Individual Details

Eva de Braose

(1227 - Jul 1255)

According to Wikpedia:

Eva de Braose ( fl. 1238-July 1255) was one of the four co-heiresses of William de Braose. She was the wife of William de Cantilupe who, as a result of his marriage, acquired significant land holdings in both England and Wales.

Family
Eva de Braose was one of the four daughters of William de Braose and Eva Marshal. Her sisters were Isabella, Maud, and Eleanor.[2] William was the last of the Braose Marcher lords who possessed extensive lands in Wales, Herefordshire, Sussex and Devon. Eva Marshall was a daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke. William de Braose was hanged by Llywelyn the Great, Prince of Gwynedd in 1230 and the four young sisters became co-heiresses of valuable property.[3] All the sons of their maternal grandfather William Marshal died without heirs[4] and in 1247 the Braose sisters each inherited a share of their mother's portion of the Marshal estates.

Marriage and inheritance
As de Braose was a minor when her father died, her wardship was granted to William II de Cantilupe, the king's steward in 1238. By 1241 de Braose was married to William II de Cantilupe's son, William III de Cantilupe. As a result of this marriage, William III became lord of Abergavenny, a significant Marcher lordship.[5]

The couple later gained more lands in south west England and Wales through her mother's Marshal inheritance.[6] The Braose barony of Totnes in Devon and the Cantilupe baronies of Eaton Bray in Bedfordshire and Bulwick in Northamptonshire also came under their control.[7]

Eva de Braose and William III de Cantilupe had three children:

George de Cantilupe (1251- 1273)[8]
Joan de Cantilupe (d 1271) married Henry de Hastings (1235-1269).[9]
Millicent de Cantilupe (died 1299) married (1) John de Montalt; (2) Eudo de la Zouche (died 1279)[10]
William de Cantilupe died in September 1254 and de Braose in July the following year.[11]

After his parents' deaths, George gained possession of all their estates. He died childless in 1273 and the lands were divided between his two sisters. The barony of Abergavenny descended through Joan to the Hastings family while Totnes and the Cantilupe estates became possessions of Millicent's de la Zouche heirs.[12]

Notes
See clearer image[1]
Cawley 2012 citing various sources
Cawley 2012 citing various sources
Walker 2004
Stacey 2004
Stacey 2004
Vincent 2004
Vincent 2004
Kingsford 2004
Stacey 2004
Stacey 2004
Vincent 2004
References
Cawley, Charles (23 September 2012), Untitled English Nobility A - C: William de Briouse (-hanged 2 May 1230), Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
Kingsford, C.L. (2004), ‘Hastings, Sir Henry (1235?-1269)’, rev. H. W. Ridgeway, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 26 November 2012(subscription or UK public library membership required)
Stacey, Robert C. (2004), ‘Cantilupe, William (III) de (d. 1254)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 28 November 2012(subscription or UK public library membership required)
Vincent, Nicholas (2004), ‘Cantilupe, Sir George de (1251-1273)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 28 November 2012(subscription or UK public library membership required)
Walker, R.F. (2004), ‘Marshal, William (II), fifth earl of Pembroke (c.1190-1231)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 28 November 2012(subscription or UK public library membership required)


-- MERGED NOTE ------------

According to Wikpedia:

Eva de Braose ( fl. 1238-July 1255) was one of the four co-heiresses of William de Braose. She was the wife of William de Cantilupe who, as a result of his marriage, acquired significant land holdings in both England and Wales.

Family
Eva de Braose was one of the four daughters of William de Braose and Eva Marshal. Her sisters were Isabella, Maud, and Eleanor.[2] William was the last of the Braose Marcher lords who possessed extensive lands in Wales, Herefordshire, Sussex and Devon. Eva Marshall was a daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke. William de Braose was hanged by Llywelyn the Great, Prince of Gwynedd in 1230 and the four young sisters became co-heiresses of valuable property.[3] All the sons of their maternal grandfather William Marshal died without heirs[4] and in 1247 the Braose sisters each inherited a share of their mother's portion of the Marshal estates.

Marriage and inheritance
As de Braose was a minor when her father died, her wardship was granted to William II de Cantilupe, the king's steward in 1238. By 1241 de Braose was married to William II de Cantilupe's son, William III de Cantilupe. As a result of this marriage, William III became lord of Abergavenny, a significant Marcher lordship.[5]

The couple later gained more lands in south west England and Wales through her mother's Marshal inheritance.[6] The Braose barony of Totnes in Devon and the Cantilupe baronies of Eaton Bray in Bedfordshire and Bulwick in Northamptonshire also came under their control.[7]

Eva de Braose and William III de Cantilupe had three children:

George de Cantilupe (1251- 1273)[8]
Joan de Cantilupe (d 1271) married Henry de Hastings (1235-1269).[9]
Millicent de Cantilupe (died 1299) married (1) John de Montalt; (2) Eudo de la Zouche (died 1279)[10]
William de Cantilupe died in September 1254 and de Braose in July the following year.[11]

After his parents' deaths, George gained possession of all their estates. He died childless in 1273 and the lands were divided between his two sisters. The barony of Abergavenny descended through Joan to the Hastings family while Totnes and the Cantilupe estates became possessions of Millicent's de la Zouche heirs.[12]

Notes
See clearer image[1]
Cawley 2012 citing various sources
Cawley 2012 citing various sources
Walker 2004
Stacey 2004
Stacey 2004
Vincent 2004
Vincent 2004
Kingsford 2004
Stacey 2004
Stacey 2004
Vincent 2004
References
Cawley, Charles (23 September 2012), Untitled English Nobility A - C: William de Briouse (-hanged 2 May 1230), Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
Kingsford, C.L. (2004), ‘Hastings, Sir Henry (1235?-1269)’, rev. H. W. Ridgeway, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 26 November 2012(subscription or UK public library membership required)
Stacey, Robert C. (2004), ‘Cantilupe, William (III) de (d. 1254)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 28 November 2012(subscription or UK public library membership required)
Vincent, Nicholas (2004), ‘Cantilupe, Sir George de (1251-1273)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 28 November 2012(subscription or UK public library membership required)
Walker, R.F. (2004), ‘Marshal, William (II), fifth earl of Pembroke (c.1190-1231)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 28 November 2012(subscription or UK public library membership required)

Events

Birth1227
Marriage1241William III de Cantilupe
DeathJul 1255

Families

SpouseWilliam III de Cantilupe ( - 1254)
ChildGeorge de Cantilupe, Lord of Abergavenny (1252 - 1273)
ChildMillicent de Cantilupe ( - 1299)
ChildLiving
FatherWilliam de Braose, Lord of Abergavenny (1197 - 1230)
MotherEva Marshal (1203 - 1246)
SiblingIsabella de Braose (1222 - )
SiblingMaud de Braose (1226 - 1301)
SiblingEleanor de Braose (1230 - 1250)