The village grew up as a cross-roads location near the source of a tributary of the River Blyth. It is mentioned in the Domesday Book as Bufelda, a large village of 42 households held by Count Alan of Brittany. In the medieval period a main route between the post of Dunwich and Bury St Edmunds crossed the modern day A144 road in the centre of the village. The village retains its basic cross plan, having developed around the cross-roads. Some Bronze Age and Iron Agearchaeological sites have been identified close to the village and a number of medieval sites have been identified, including a scheduled ringwork in diameter known as Castle Yard south-east of the village. A market was held in the village until the 16th century. The economy has always been based around agriculture, including the linen industry which developed in the Waveney valley area to the north. Malting and milling were important economically from the 18th century. The village had two windmills, with post mills, which demolished in 1904 and 1944.
Geography
The village lies near the source of a tributary of the River Blyth and the main street is situated along the river valley. An area of sandlings is found in the east of the parish, with the village itself on the eastern edge of the "High Suffolk" clay plateau.
Culture and community
Most of the village has been designated as a conservation area by East Suffolk District Council since 1987. Local services include Bramfield Primary School, a pub, village hall, garage and butchers. Local services have declined since the 1980s. As well as the parish church, the village has a United Reformed chapel, built in 1841, with its own graveyard. A small village green survives in the centre of the village outside the pub, The Queen's Head. The pub includes buildings dating from the 16th century and is a Grade II listed building. Bramfield House School is west of the village on the road to Walpole. It is a residential school catering for boys aged 7 to 18 with special educational needs. Nationally-renowned poet Roger Langley lived in the village following his retirement as a teacher and much of his work was inspired by the countryside around Bramfield and carvings in the village church. Langley was posthumously awarded the 2011 Forward Prize for Best Single Poem, for "To a Nightingale".
Landmarks
There are a number of listed buildings in Bramfield.
Bramfield Hall dates from the 16th century but was substantially altered and extended in the 18th century. Built of red brick in three storeys to an H-shaped floorplan, it has a symmetrical 9-bay late 18th century frontage with projecting wings. The boundary wall of the estate is a crinkle crankle wall built in a wavy line for extra stability. The hall itself is a Grade II* listed building. The hall was the home of the Tatlock family for many years. Paul Tatlock first bought land here during the early 19th century. It was later the home of the Gladwyn Jebb, the 1st Baron Gladwyn of Bramfield, who was the acting Secretary-General of the United Nations on its formation in 1945 and is buried in the village at St Andrew's church.