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  1. Margaret de Braose. Apariencia. ocultar. Margaret de Braose, señora de Trim (m. después de 1255), fue una noble anglogalesa, la hija de William de Braose, IV señor de Bramber, y de la legendaria Maud de St. Valéry, a la que dejaron morir de hambre por orden del rey Juan de Inglaterra.

  2. Margaret de Braose, Lady of Trim (died after 1255), was an Anglo-Welsh noblewoman, the daughter of Marcher Lord William de Braose, 4th Lord of Bramber and the legendary Maud de St. Valéry, who was left to starve to death by orders of King John of England.

  3. 21 de nov. de 2023 · Daughter of William III de Braose, 4th Lord of Bramber and Maud (Matilda) de Saint-Valéry. Wife of Walter de Lacy, Lord of Meath. Mother of Katherine de Lacy; Petronilla de Lacy; Egidia de Lacy, Lady of Connacht and Gilbert de Lacy, of Trim and Ludlow.

  4. Margaret de Braose, señora de Trim (m. después de 1255), fue una noble anglogalesa, la hija de William de Braose, IV señor de Bramber, y de la legendaria Maud de St. Valéry, a la que dejaron morir de hambre por orden del rey Juan de Inglaterra.

  5. When Margaret De Braose Lady of Trim was born in 1177, in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales, her father, William de Braose 4th Lord of Bramber, was 24 and her mother, Mathilde de Saint-Valery, was 28. She married Walter de Lacy Lord of Meath in November 1195, in Herefordshire, England.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Baron_CamoysBaron Camoys - Wikipedia

    By his first wife, Margaret de Brewes, daughter of William de Braose, 1st Baron Braose, Ralph de Camoys (d.1336) had a son, Thomas de Camoys, 2nd Baron Camoys, (d.1372). Thomas married a wife named Margaret, and by her had a son, Ralph Camoys.

  7. The House of Braose ( alias Breuse, Brewes, Brehuse, [2] Briouze, Brewose etc., Latinised to de Braiosa) was a prominent family of Anglo-Norman nobles originating in Briouze, near Argentan, Orne, Normandy. Members of this family played a significant part in the Norman conquest of England and subsequent power struggles in England, Wales and Ireland in the 11th to 14th centuries.