Risby, Suffolk

      Coordinates: 52°16′01″N 0°37′59″E / 52.267°N 0.633°E / 52.267; 0.633

      Risby
      St Giles Risby - geograph.org.uk - 1278025.jpg
      St Giles church Risby
      Risby is located in Suffolk
      Risby

       Risby shown within Suffolk
      OS grid reference TL7966
      Shire county Suffolk
      Region East
      Country England
      Sovereign state United Kingdom
      Post town Bury St Edmunds
      Postcode district IP
      Dialling code 01284
      EU Parliament East of England
      List of places
      UK
      England
      Suffolk

      Risby is a village in Suffolk, located around 3 miles (4.8 km) miles west of Bury St. Edmunds, north of the A14 road. It is believed that the village was founded in about the tenth century, presumably on the strength of its having a Norse name, possibly Rȳðs - by "farm settlement at a clearing" and identical to Ryssby in Sweden.[1] The traditional division or Hundred in which it stands is Thingoe,[2] also a Norse name. The village now has a population of 840.

      History

      Risby was recorded in Domesday as Rasbi and Risbi and Resebi. The Black Ditches are on the western edge of the parish and are believed to be the most easterly of a series of early Anglo-Saxon defensive earthworks built across the Icknield Way.

      Saxham and Risby Station, 1 mile (1.6 km) south of the village, opened in 1854 and closed in December 1964, though passenger traffic ceased in 1967.

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      Present day

      Risby Church of England Primary School operates in the village which also has a village hall and two pubs

      St Giles Church lies opposite Quay's Farm behind a wall of flints and pink bricks and consists of nave, chancel and porch with traceried windows and one of the East Anglian round towers, in flint,[3] containing three bells. The tower is plain up to above roof level, where a number of lancets appear below a shallow battlemented parapet. This tower has a texture of varicoloured flints, black, white, brown, glassy, dull, orange, not usually chipped or knapped, set in a buff-coloured mortar, and it rises with a slight taper from ground level and without obvious signs of coursing, as if built in one campaign. It is similar to the round tower at neighbouring Little Saxham. Inside the church, the tower arch seems rather tall for its width, and has roll mouldings about the arch and capitals marked with simple lozenge designs, as if Anglo-Saxon, but it may be from the Norman period in a style archaic for its time. The church guide suggests a date about 1000 to 1066. The space inside the round tower is surprisingly small, suggesting very thick walls.[4] The interior of the church contains tablets to the Danby, Wastell, and Spark families; also a carved screen. On the nave floor, partly under a carpet, could be noted some arms of the Godfrey family in exactly the same style and material as those also noted for Godfrey at Lydd, Kent. The arms: A chevron between three pelicans' heads erased at the neck vulning themselves. The colour of the field is given as Sable, the chevron as Or[5]

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      References

      1. ^ Ekwall, Eilert, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names Oxford 1980, etc.
      2. ^ from Old Scandinavian þinghaugr, assembly mound, Ekwall, as above
      3. ^ notes made at the church, August 2003
      4. ^ notes made at the church August 2003
      5. ^ Corder, Joan, A Dictionary of Suffolk Arms Suffolk Records Society 1965
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      Last modified on 21 April 2013, at 21:23