User talk:2A00:23C8:8084:4800:110F:4EAD:5A0E:94FC

Thetford
Under "Early History" the entry includes the following: "During the Iron Age, a fort was established on Icknield Way at the site of Thetford Castle." According to Pevsner and Wilson, The Buildings of England: Norfolk 2, p 699, there was a "crossing", the "ford" that gave the town its name, and this "by c. 500 BC was important enough to justify a hill-fort set immediately N", ie on the site of the present castle. Might it be clearer to say something like this, so as both to clarify the significance of the "ford" in "Thetford" and to remove any possible confusion between "ford", "ford" and "castle"?