Bury St. Edmunds, or St. Edmundsbury (16), a market-town in Suffolk, 26 m. NW. of Ipswich, named from Edmund, king of East Anglia, martyred by the Danes in 870, in whose honour it was built; famous for its abbey, of the interior life of which in the 12th century there is a matchlessly graphic account in Carlyle's “Past and Present.”
Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)
Bury * Busa`co