FRAMLINGHAM, a town of Sussex, 88 miles from London. It is a large old place, with a castle, supposed to have been built by some of the first kings of the East-Angles; the walls, yet standing, are 44 feet high, 8 thick, with 13 towers 14 feet above them, 2 of which are watch-towers. To this castle the princess, afterwards Queen Mary I. retired, when the Lady Jane Grey was her competitor for the crown. The town is pleasantly situated, though but indifferently built, upon a clay-hill, in a fruitful soil and a healthy air, near the source of the river Ore, by some called Wincknel, which runs through it to Oxford. It has a spacious place for the market on Saturday; and a large flatly church built all of black Flint, with a steeple 100 feet high; two good almshouses; and a free-school.
FRAMLINGHAM
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