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Essex whirl

With staycations staying popular, head to Saffron Walden for proof there’s plenty to explore at home

February 21, 2021 15:42
Town Hall and King Street CREDIT Saffron Walden TIC
3 min read

With its pastel houses, half-timbered buildings and winding cobbled streets, at first glance Saffron Walden looks the very epitome of a traditional English market town. But this pretty part of Essex has its own exotic history, perfect to discover on a weekend break.

Once the centre of the country’s saffron trade, its wealth was built on fields of flowers — the saffron crocus, to be precise. Originally grown in the Middle East, India and China, the crocus flourished in the soil here, resulting in the town’s gaining the ‘Saffron’ part of its name during the 16th century.

With 4,300 blossoms needed to create one ounce of the spice, it’s still the most expensive in the world, weight for weight often costing the same as gold — at times, even more valuable. And while the saffron trade is all but gone from Essex today, you can still trace its impact as you follow the town’s historic trail.

Standing by the first of the trail markers on the pavement outside the Tourist Information Centre, the market was in full swing in front of us. The black-and-white-timbered Town Hall, where the Tourist Information is set, is itself only a couple of centuries old, a positive newcomer compared to the market, which dates back to 1141.

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