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The area around Bratton Clovelly has been inhabited since the Neolithic period. At the edge of the parish to the north, on Broadbury, there are several barrows and Castle Cross had a Roman signal station, hence its name. The stones of this building were still visible up to the middle of the 19th Cent. This cross-roads is the highest non-moor land road in the county, being 928 feet (281 metres) above sea-level. The land within the parish is Culm Measures (unique to the north Devon and north Cornwall area, this is heavy clay and not good quality, but has a wide variety of interesting flora and fauna) and much outside the village itself was moor land. If you stand in the churchyard and look across to the large field on the hill opposite it is obvious that this was originally several smaller ones. Originally fields in Devon were of only a few acres but modern machinery has necessitated removal of some of the hedges. In certain lights you can still see the lines of the old hedges and ditches. There are no valuable mineral resources as on Dartmoor or in Cornwall. During the early centuries Bratton was the cross-road for pack-horse routes from north and south Devon and from Cornwall in the west to Exeter and beyond. In the 17th Cent. it was a thriving place owing to the wool trade, but since then the area has never been particularly prosperous and the (often absentee) landlords made no improvements. Perhaps we have been lucky in some respects as we still have so much of the past available to us that has not been 'modernised', particularly the Church that still shows its Saxon and Norman origins. Some of the place-names are Celtic and the hamlet of Boasley was mentioned in a Saxon document in 1050. In 1086 the manor of Bratton was held by Baldwin 'The Sheriff' and paid taxes on 1 virgate (about 30 acres, sufficient for 15 ploughs). Bratton was in two parts separated by a strip of land at Thrushelton (now Broadwoodwidger), this continued until at least 1840. A family named D'eaudon held the manor in the 13th Cent., a daughter of whose married Sir Roger Clavill which gave the name ‘Clovelly’. They died without issue and the manor passed to her sister who was married to Sir Baldwyn Malet. Their great-grandson was Walter Meriet, Chancellor of Exeter 1322. In due time it passed to the Somertons, whose daughters married into the Francis and Kirkham families. The name of the village was then changed to Bratton Francis until the male line ran out in 1547. The joint heirs were called Langford, Pengelly and Coryndon and the name reverted to Bratton Clovelly. The Langfords were Cornish in origin with several seats in Cornwall as well as at least four in Devon, one of the latter being Swaddledown - which can trace seven generations of this family. Swaddledown is to the north-west of the village and the present house was built in the early 17th century on the site of an earlier medieval building. The Burnbys of Burnby also were living in the village for seven generations and recorded their marriages in stained glass windows, the remains of which can be seen in the vestry of the Church. They were obviously very generous to the church and contributed to the building of the aisle. |