Feudal barony of Bampton


The [Edmund Crouchback|]feudal barony of Bampton was one of eight feudal baronies in Devonshire which existed during the mediaeval era, and had its caput at Bampton Castle within the manor of Bampton.

Descent

Domesday Book

The Domesday Book of 1086 lists Baentone as one of the 27 Devon holdings of Walter of Douai, also known therein as Walscin. Walter was also feudal baron of Castle Cary in Somerset. At Bampton he established a castle, the motte of which survives today. The manor was a very large holding of 76 households, and previously to the Norman Conquest of England of 1066 had been held in demesne by King Edward the Confessor. As a manor in the royal demesne it had paid no tax. Walter had obtained it from William the Conqueror in exchange for the manors previously granted to him of Ermington and Blackawton. According to the Book of Fees the member manors of the barony of Bampton included: Duvale, Hele, Doddiscombe, Hockworthy, Havekareland, and Legh. Walter held the manor of Bampton in demesne, but nevertheless he had three tenants who held land somewhere within the manor, namely two men named Rademar, one of whom appears to have been a tenant of several of Walter's Somerset manors. One may possibly have been Rademar the Clerk, Walter's brother. The third tenant was Gerard, thought to have been Walter's steward and his tenant at Bratton Seymour in Somerset. The descent from Walter of Douai was as follows:
The Duchess of Cleveland in her Battle Abbey Roll stated of the Paynel family: "The various accounts of it, either by Dugdale, or the county historians of places where they held lands, are so contradictory to each other, that to endeavour to reconcile them to any degree of correctness would require more consumption of time and expense in the investigation of public records, than would compensate any author for the undertaking."—Banks. I, for one, should be far from coveting such a task, even if I possessed the ability that it would require". The descent of Paynel, feudal barons of Bampton is as follows, according to Sanders :
The first members of this family to have come to England were Wynebald de Ballon, and his brother Hamelin de Ballon, sons of Drogo de Ballon, lord of the castle of Ballon, 12 miles north of Le Mans, capital of the ancient province of Maine. From its strength the castle was known as "The Gateway to Maine". Ballon is today a French commune, in the department of Sarthe, in the modern region of Pays-de-la-Loire. Maine was invaded and conquered by William Duke of Normandy in the early 1060s, just prior to his invasion of England.
Edmund of Lancaster, the second surviving son of King Henry III.

Cogan

The FitzWarin family were powerful Marcher Lords seated at Whittington Castle in Shropshire and at Alveston in Gloucestershire. The title Baron FitzWarin was created by writ of summons for Fulk FitzWarine in 1295. The descent of the barony of Bampton in the FitzWarin family is as follows:
Sir Richard Hankford married as his first wife Elizabeth FitzWarin, 8th Baroness FitzWarin. Upon her death the barony must have been in abeyance between her daughters Thomasine Hankford, born and baptised at Tawstock, and Elizabeth Hankford until the death of the latter in 1433, when Thomasine became 9th Baroness.

Bourchier

The Bourchier family, the Devon branch of which, seated at Tawstock Court, was later created Earls of Bath, retained the manor of Bampton until at least the time of Risdon who states in his Survey of Devon that "the Earl of Bath is lord of this manor". The descent of Bampton was as follows:
The heir of the Bourchiers was the Wrey family of Trebeigh Manor, St Ive, Cornwall. On the death of Henry Bourchier, 5th Earl of Bath, the last in the male line, the title became extinct. The co-heiresses to the Bourchier lands became the three daughters of his first cousin once removed Edward Bourchier, 4th Earl of Bath. The 3rd daughter, Lady Anne Bourchier, married firstly James Cranfield, 2nd Earl of Middlesex, the issue of which marriage was soon extinct and secondly to Sir Chichester Wrey, 3rd Baronet, whose descendants inherited the principal Bourchier seat of Tawstock. The Devon biographer John Prince stated that in his day the most part of Bampton remained the posterity of the former Earls of Bath and was the "noble seat" of Lady Wrey, dowager of Sir Bourchier Wrey, 4th Baronet.

Tristram

An old mansion near Bampton Castle, called Castle Grove, was the residence of the Tristram family, who according to Lysons probably purchased it from the Bourchiers. A mural monument to John Tristram, last of the family to occupy the estate of Duvale within the parish of Bampton, exists in the parish church. In 1822, the site of the castle was the property of Robert Lucas, Esq., heir to the Tristram family.

Arnold

In 1720, the manor of Bampton was owned by William Arnold, gentleman.

Fellows

In 1720, the manor of Bampton was purchased from William Arnold by William Fellowes, Esquire, and his brother Sir John Fellowes, 1st Baronet Deputy Governor of the South Sea Company. The latter died childless.
;William Fellowes

"Deeds re £30,000 for purchase of estate for William Fellowes, his son-in-law, left by will of Joseph Martyn 1715; manors of Eggesford, Chawley, Borriston, Cheldon, Cudlip, East Warlington, Witheridge, Drayton; hundred of Witheridge; capital messuage called Eggesford, and farm and advowson, Devon, and manor of Mountsey and estates, Somerset, Lord Doneralle to William Fellowes 1718".

;Coulson Fellows
;Henry Arthur Fellows

Wallop/Fellows

In 1822, it was the property of the Honourable Newton Fellows, of Eggesford. He had been born with the name "Newton Wallop", and was the younger son of John Wallop, 2nd Earl of Portsmouth by his wife Urania Fellows, sister of Henry Arthur Fellows. Newton Wallop changed his name to Fellows after having become heir to the Fellows' estates, including Eggesford and Bampton, and eventually inherited the Earldom of Portsmouth as 4th Earl of Portsmouth, after the death of his elder brother John Wallop, 3rd Earl of Portsmouth.