Il avait une relation avec Grecia Alice de Briwere.
Enfant(s):
Feuded with half brother John over Braose estates. Refused John's call to defend throne against Louis Capet.
Ancestral Roots by Weis, Seventh Edition L 177-7.
Reginald had seizen of his father's lands 26 May 1216, following the death of his brother Giles. From Doug thompson,http://freespace.virgin.net/doug.thompson/BraoseWeb/index1.htm: "Reginald supported Giles in his rebellions against King John. They were both active against the King in the barons' war. Neither was present at the signing of Magna Carta because they were still rebels who refused to compromise. K. John acquiesced to Reginald's claims to the de Braose estates in Wales in May 1216. He became Lord of Brecon, Abergavenny, Builth and other Marcher Lordships but was very much a vassal of Llewelyn Fawr, Prince of Gwynedd and now his father-in-law. Henry III restored Reginald to favor and the Bramber estates (confiscated from William by K. John) in 1217. At this seeming betrayal, Rhys and Owain, Reginald's nephews who were princes of Deheubarth, were incensed and they took Builth (except the castle). Llewelyn Fawr also became angry and beseiged Brecon. Reginald eventually surrendered to Llewelyn and gave up Seinenydd (Swansea). By 1221 they were at war again with Llewelyn laying seige to Builth. The seige was relieved by Henry III's forces. From this time on Llewelyn tended to support the claims of Reginald's nephew John concerning the de Braose lands. Reginald was a witness to the re-issue of Magna Carta by Henry III in 1225.
The Plantagenet Ancestry (GS NUMBER Q940 D2T) pp.76, 77, 118, 128; ANCESTRAL FILE, LDS GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY; SOCIETY;
Pedigrees of Anglesey and Carvonshire, p.309;
The Royal Lines of Succession, p.23;
Dictionary of National Biography Vol 34, p.7-13;
Eminent Welshmen; ANCESTRAL FILE, LDS GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY;
SOURCE: Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists Who Came to New England between 1623 and 1650, 6th Ed 1988, p. 150, line 177 #7
... the Barony of Braose was continually and uninterruptedly assumed and claimed by the Mowbray family and by their successors the Howards, both of which families styled themselves or were styled Lords Braose[1]l in Charters, Letters Patent, and Funeral Certificates, and on their monuments and Garter plates. This persistent and perpetual usage of the title must inevitably cause one to think they had good reason to believe that the abeyances had been determined in their favour. Comparing the evidence available for the purposes of establishing this fact with that similarly available in relation to the Barony of Segrave in 1877, it is not an unlikely supposition that sufficient evidence could be produced to justify the Committee for Privileges in accepting the determination in favour of the Howards as an established fact.
Source: The House of Stourton, II., p. 994.
in the reign of Elizabeth.
[1] Unluckily for this argument the Berkeley co-heirs of the Mowbrays similarly assumed this title with those of Mowbray and Segrave
(Complete Peerage, I. pp. 333-334).
Reginald de Braose | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Grecia Alice de Briwere |
Les données affichées n'ont aucune source.