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Norwich School (educational institution)

Norwich School
Norwich school crest.jpg
Motto Praemia Virtutis Honores
(Honours are the rewards of virtue)
Established 1096
1547 (Refoundation)
Type Independent day school
Religion Church of England
Head Master Steffan Griffiths
Chairman of the Governors P. J. E. Smith
Founders
Location 70 The Close
Norwich
Norfolk
NR1 4DD
England
Coordinates: 52°37′54″N 1°17′57″E / 52.6318°N 1.2993°E / 52.6318; 1.2993
DfE number 926/6124
DfE URN 121242 Tables
Staff 140 (full-time)
Students 1069
Gender Co-educational
Ages 7–18
Houses Brooke, Coke, Nelson, Parker, Repton, School, Seagrim, Valpy
Colours Royal blue and Burgundy
         
Publication The Norvicensian
Old Norvicensian
Former pupils Old Norvicensians
Affiliations Worshipful Company of Dyers
HMC, CSA, IAPS
Website www.norwich-school.org.uk

Norwich School (formally King Edward VI Grammar School, Norwich) is a selective English independent day school in the close of Norwich Cathedral, Norwich. Among the oldest schools in the United Kingdom, it has a traceable history to 1096 as an episcopal grammar school established by Herbert de Losinga, first Bishop of Norwich. In the 16th century the school came under the control of the city of Norwich and moved to Blackfriars' Hall following a successful petition to Henry VIII. The school was refounded in 1547 in a royal charter granted by Edward VI and moved to its current site beside the cathedral in 1551. In the 19th century it became independent of the city and its classical curriculum was broadened in response to the declining demand for classical education following the Industrial Revolution.

Early statutes declared the school was to instruct 90 sons of Norwich citizens, though it has since grown to a total enrolment of approximately 1,020 pupils. For most of its history it was a boys' school, before becoming co-educational in the sixth form in 1994 and in every year group in 2010. The school is divided into the Senior School, which has around 850 pupils aged from 12 to 18 across eight houses, and the Lower School, which was established in 1946 and has around 170 pupils aged from seven to 11. The school educates the choristers of the cathedral, with which the school has a close relationship and which is used for morning assemblies and events throughout the academic year. In league tables of British schools it is consistently ranked first in Norfolk and Suffolk and amongst the highest in the United Kingdom.


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