Suffolk
Related Category: British and Irish Political Geography
county (1991 pop. 629,900), 1,466 sq mi (3,798 sq km), E England. The county seat is
Ipswich. Suffolk is bordered on the N by the Ouse and Waveney rivers and on the S by the Stour River. The terrain is low and undulating, and the region, mainly agricultural, is one of the chief producers of grain, sugar beets, and vegetables in England. Breeds of horses, hogs, sheep, and cattle have been developed; stock and poultry raising are common occupations. Along the coast (especially at
Lowestoft) fishing is important. Industries include food processing, milling, malting, and the making of farm machinery and fertilizers. Tourists frequent the coast. Suffolk and Norfolk formed the Kingdom of the Iceni, whose Queen Boadicea led a revolt (A.D. 60) against the Romans. In Anglo-Saxon times Suffolk was part of the kingdom of
East Anglia, inhabited by the south folk of that kingdom, from which its name comes. In the Middle Ages, Suffolk was the center of a large wool industry. The importance of Ipswich as a port increased when Great Britain joined the European Community (now the European Union). In 1974, East Suffolk and West Suffolk were combined to form the nonmetropolitan county of Suffolk.