| BROADSWORD | Bit of Norfolk dialect for an old weapon |
| MARDLE | Norfolk dialect for gossip or pond (6) |
| LONGBOW | Crave a sign of respect for an old weapon (7) |
| SPEAR | Odds on getting attention for an old weapon (5) |
| PIKE | Fish for an old weapon (4) |
| BRAT | Dialect for an apron, child's pinafore or an overall; US word for a type of German sausage; or, a young rascal, scamp or tyke (4) |
| SCIMITAR | In reform of racism, it's an old weapon (8) |
| INGLE | Dialect for an open fireplace (5) |
| LANCE | ... and left an African party, at the end, with an old weapon (5) |
| GLANCE | Look, £1,000 on an old weapon (6) |
| TRIDENT | New model tried to design an old weapon (7) |
| ARROW | A f-fight with an old weapon (5) |
| SAVEALL | Any device preventing waste or loss; a light sail set to catch the breeze spilled from a larger sheet; dialect for an apron; or, a miser (4-3) |
| GULL | Dialect for an unfledged bird or a gosling; a mew; or, a dupe or fool (4) |
| HOWARD | Name of several Dukes of Norfolk, including the third, who was an uncle of two wives of King Henry VIII (6,6) |
| THOMAS | Name of several Dukes of Norfolk, including the third, who was an uncle of two wives of King Henry VIII (6,6) |
| ANGLIA | East ---, region of England consisting of Norfolk, Suffolk and parts of Essex and Cambridgeshire (6) |
| BYROADS | Routes heading for Yarmouth in area of Norfolk (7) |
| NORWICH | County town of Norfolk and birthplace of Elizabeth Fry in 1780 (7) |
| ARUNDEL | Sussex castle, seat of the Dukes of Norfolk (7) |