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Trimingham

Trimingham
Trimingham Village Sign 10 Nov 2007.JPG
The Village sign
Trimingham is located in Norfolk
Trimingham
Trimingham
Trimingham shown within Norfolk
Area 2.33 km2 (0.90 sq mi)
Population 485 (Including Sidestrand parish, 2011 census)
• Density 208/km2 (540/sq mi)
OS grid reference TG275387
• London 139 miles (224 km)
Civil parish
  • Trimingham
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town CROMER
Postcode district NR27
Police Norfolk
Fire Norfolk
Ambulance East of England
EU Parliament East of England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Norfolk
52°53′49″N 1°23′13″E / 52.897°N 01.387°E / 52.897; 01.387Coordinates: 52°53′49″N 1°23′13″E / 52.897°N 01.387°E / 52.897; 01.387

Trimingham is a village and a civil parish in the English county of Norfolk. The village is 5.9 miles (9.5 km) north of North Walsham, 6.3 miles (10.1 km) east of Cromer and 24.8 miles (39.9 km) north of the city of Norwich. The village straddles the B1159 coastal road between Cromer and Mundesley. Near-by road communications with Gimingham are the A140 to Norwich. The nearest railway station is at Gunton for the Bittern Line which runs between Sheringham, Cromer and Norwich.The nearest airport is at Norwich International Airport. It is very close to the village of Overstrand and has a small church.

The spireless parish church of Trimingham is called St John the Baptist's Head. This strange dedication to John the Baptists head dates from the medieval period. During this time a life size alabaster head of the saint was kept at the church and pilgrims in this country came to the church to the shrine altar, rather than make the journey to Amiens Cathedral where a relic said to be the real head of John the Baptist was kept. The alabaster head did not survive and although it is unknown exactly what happened to it, it has been suggested that it was probably destroyed by Anglican reformers as a result of the 1538 Injunction against images during the reign of Henry VIII. Another theory is that the head was destroyed as a result of a further injunction which was rigorously imposed in 1547, during the early weeks of the reign of Edward VI. Today an Alabaster head survives in the Victoria and Albert Museum and it is thought that the head at Trimingham was exactly like the head in the museum collection. To this day, the nearby Village hall is called pilgrim shelter as a reminder of Trimingham’s past as a site of pilgrimage. The church has a short tower which is thought to be unfinished. It has heavy buttresses on the west elevation which suggest that a fault in the construction of the church may well have been the reasoning for the unfinished tower. The nave to the east cuts around the buttress to embrace it. This peculiarity may be partly the result of a restoration by Thomas Jekyll in the 1850s. Pevsner. states in his survey book, that Thomas Jekyll completely rebuilt the nave of which the most notable feature is the way that the tower buttresses on the east side project into the nave. The churches rood screen is very small with four figures on either side of the entrance to the chancel. The figures are St Edmund with his arrow, St Clare with her book and monstrance, St Clement with his anchor and crozier, and St James in his pilgrim's robes. On the south side are St Petronella with her book and keys, St Cecilia with her garland of flowers, St Barbara with her tower, and St Jeron with his hawk. The east window of the church is credited to H Wilkinson and dates from 1925. the window depicts Christ in Majesty flanked by St Michael and St Gabriel, with the symbols of the four Evangelists surrounding them.


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