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  1. Maud de Braose, Baroness Mortimer of Wigmore (1224 – shortly before 23 March 1301) [citation needed] was a noble heiress, and one of the most important, being a member of the powerful de Braose family which held many lordships and domains in the Welsh Marches.

  2. Maud de Braose, Baroness Wigmore (1224- 1300/23 March 1301) [1] was a noble heiress and a member of the powerful de Braose family which held many lordships and domains in the Welsh Marches. She was the wife of Roger Mortimer, 1st Baron Wigmore, a celebrated soldier and Marcher baron.

    • England
    • Bramber Castle, Sussex, England
    • 1226
  3. Maud de Braose, Baroness Mortimer of Wigmore was a noble heiress, and one of the most important, being a member of the powerful de Braose family which held many lordships and domains in the Welsh Marches.

  4. Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maud_de_Braose,_Baroness_Wigmore&oldid=1026974498"

  5. Mortimer, Maud (c. 1229–1301) Baroness Wigmore. Name variations: Maud de Braose. Born around 1229; died in 1301; daughter of William de Braose, lord of Abergavenny, and Eve de Braose ; granddaughter of Reginald, baron de Braose; married Roger Mortimer (d. 1282), lord of Wigmore; children: Ralph Mortimer; Edmund Mortimer (d. 1303), 1st lord ...

  6. When Maud de Braose was born in 1226, in Breconshire, Wales, United Kingdom, her father, William de Braose, was 30 and her mother, Eva Marshall, Baroness Abergavenny, was 23. She married Roger Mortimer 1st Baron Mortimer in 1247, in King's Stanley, Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom.

  7. His wife was Maud de Braose, daughter of William de Braose, Lord of Abergavenny by Eva Marshal. Roger Mortimer had married Maud in 1247. She was, like him, a scion of a Welsh Marches family. Their seven known children were: Ralph Mortimer, died 10 August 1274, Sheriff of Shropshire and Staffordshire.

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