[3] Baring-Gould suggests that the princess Azenor fled Armorica with her young son due to dynastic conflict.
Doble is of the opinion that Budoc was a once-famous abbot whose chief establishment was on the Breton coast.
[3] The vita by the monk Winwaloe describes Budoc as a teacher living on the island of Laurea.
Azenor's husband then sailed in search of her, and, arriving in Ireland, the couple was reconciled, but both died before they could return to Brittany.
[3] Two stained-glass windows in the chancel of Saint-Budoc Church in Porspoder depict scenes from the life of the saint.
Budoc is reputed to have sailed across the Plymouth Sound, until he found an inlet on the Devon side of the River Tamar.
He landed in Budshead Creek, part of the present district of Plymouth called St Budeaux.