The Angel and Royal Hotel The Royal Arcade now sits on what was formerly the site of the Angel, a 15th-century inn and
coaching house in the parish of
St Peter Mancroft, which sat on the eastern side of the
marketplace, facing out into Gentleman's Walk. It was one of a group of significant inns on this side of the market. Behind the Angel was a narrow service lane known as the Back of the Inns. The
Great Cockey ran along the Back of the Inns, and thus flowed outside the back gate of the Angel.
17th century There are consistent records of rentals of the Angel throughout the 17th century, during which time it existed alongside other inns that took up all of the houses on the eastern side of the market. These included the Half Moon, the King's Head, the Bear, the Angel, and the White Lion, the latter being only a few yards away from the Angel. Christopher Ponder was a bookseller who operated his business from the inn from 1615 to 1624. In 1616, Edward Stephenson and his wife Amy were sent to the stocks for "abusinge of Thomas Levy the constable of
St Stephens [...] causing an outrage in the same p[ar]ish and for drinking at the Angel contrary to the lawe". As supposed by historian Fiona Williamson, the Angel may have been part of a Royalist tavern-based network in Norwich during the
English Civil Wars, and was central to the events of the riot that led to the
Great Blow in 1648, alongside the White Lion and King's Head. The night prior, twenty or so "gentlemen" bought rounds at the Angel on the understanding that the recipients would obstruct the mayor John Utting's departure from Norwich, according to the
watch who had found them around midnight which was contrary to statute. One of these 'gentlemen' was mercer Leonard Spurgeon, who charged his pistol to rally the men at the inn and then stayed with them until all the rounds were finished at around midnight, telling them there would be a call to arms at 8am the next day. Christopher Bransby, a strong supporter of the mayor and key participant in the events of the riot, was also present at the inn for a meeting with one Doctor Brooke; Bransby went to the White Lion and then back to the Angel's lodgings to sleep. The Angel was one of the inns in the area that became the centre of contemporary intrigue into the causes for the riot that led to the Great Blow, and were mentioned in witness statements about the riot. In 1675, Mrs Marie Pease provided entertainment at the inn, showing "twoe
meeremayds" and "a devouring great eating
Quaker" at the Angel's sign. and near the King's Head inn (1781 map)
17001899 The Angel became a coffee house and tavern, and at one point was home to one of the city's
masonic lodges. By the late 18th century, the Angel was one of four great inns at the bottom of the market place, the others being the Half Moon, the King's Head, and the Bear.
James Woodforde often stopped at the inn in the late 18th century when on his way from his home in
Weston Longville to
London by coach, and often took coffee or supped at the Angel, but would stay at the King's Head to sleep. On
Marie Tussaud's first visit to Norwich in 1819, she took the largest room in the Angel. The inn was too cramped to display her 70 to 90
wax figures, and so on her second visit in 1825 she instead used the assembly rooms at Chapel Field House. In the 19th century, the Angel was converted into the Royal Hotel.
Royal Arcade (1899present) The building was later demolished and replaced with Norwich's Royal Arcade in 1899, which runs eastwards from the market. The architect of the Arcade was
George Skipper, the designer was
William James Neatby of
Royal Doulton. In 2024, the arcade marked its 125th anniversary with a selection of events including
morris dancing, food tasting, and a talk about Skipper.
Architecture The three-storey building has
ceramic tile facing, with a slate and plain tile roof by the shops and a glass and timber roof over the arcade itself. Its entry on the market side is an arch with stained glass in the semi-circular top, with bowed shopfronts to each side of the entry. This entry also has a curvilinear
pediment. Its interior is two storeys and has projecting timber shopfronts. To commemorate the Angel, the image of an angel in white on blue was crafted at the entrance to the Arcade from the Back of the Inns, known as Parson Woodforde's Angel. The Back of the Inns still exists as a pedestrian street. Above the east entrance of the arcade, on the site of a former inn named the Angel, sits Parson Woodforde's Angel, an
Art Nouveau style depiction of an angel in white on blue, sculpted from Doulton
carrara marble. It commemorates the Angel and Woodforde's time there. ==References==