Venerable (Monastic) 6th century

Brannock of Braunton

6th century

Also known as Brannoc of Braunton

A missionary monk who settled at Braunton in Devon, remembered for his care of animals and the founding of a church there.

Feast Day
January 7
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Brannock of Braunton

Come to them for
Animals / Livestock

Life

Brannock of Braunton was a missionary monk of the sixth century who, by tradition, migrated from South Wales into North Devon, where he founded a monastery at Braunton near Barnstaple and served as its first abbot. A pre-schism Western saint venerated as Orthodox, he is remembered for his missionary labors in Devon and for the church that has borne his name and his patronage from at least the ninth century.

The traditions surrounding Brannock are admittedly confused, and the saint is recorded under several spellings — Barnoc, Brannoc, and Brannocus among them. Some hagiographers have identified him with the sixth-century Welsh missionary Saint Brynach, though the two are generally held to be distinct. By tradition he is associated with the household of Brychan, the Welsh chieftain whose descendants populate much of the early hagiography of South Wales and the West Country; one liturgical text names him a tutor of the children of Brychan.

Brannock's settlement at Braunton grew in importance over the following centuries. The church dedicated to him was established by at least 854, and the minster that developed around it gave rise to the Saxon settlement known as Brannocminster, which by the time of the Norman Conquest was a royal manor ranked with Barnstaple. The Domesday Survey of 1086 records St Brannock's among the principal churches of Devon, evidence of the standing his foundation had attained.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 6th century Migration to Devon By tradition Brannock migrated from South Wales into North Devon.
  2. 6th century Foundation of Braunton He founded a monastery at Braunton near Barnstaple and served as its first abbot.
  3. by 854 Church dedication The church at Braunton was dedicated to him by at least this date.
  4. 933 Translation of a relic A relic held to be the saint's arm was moved from Branscombe to Milton Abbey in Dorset by order of King Athelstan.
  5. 1086 Recorded in Domesday St Brannock's church is recorded among the principal churches of Devon in the Domesday Survey.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

The Founding of Braunton

According to local tradition, Brannock first attempted to build his church on a hill overlooking Braunton, but the structure collapsed. In a dream he was instructed to seek out a sow and her piglets, and to raise his church on the spot where he found them. He built in the lower wooded valley accordingly, away from the main Celtic settlement and near the old trackways. The legend of the sow and her young is commemorated in the present St Brannock's Church, Braunton, in a stained-glass window and a carved roof boss.

The site Brannock chose endured. His foundation became a minster, and the settlement that grew around it took the name Brannocminster. By the Norman period it was a royal manor of consequence, and the Domesday Survey of 1086 lists St Brannock's church among the leading ecclesiastical sites of the county.

Burial, Relics, and Veneration

Medieval antiquarians, including William of Worcester and John Leland, recorded that Brannock was buried at his church in Braunton, where some of his relics are said to remain. A relic identified as the saint's arm was kept at Branscombe before being removed to Milton Abbey in Dorset in 933 by order of King Athelstan.

Brannock's feast is observed on differing days: January 7, the date on which he is commemorated in the Orthodox synaxarion and which was kept at Exeter Cathedral, and June 26, which is celebrated at Braunton itself. His church remains a place of pilgrimage.

Notes

Local pre-schism Western saint — clergy/source review advised.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 7