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Everything about Francis Blomefield totally explained

Francis Blomefield (July 23, 1705 - January 16, 1752) was an English topographical historian of the county of Norfolk. During his lifetime he compiled and published detailed accounts of the city of Norwich, Borough of Thetford and the southern hundreds of the county, but died before the whole work could be completed.

Biography

Francis Blomefield was born in the village of Fersfield, in south Norfolk, the eldest son of Henry and Alice Blomefield, who were yeomen farmers. He was educated at Diss and Thetford Grammar Schools, and in April 1724 he was admitted to Caius College, Cambridge, where he graduated BA in 1727 and MA in 1728 . On leaving University in 1727 he was ordained, rector of Hargham in 1729, and shortly afterwards rector of Fersfield, his father's family living. He married 1 September 1732, Mary Womack, daughter of a former rector of Fersfield. They had three daughters, two of whom survived him.
   As a boy Blomefield began recording monumental inscriptions from churches he visited in Norfolk, Suffolk and later Cambridgeshire. Whilst at College he also kept genealogical and heraldic notes relating to local families. Soon after leaving University he was collecting materials for an account of the antiquities of Cambridgeshire, but in 1732 this project was deferred when hew was given access to Peter Le Neve's huge collection of materials for the history of Norfolk, by Le Neve's executor "Honest Tom" Martin. In July 1733 Blomefield published his proposals for publishing An essay towards a topographical history of Norfolk in parts. Soon afterwards, while collecting further information for his history, he discovered some of the famous Paston Letters. By 1736 he was ready to begin publishing the results of his researches into type, assisted by his friend Charles Parkin, the rector of Oxborough. At the end of 1739 the first volume of Blomefield’s History of Norfolk was completed. It was printed at the author's own press at Fersfield, acquired especially for the purpose. The second volume, consisting of a detailed history of Norwich was begun in 1741 and completed by 1745. He was two thirds through his third volume but had only covered about 40% of the county when he contracted smallpox during a visit to London, and died in Fersfield in January 1752.
   In 1751, shortly before his death, Blomefield published his Cambridgeshire notes as a single volume entitled Collectanea Cantabrigiensia.

Completion of the “History of Norfolk”

The topographical history of the remaining areas of Norfolk was subsequently completed by Blomefield’s friend Charles Parkin between 1753 and 1765 (albeit in a far less detailed and accurate manner than Blomefield had managed). The remaining sheets of volume 3 and two further folio volumes were published at King's Lynn between 1769 and 1775. The entire work was subsequently reprinted in eleven quarto volumes in London between 1805 and 1810.

Assessment

Blomefield’s Norfolk was both detailed and largely reliable and comparable with the best county histories of the period. There is little doubt that in compiling his book Blomefield had frequent recourse to the existing historical collections of Peter Le Neve, John Kirkpatrick of Norwich and Tanner, his own work being to some extent one of expansion and addition, although he did compile extensive collections of his own.

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