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  1. Maud of Wales. Maud of Wales (Maud Charlotte Mary Victoria; 26 November 1869 – 20 November 1938) was Queen of Norway as the wife of King Haakon VII. The youngest daughter of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra of the United Kingdom, she was known as Princess Maud of Wales before her marriage, as her father was the Prince of Wales at the time.

  2. James George Alexander Banerman Carnegie, 3rd Duke of Fife, 12th Earl of Southesk (23 September 1929-). The Countess of Southesk died in a London nursing home in December 1945, after a bout of acute bronchitis. The Countess of Southesk was considered a member of the British Royal Family, although she did not undertake official and public duties.

  3. Maud was the daughter of Waltheof, the Anglo-Saxon Earl of Huntingdon and Northampton, and his French wife Judith of Lens. Her father was the last of the major Anglo-Saxon earls to remain powerful after the Norman conquest of England in 1066, and the son of Siward, Earl of Northumbria. Her mother was the niece of William the Conqueror, which ...

  4. Maud is only seventeen by Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale. Maud, and Other Poems (1855) was Alfred Tennyson 's first published collection after becoming poet laureate in 1850. Among the "other poems" was "The Charge of the Light Brigade", which had already been published in the Examiner a few months earlier.

  5. Maud of Lancaster (4 April 1340 – 10 April 1362), also known as Matilda, Countess of Hainault, was a 14th-century English noblewoman who married into the Bavarian ducal family. The eldest daughter of Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster and Earl of Leicester , and his wife Isabel de Beaumont , she was born at Bolingbroke Castle in Lindsey .