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.