The village of Barwick is mentioned in the
Domesday Book and was located at the present Barwick Hall Farm. Earthworks of the
deserted medieval village were traceable until recently. The Domesday Book mentions a village church, dedicated to St Mary. This was in what is now a wood called Churchyard Plantation, south of the present Barwick House. It was abandoned in the 16th century after the village was deserted, and only a few low walls survive. In 1171 the church and adjacent land were acquired by
Old Buckenham Priory, which founded a hamlet called Middleton just to the north of the former. Barwick and Middleton continued as separate settlements until the 15th century. The desertion of the old village of Barwick occurred during the tenure of Thomas Thoresby, the founder of
Thoresby College in
King's Lynn, and of Middleton earlier. The sites became two farms, which were known as Great Barwick (the old village) and Little Barwick (Middleton) by the 17th century. The former went on to become Barwick Hall Farm, the latter Barwick House. ==Topography==