By THOMAS JAMES WARREN BULKELEY, Viscount BULKELEY, Oct 1808"Joan and her affair with William de Braose is the subject of Saunders Lewis's Welsh verse play Siwan.Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum in Turri Londinensi I, p. 12.Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 By Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines: 27-27, 29A-28, 29A-29, 176B-27, 254-28, 254-29Categories: 1191 births | 1237 deaths | House of Plantagenet | Illegitimate children of British monarchs | Women of medieval Wales | Welsh royaltyConflicting information exists on the net about whether or not she ever had children. She should not be confused with her half-sister Joan, Queen Consort of Scotland.Little is known about her early life. A recent suggestion that the execution might have taken place at Crogen near Bala rests on the suggestion that 'Crogen' and 'Crokein' are one and the same: there is however no further eveidence in the area to lend this substance.Joan was placed under house arrest for twelve months after the incident. Margaret, who married Sir John de Braose, the grandson of William de Braose, 7th Baron Abergavenny and had issue. Rather than be buried with her husband Ralph (who was buried with his first wife) she was entombed next to her mother in the magnificent sanctuary of Lincoln Cathedral. Mar 4 1237 - Aberconwy, Arllechwedd Uchaf, Caernarfon, Gwynedd, Wales July 22 1210 - Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England July 22 1210 - Coucy-la-Ville, Aisne, Picardie, France July 22 1210 - Coucy, Ardennes, Champagne-Ardenne, France Mar 4 1238 - London, Greater London, Middlesex, England Mar 4 1238 - Havering-atte-Bower, Essex / London, Middlesex, England, Great Britain [197]Children: See (TO-5) Llewelyn ap IORWERTH, Prince of North Wales25. Joan was already an adult when she was legitimized by the marriage of her mother and father with papal approval. Alexander was twenty-three. Joan's is the smaller of the two tombs; both were decorated with brass plates — full-length representations of them on the tops, and small shields bearing coats of arms around the sides — but those were damaged or destroyed in 1644 during the English Civil War. She died at the royal home, Garth Celyn, Aber Garth Celyn, on the north coast of Gwynedd in 1237. [214, 6, 71, 137, 148, 196, 58, 109, 90, 1]+ 35 i. EDWARD I "LONGSHANKS"9, KING OF ENGLAND, b. on 17 June 1239 in Westminster, London, England, d. on 7 July 1307 in Burgh-On-The-Sands, Cumbria, England; m. (1) (UC-31) ELEANOR OF CASTILE on 18 Oct. 1254 in Burgos; m. (2) (T-62) PRINCESS MARGUERITE OF FRANCE on 8 Sept. 1299 in Canterbury Cathedral, Kent.+ 36 ii. Susanna, who was sent to England as a hostage in 1228. Although this may have been done to ensure that his widow was well provided for; by doing this, Ralph essentially split his family into two, and the result was years of bitter conflict between Joan and her step-children, who fiercely contested her acquisition of their father's lands. Inevitably, when Joan died, the lands would be inherited by her own children.Joan died on 13 November 1440 at Howden in Yorkshire. According to a wikipedia entry for Joan of England, Queen consort of Scotland:Joan of England, Queen Consort of Scotland (22 July 1210 – 4 March 1238) was the eldest legitimate daughter and third child of John of England and Isabella of Angouleme.Joan was brought up in the court of Hugh X of Lusignan who was promised to her in marriage from an early age, as compensation for him being jilted by her mother Isabella of Angouleme, however on the death of John of England, Isabella decided she should marry him herself and Joan was sent back to England, where negotiations for her hand with Alexander II of Scotland were taking place.She and Alexander married on 21 June 1221, at York Minster[1].