| Suffolk | |
|---|---|
| Geography | |
| Status: | Ceremonial & Non-metropolitan county |
| Region: | East of England |
| Area: - Total - Admin. council | Ranked 8th 3,801 km² Ranked 7th |
| Admin HQ: | Ipswich |
| GB: | GB-SFK |
| ONS code: | 42 |
| NUTS 3: | UKH14 |
| Demographics | |
| Population: - Total () - Density - Admin. Council | Ranked / km² Ranked |
| Ethnicity: | 97.2% White |
| Politics | |
| Executive: | |
| Members of Parliament | |
| Bob Blizzard, John Gummer, Michael Lord, Chris Mole, David Ruffley, Richard Spring, Tim Yeo | |
| Districts | |
Suffolk (pronounced SUF-f'k) is a large traditional and administrative county in the East Anglia region of eastern England. It has borders with Norfolk to the north, Cambridgeshire to the west and Essex to the south. The North Sea lies to the east. The county town is Ipswich, at and other important towns include Lowestoft and Bury St Edmunds. Felixstowe is one of the largest container ports in Europe.
The county is low-lying with few hills, and is largely wetland habitat and arable land. The Suffolk Broads area is part of The Broads National Park, and the Suffolk Coast and Heaths is an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
Suffolk was part of the kingdom of East Anglia which was settled by the Angles in the 5th century.
In 1974, Suffolk was split into seven administrative districts, Suffolk Coastal, Forest Heath, St. Edmundsbury, Babergh, Forest Heath, Waveney and Mid Suffolk with Suffolk Coastal's council based in Woodbridge, Babergh's in Hadleigh, Mid-Suffolk's in Needham Market, Forest Heath's in Mildenhall and West Suffolk's in Bury St Edmunds. There is also Waveney (with its council based in Lowestoft) and Borough of Ipswich, which is the administrative council controlling the county town.
| Year | Regional Gross Value Added | Agriculture | Industry | Services |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 7,113 | 391 | 2,449 | 4,273 |
| 2000 | 8,096 | 259 | 2,589 | 5,248 |
| 2003 | 9,456 | 270 | 2,602 | 6,583 |
includes hunting and forestry
includes energy and construction
includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured
Components may not sum to totals due to rounding
The west of the county lies on more resistant Cretaceous Chalk. This chalk is the north-eastern extreme of the Southern England Chalk Formation that stretches from Dorset in the south west to Dover in the south east. The Chalk is less easily eroded so forms the only significant hills in the county. The highest point of the county is Great Wood Hill, the highest point of the Newmarket Ridge, near the village of Rede which reaches 128m (420ft).
Most English counties have nicknames for people from that county, such as a Tyke from Yorkshire and a Yellowbelly from Lincolnshire; the traditional nickname for people from Suffolk is 'Suffolk Fair-Maids', or 'Silly Suffolk', referring respectively to the supposed beauty of its female inhabitants in the Middle Ages, and to the long history of Christianity in the county and its many fine churches (from Anglo-Saxon selige, originally meaning holy).
This comparatively recent evidence is but a coda to the widespread settlement in the region shown by earlier archaeological evidence of Mesolithic man as far back as c.7000BC, (Grimes Graves, Norfolk - a 5000 y/o flint mine) with Roman settlements Lakenheath, Long Melford, later Bronze and Saxon settlements. Sutton Hoo: burial ground of the Anglo-Saxon pagan kings of East Anglia.
For a full list of settlements see the List of places in Suffolk.
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