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Brun 15 was a minor thegn in Wessex, with two manors together assessed at 6 hides and worth £4.
Distribution map of property and lordships associated with this name in DB
List of property and lordships associated with this name in DB
Holder 1066
Shire
Phil. ref.
Vill
Holder 1066 DB Spelling
Holder 1066
Lord 1066
Tenant-in-Chief 1086
1086
subtenant
Fiscal value
1066
value
1086 value
Holder 1066 ID conf.
Show on map
Somerset
45,3
Babcary
Bruno
Brun 'of Buckhorn Weston'
-
Humphrey the chamberlain
-
2.50
2.00
2.50
A
Map
Dorset
26,1
Buckhorn Weston
Bruno
Brun 'of Buckhorn Weston'
-
Robert, count of Mortain
Hamon 'of Buckhorn Weston'
3.50
2.00
3.50
A
Map
Total
6.00
4.00
6.00
Brun 15 is identified first by the fact that these two manors, about 14 miles apart, were isolated by scores of miles from the nearest estates of any other Brun. In addition, the only other landowner at both places was called Godric (Godric). The 7 hides of Buckhorn Weston were reported in GDB to be held by Godric and Brun in parage as two manors. At Babcary there were separate manors, each of 2½ hides and 3 ploughlands, held freely by Godric (Som. 19:66) and Brun. Probably if Exon had survived for Buckhorn Weston it would show that Godric’s and Brun’s manors there were assessed equally too. Both parts of Buckhorn Weston and Godric’s manor at Babcary passed after the Conquest to Robert, count of Mortain; Brun’s manor instead went to Humphrey the chamberlain, but both Exon (466r.) and GDB explain that ‘This was added to Beorhtric’s lands’, meaning the magnate Beorhtric son of Ælfgar (Beorhtric), whose extensive property had gone in the first place to Humphrey’s mistress Queen Matilda. Finally, the common spelling Bruno also links these two estates, and probably indicated that their owner’s name was the form normalized as Bruna.
Both Weston and Babcary are on the undulating fertile lias plain around Ilchester.
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