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  1. Apr 23, 2024 · Joan: King John's Daughter. Joan, Lady of Wales was the only known illegitimate daughter of England's tyrannical King John, best remembered for his war with the English barons and his resistance to the 1215 Magna Carta. John was married twice, and he had five legitimate children.

  2. Joan, Lady of Wales, also known by her Welsh name Siwan, was an illegitimate and favoured daughter of King John, and one of several illegitimate medieval women married off by her father for the sake of politics.

  3. Joan's reinstatement at Llywelyn 's side, not only as his wife, but as a politically active consort after only a year's imprisonment suggests that her reputation and importance as a successful diplomat far outweighed any breach of marital fidelity.

  4. May 2, 2020 · Contemporaries were deeply shocked at Joan’s betrayal of her husband; indeed, following this scandal, Welsh law identified the sexual misconduct of the wife of a ruler as ‘the greatest disgrace’.

  5. When she died at the palace of Aber on 2 February 1237 her body was conveyed across the Menai and buried in a new cemetery near the manor of Llan-faes, where Llywelyn founded a Franciscan friary in her memory. She was the mother of Dafydd ap Llywelyn.

  6. Death of Joan, Lady of Wales. In February 1237, Joan died peacefully at the royal palace of Abergwyngegyn, north of Gwynedd. A grief-stricken Llywelyn never left her side. Llywelyn established a Franciscan Friary near the shores of Llanfaes in her honor where Joan was buried.

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  8. Dec 6, 2020 · Joan was the illegitimate daughter of King John of England and married Llywelyn Fawr Prince of Gwynedd in North Wales, and (arguably) eventually Lord of most of Wales by the time he died. I have written about Joan and Llywelyn before.