The Norman conquerors had a logistical problem in the few years after
the Battle of Hastings: there were only about 10,000 of them to
keep the lid on a hostile nation of two million which was constantly
in revolt somewhere or other.
Their solution was castles to dominate the surrounding countryside
and provide a base for whichever of King William's associates held
that particular slice of country among his spoils.
William de Warenne, having got large chunks of Norfolk (and for
that matter, a dozen other counties) in his allotment, picked Castle
Acre as his Norfolk seat.
It was an interesting choice for this is not the most fertile part
of the county at the north end of Breckland, that swathe of central-west
Norfolk and north-west Suffolk characterised by stony ground, heathland
and, these days, twisted pines. But it was pretty enough, on a south
facing slope just above the trout-laden River Nar. And it was on the
Peddar's Way, a trans-East Anglia route of uncertain origin but certainly
adopted - if not built by - the Romans and, these days, by long distance
walkers.

Warenne
had intended also to build a Cluniac priory following a similar project
at Lewes but in 1088, he was wounded during an insurrection in Sussex
and, having been created the first Earl of Surrey for his pains, he
expired. His son nevertheless took up the work which began about 1090.
Today, the remains of castle and priory are Castle Acre's claim to
fame.
The Priory, though now largely skeletal, was clearly a grand edifice.
The Cluniac Order - from Cluny in France - was founded in 909AD,to
return to the original rule of St Benedict, but it somehow lost the
message, becoming extremely wealthy, magnificent in ritual and somewhat
remote from the supposed simplicity and poverty.
Strange then that this priory did not flourish, despite many benefactors,
ample revenue and great possessions which included, apparently, the
prize exhibit of the arm of St Philip. Debts and scandals in the 13th
and 14th centuries culminated in the arrest in 1351 of the monks who
had 'spurned the habit of their order and were vagabonds in England
in secular habit'. When the priory surrendered to Henry VIII in 1537,
only 10 were in residence out of a complement of thirty or more. There
is no word of the arm.

By then, the castle was long derelict. The Warennes' occupation had
spanned 250 years but later generations lost interest. In 1615, the
castle and priory passed to Sir Edward Coke, Earl of Leicester, who
was already accused by the Crown of monopoly through massive landholdings
but asked to buy just one more 'acre'. The Castle Acre estate was
as large as his other lands together.
The Leicesters remained big landowners in the area thereafter but
Castle Acre has never been an estate village, land having always been
held by several freeholders.
This was significant for the development of 'gang labour' in the 19th
century. At that time, ratepayers paid according to the people living
on their land and big estates thus tried to restrict settlement on
theirs. But they still needed extra labour and this travelled in from
'open villages' like Castle Acre where speculators threw up basic
accommodation and charged high rents.

By
then the village had grown beyond the original fortifications and,
even from the 17th century when the Breckland landscape had finally
been stripped of its useful woodland, had seen building in flint and
stone for the simplest houses. Norfolk after all had plenty of flint.
Dressed stone however was purloined from the ruins; it still features
in many a Castle Acre quoin. The Rev JH Bloom in his 1843 book, The
Castle and Priory at Castle Acre berated such thievery with, he claims,
some success.
This was significant for the development of 'gang labour' in the 19th
century. At that time, ratepayers paid according to the people living
on their land and big estates thus tried to restrict settlement on
theirs. But they still needed extra labour and this travelled in from
'open villages' like Castle Acre where speculators threw up basic
accommodation and charged high rents.
These days, the ruins, now tended by English Heritage, are regarded
as the nation's best in their respective Norman categories. Walkers
breaking their journey also find a village with its Norman heart basically
intact. There are restaurants, a tea shop and two decent pubs - the
Ostrich, once a coaching inn, and the Albert Victor, formerly the
Dun Cow.
There were another five pubs even in this century but three are now
houses - the Rising Sun on the Newton road, the Chequers in Bailey
Street below the surviving Norman town arch and the Forrester's Arms
once also known as the Drum and Monkey because a traveller with a
monkey on a barrel organ used to go there.

The
Ship further down is an antiques shop while the Red Lion, now the
Old Red Lion, is a vegetarian hostel and restaurant, which was recently
repainted bright red and canary yellow, to mixed reviews, it has to
be said. TV, radio and newspapers all got in briefly on the debate.
But, for all its history, no other great stirring event appears to
have happened in Castle Acre. Katherine Steward, paternal grandmother
of Oliver Cromwell was born there, and Cromwell himself indirectly
left a mark on the church font cover, according to local resident,
John Dawes, 40 years in Australia and now returned to the village
of his birth.
When I was small, the font cover had a dull finish but a man from
Norwich museum stripped it down to find gilt and reds and greens.
Parishioners had applied whitewash to prevent it catching the disapproving
eye of Cromwell's puritans.'
He also recalls the crash of a wartime Lancaster on Hungry Hill to
the south from where a wheel bounced over roads and hedges for nearly
a mile to finish up at the river in the valley. Otherwise things have
been pretty quiet.
But that is probably no bad thing. For there is no mistaking the romance
of the place no matter that writers decry the manicuring of those
ruins of the last few decades. There are views to be had at Castle
Acre which, give or take a few power lines, will not differ markedly
from what the Warennes looked out upon from their early spartan existence.
It could just stay that way.