Within the parish, several Roman artefacts have been discovered including pottery remains, busts, figurines, coins and a rare cast for Iceni brooches, which points to the possible site of a Roman temple.[2] The majority of the artefacts were found in 1844 and classified under the Felmingham Hoard, which was acquired by the British Museum in 1925.[3]
Felmingham Hall was built in the late-Sixteenth Century and still stands today as a Grade II listed building. Ruggs Hall was also built in the Sixteenth Century but was demolished in the Nineteenth Century, with a farmhouse now standing on its original site.[2]
According to the 2011 Census, Felmingham has a population of 561 residents living in 234 households. The parish covers a total area of 7.68 square kilometres (2.97 sq mi).[5]
Felmingham's parish church is dedicated to Saint Andrew and was rebuilt in the Eighteenth Century on the site of previous worship. The font is made from Purbeck Marble and the church features a brass monument to Robert Moone who died in 1591. St. Andrew's also features numerous examples of stained-glass windows with some salvaged from the demolished St. Philip's Church at Potter Heigham with further depictions of the Ascension and the Coronation of the Virgin installed by William Morris and Geoffrey Webb.[6] St. Andrew's has a peal of nine bells in the belfry and a hand-carved screen commissioned for the Millennium depicting scenes from the New Testament.[7]
Felmingham war memorial takes the form of an inscribed granite slab which was unveiled and re-dedicated in August 2018 in the presence of Graham James, Bishop of Norwich. The memorial is located inside St. Andrew's Churchyard and lists the following names for the First World War: