This blog was originally published on 3rd June 2012
UNESCO City of Literature
‘Do different’, they say here. There is a stubborn independence in the Norfolk character, born from centuries of invasion by Romans, Danes, Vikings, Angles and Saxons. This low-lying county, once home to Boudicca and the Iceni people, has over one hundred miles of coastline. It is a wild place of heath, flint and big skies. In some parts of Norfolk you can drive for miles without seeing a house.
Burnham
Overy Staithe
And in the middle sits Norwich, the most easterly city in
the UK. This former seat of the Saxon Earls of East Anglia became the capital
of what was the most populous region in Norman England. By the fourteenth
century, the walled city of Norwich covered an area bigger than London. With
more medieval churches than any city north of the Alps, Norwich became one of
Europe’s great seedbeds of religious art and architecture. As Nicholas Pevsner
wrote: ‘Norwich has everything'.
Norwich Cathedral the most complete
Norman cathedral,
founded in 1096 and boasting 1000 bosses in the cloister,
the largest in the country
founded in 1096 and boasting 1000 bosses in the cloister,
the largest in the country
It was here that, sitting in her anchorite cell on King
Street, Julian of Norwich penned The Revelations of Divine Love, the first book written in the English language by a woman. The
medieval Christian mystic was a contemporary of Chaucer. And close by lived the
medieval Hebrew poet, Meir ben Elijah.
As you approach the city by road, you’ll see the Norwich
sign with an image of the cathedral, and underneath it the famous quotation by
the seventeenth century writer, George Borrow, ‘A fine city’. And it is a fine city – a city on a human scale
that you can cross on foot in half an hour passing flint churches, Tudor
merchant houses and the massive Norman castle. My family, on both sides, has
lived here for generations and I have a sense of deep local pride.
Norwich
Castle: the most elaborate Norman Keep to be constructed in England
and the
first English castle to be built on a mound
And I would like to share its success with you – for
Norwich has strengthened its place on the world literary map. On 10th
May 2012, Norwich was accredited as England’s foremost literary city by
becoming its first UNESCO Creative City of Literature. It joins an elite network of cities comprising
Edinburgh, Dublin, Iowa City, Melbourne and Reykjavik. The accreditation
provides international recognition to Norwich’s literary heritage, its contemporary
strengths and future potential in the field of literature and all the literary
arts.
So why Norwich? Think of this provincial city and Nelson,
the Canaries, the Norfolk Broads and
Colman’s mustard will probably flit through your mind – but Norwich has a
sensational literary past. It’s a place that makes a difference.
People sometimes refer to Norfolk as a slow-paced, staid
backwater, but throughout its history it has been associated with poltical
dissent, radical politics and Nonconformist religion.
Robert Kett, our very own Robin Hood, led the
Peasants' Rebellion from Norwich in 1549. Thomas Paine, whose book The Rights of Man influenced the American Constitution, was born near the
city. In 1713, the UK’s first provincial psychiatric hospital opened on Bethel
Street – hence the word ‘bedlam’. Elizabeth Fry, the Quaker prison reformer and
philanthropist who features on our £5 note, was born in Norwich. So, too, in
1796 was the UK’s first-ever black circus proprietor, Pablo
Fanque,
immortalised by The Beatles’ song, ‘Being
For the Benefit of Mr Kite!’
Norwich also has a long reputation as a city of refuge.
In the sixteenth century a large influx of Dutch, Flemish and Walloon refugees
brought weaving skills, which helped to build the city’s wealth and influenced
its architecture. It was the Flemish who brought the canary, later adopted at
Norwich City Football Club’s mascot.
River Wensum
Until the Industrial Revolution, Norwich was the capital
of England's most populous county. It vied with Bristol as the second city. By
the eighteenth century, Norwich was already on the cultural map. The
country’s first provincial newspaper, Norwich
Post, was published in 1701. Sir Thomas Browne, the great polymath scholar,
medical doctor, philosopher and encyclopaedist lived in the city. Luke Hansard, the printer who published
parliamentary debates was born here. In 1758, the Theatre
Royal, the
country’s first provincial theatre, opened and is still the most successful
today. And in 1772, Norwich was home to the first arts festival in Britain.
A century later, the local Quaker writer, Anna
Sewell,
published Black Beauty. Her story,
which aimed to induce an understanding treatment of horses, became an all-time
bestseller with sales of over 30 million books. As Sewell helped to put Norwich
on the literary map, John Crome and John Sell Cotman put it on the artistic map
with the Norwich School of Artists, founded in 1803.
It also has its share of heroes: Admiral
Lord Nelson was
schooled in Norwich. Edith Cavell, the
nurse and local heroine who was executed by firing squad in 1915 for helping
hundreds of allied soldiers to escape, was born near the city.
As you might expect, Norwich was one of the first cities
to have a library in 1794. In 1850, it was the first municipality to adopt the
Library Act. Today, the Norfolk & Norwich Millennium Library, housed in The Forum, is the most successful library
by far in England, with over one million visitors and users a year.
The Forum, which houses the Norfolk & Norwich
Millennium Library
and BBC
East, as well as restaurants and conference facilities
Norwich is also home to the country’s first – and now leading – course in creative writing. In 1971, Malcolm Bradbury and Angus Wilson founded the MA Course in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. There have been some luminary graduates including Ian McEwan (its first student), Kazuo Ishiguro, Rose Tremain, Anne Enright and Angela Carter.
So what will the City of Literature status do for
Norwich? In 2016, Writers
Centre Norwich,
which put forward the UNESCO bid, will open a £7 million International Centre
for Writing. The aim is to create a world-leading centre for creative writing.
The flagship project is a partnership between WCN and the University of East
Anglia, and will be housed in a building granted by Norwich City Council.
No doubt there will be more writers coming to the city.
Ask any local about Norwich and they’ll tell you the old adage: ‘Norwich has a
pub for every day of the year and a church for every Sunday’. We may soon be
able to add, ‘And a writer a day for every coffee bar’.
Elm
Hill, Norwich
And if you are a writer living in East Anglia, you might
like to join East Anglian Writers.
We are a group of 240 professional writers affiliated to the Society of Authors
and a jolly bunch.
On this Diamond Jubilee Day, I give three cheers to Her
Majesty and three cheers to Norwich – our new City of Literature!
And if you haven't yet been to
Norwich, then please visit. It's a lovely city.
My thanks to fellow EAW member John Worrall for supplying the photographs
for this piece.
http://www.anglianimages.co.uk
Sheridan Winn is author of the Sprite Sister books
Salthouse, North Norfolk
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