Hyde The
rectory and
advowson of Dinton were sold in 1585 by
Henry Herbert, 2nd Earl of Pembroke (1534–1601) to
Lawrence Hyde I (died 1590) of West Hatch, MP for Heytesbury in 1584. His eldest son Robert Hyde I sold them in 1594 to his brother Sir
Lawrence Hyde II (1562–1641), attorney-general to
Anne of Denmark, wife of King James I. They were inherited by the latter's son
Sir Robert Hyde II (died 1665), Chief Justice of Common Pleas, who died without surviving issue, and then passed to his nephew, Robert Hyde III (died 1722), son of
Alexander Hyde, Bishop of Salisbury. Robert III died without progeny and bequeathed the rectory and advowson to his cousin Rev. Robert Hyde IV (died 1723), a Fellow of
Magdalen College, Oxford, who in turn passed them to his college, which retained them until 1950, when they passed to the Bishop of Salisbury. The estate of
Little Clarendon is within the parish of Dinton, and was apparently the origin of the appellation he chose for his earldom. Henry Hyde appears to have leased the rectory and advowson of Dinton from his brother, and it was probably in the rectory house that the future Earl of Clarendon was born. Henry Hyde moved away to Purton between 1623 and 1625. • William I Wyndham (1659–1734) bought the manor in 1689. He thus inherited the ancient family manor of Orchard Wyndham. He married in 1867 Frances Ann Stafford (died 1934), second daughter of Rev. Charles James Stafford, vicar of Dinton. • William VII Wyndham (born 1868), eldest son, JP, of Orchard Wyndham, sold Dinton in 1916 to Bertram Philipps. ==References==