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Local firms include St. Peter's Brewery, based at St. Peter's Hall to the south of the town.. In 2008, Bungay became Suffolk's first Transition Town and part of a global network of communities that have started projects in the areas of food, transport, energy, education, housing and waste as small-scale local responses to the global challenges of climate change, economic hardship and limited ...
North Community Library [94] (the city's first branch library; 1893–1979) [95] Seven Corners (1912–1964) [96] Stubbs Bay (closed in August 1955) Robbinsdale (community now served by the Rockford Road library) [97] The Hennepin County Library formerly operated school libraries in rural communities and a library in Glen Lake Sanatorium. [86]
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The B1062 Bungay to Beccles road runs through the centre of the parish. [2] In the 1870s, Mettingham was described as: "a village and a parish in Wangford district, Suffolk. The village stands near the river Waveney, at the boundary with Norfolk, 2 miles E of Bungay r. station; is a scattered place; and has a postoffice under Bungay." [3]
Bungay is a town in Suffolk, East Anglia, England. Bungay may also refer to: People called Bungay. Frank Bungay (born 1905), former professional footballer;
Henry confiscated Bungay but in 1164 he returned it to Bigod, who built a large square Norman keep on the site in 1165. It is not recorded how much it cost to build the keep, but the archaeologist Hugh Braun, who led the excavations at the castle in the 1930s, estimated that it would have cost around £1,400 (equivalent to £4,449,176 in 2023 ...
Friars Bacon and Bungay sleep through the activation of their brazen head while their manservant Miles plays a pipe and drum. [1]Thomas Bungay (Latin: Thomas Bungeius or Bungeyensis; [2] c. 1214 – c. 1294), [3] also known as Thomas of Bungay [4] (Latin: Thomas de Bungeya; [5] French: Thomas de Bungeye) and formerly also known as Friar Bongay, [1] was an English Franciscan friar, scholar, and ...
Bungay Castle is a gothic novel by Elizabeth Bonhôte, first published in 1797. It is set loosely in the thirteenth century around the First Barons' War, and follows the fortunes of the fictional De Morney family at the real Bungay Castle in Suffolk. Bonhôte's husband purchased the ruins of this castle in 1791.