Manor of Bratton Fleming
The Manor of Bratton Fleming was a medieval manor estate in Bratton Fleming, Devon, England.
Descent of the manor
Fleming
In the Domesday Book of 1086 the manor of "Brotone" was one of over one hundred west country manors held in chief by Robert, Count of Mortain, who was the half-brother of William the Conqueror. Robert's tenant at Bratton was Erchenbald "the Fleming" from whom, or from a descendent, Bratton Fleming was named.Erchenbald was succeeded by his son, Stephen, whose son, Archembald, went to Ireland with Henry II in 1171 and participated in Hugh de Lacy's plantation of the Kingdom of Mide. Succeeding Flemings were Stephen, died c. 1213 – 1214 and Baldwin, died 1260. Baldwin's son, Richard, married Mary/Maria Martin, daughter of Sir Nicholas FitzMartin the Younger, jure uxoris feudal baron of Barnstaple. Richard died in 1301. Their son, Baldwin, married Matilda/Maude de Genville, daughter of Sir Simon de Genville of Trim. Baldwin was summoned to parliament at Kilkenny in 1309 and was thereby deemed to have become the 1st Baron Slane. They were the parents of Simon Fleming, 2nd Baron Slane. On the death unmarried and childless of Christopher Fleming, 5th Baron Slane in 1457, his two sisters became his co-heirs to his Devon estates: Amy Fleming married John Bellewe and Anne Fleming married Walter Dillon. The Fleming lands in Devon were split between the husbands of both sisters and the Dillons acquired Bratton Fleming.
Dillon
The Dillon family was a cadet branch of the ancient Breton house of de Leon, a member of which accompanied Prince John to Ireland in 1185 and was granted extensive lands in Counties Longford and Westmeath called 'Dillon's Country'. The title Viscount Dillon was created in 1622 for Theobald Dillon, Lord President of Connaught. The Dillons of Bratton Fleming were a cadet branch of this Irish family andwere seated at Chymwell. The descent was as follows:
- Walter Dillon, who married Anne Fleming, co-heiress of Bratton Fleming.
- Nicholas Dillon of Bratton Fleming
- Robert Dillon of Bratton Fleming, married Elizabeth Fortescue, daughter of either Henry Fortescue of Ermington or William Fortescue of Prudonstone. His 5th son was Anthony Dillon, MP for Penryn in 1589.
- Henry Dillon, eldest son, married Elizabeth Pollard, daughter of Sir Hugh Pollard.
- Robert Dillon, eldest son and heir. He was bequeathed by his father "the warren called the Borough alias Braunton Borough" and brought a claim against the mayor and aldermen of Barnstaple for unlawful imprisonment. He was an overseer of the will of his uncle Anthony Dillon, MP. He married Grace Chichester, a daughter of Sir John Chichester of Raleigh. The heraldic impalement representing this marriage is visible on the monument of her father in Pilton Church. In 1599 he sold all the Dillon lands in North Devon, including Bratton Fleming, to his wife's nephew, Sir Robert Chichester of Raleigh. In about the middle of the seventeenth century this branch of the Dillons was seated in Farthingoe, Northamptonshire.