.