He is last mentioned as archdeacon in 1144 or 1145, but was probably suspended from office on 22 December 1150 and was removed from his archdeaconry by 1152.
[4] Brito was given a manor at Pampisford, Cambridgeshire by his uncle, a gift that was confirmed by King Henry I of England in 1127.
[5] Pampisford was part of the bishopric's estates, and Brito held the manor in return for the service of one knight.
[1] But in 1135, the new bishop, Nigel recovered a number of the bishopric's properties that had been alienated,[6] including Pampisford.
[1] The historian, Edward Miller, of the see of Ely called Brito "warlike".