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Suffolk - LoveToKnow 1911 (2621 words) |
 | The east Suffolk branch from Ipswich serves Woodbridge, Saxmundham, Halesworth, and Beccles, with branches to Felixstowe, to Framlingham, to Aldeburgh, and to Lowestoft; while the Southwold Light railway connects with that town from Halesworth. |
 | Suffolk comprises 21 hundreds, and for administrative purposes is divided into the counties of East Suffolk (557,854 acres) and West Suffolk (390,914 acres). |
 | The county of Suffolk (Sudfole, Suthfolc) was formed from the south part of the kingdom of East Anglia which had been settled by the Angles in the latter half of the 5th century. |
| Britain.tv Wikipedia - Suffolk (920 words) |
 | Suffolk (pronounced /sÊfÉk/) is a large historic and modern non-metropolitan county in the East Anglia region of eastern England. |
 | Suffolk was part of the kingdom of East Anglia which was settled by the Angles in the 5th century. |
 | Suffolk encompasses one of the most ancient regions of the UK: A monastery in Bury St. Edmunds founded in 630AD, plotting of Magna Carta in 1215; the oldest documented structural element of a still inhabited dwelling in Britain found in Clare. |