The place-name derives from the Anglo-Saxon word 'deór-tún', being a combination of the word for a wild animal, a deer (deór,) and the word for a fenced enclosure (tún). The most likely interpretation is 'deer park'. Alwig (a
Saxon; also written Alwi) held DURSTON manor from
King Edward the Confessor before the
Norman Conquest. Durston appeared in the
Domesday Book in 1086 as follows:
Richard holds of Roger Arundel, DURSTON. Alwig held it TRE and it paid geld for 2 hides and 3 virgates of land. There is land for 4 ploughs. In demesne is 1 plough and 4 slaves; and 4 villans and 5 bordars and 4 cottars with 3 ploughs. There are 15 acres of meadow, and 20 acres of pasture and 20 acres of woodland. It was and is worth 40s. John of Erleigh, a
Norman knight, later (after 1133) received the Hundred of North Petherton (including Durston) from
William the Conqueror's son
Henry I. John died in 1165. John was succeeded by his son William de Erlegh who founded
Buckland Priory at Durston a priory of regular canons of
St. Augustine, about 1167. Soon after their institution, these canons
behaved in a very riotous and disorderly manner, especially in killing their steward. The site was and is still known as Buckland. Several historical documents give tantalizing glimpses of the lives of these Sisters, who originally cared for sick pilgrims and crusaders in
Jerusalem. For whatever reason, the royal grant stipulated that this be the only Hospitallers' house in England that could receive Sisters of that order. The Buckland inn was in use in the 17th and 18th centuries. In 1752 the Taunton-Glastonbury road became a turnpike. The Durston inn was opened by 1841. ==Governance==