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  1. Marie de St Pol, Countess of Pembroke (c. 1303 – 1377) was the second wife of Franco-English nobleman Aymer de Valence, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, and is best known as the founder of Pembroke College, Cambridge.

  2. This manuscript was owned, perhaps commissioned, by Marie de Saint Pol, countess of Pembroke (c. 1304-1377) and wife of Aymer de Valence (c. 1270-1324), earl of Pembroke. Marie has a particular connection with the history of the University of Cambridge, being foundress in 1347 of the Hall of Valence Mary - now known as Pembroke College.

  3. Marie of Brittany (1268–1339) was the daughter of John II, Duke of Brittany, and Beatrice of England. She is also known as Marie de Dreux.

  4. The foundress and the breviary. Breviary of Marie de Saint-Pol. Summer and autumn offices of Franciscan use, with rubrics in French. University Library, MS Dd.5.5, f. 388r. Paris, 1330–1340. Vellum, 197 x 135 mm (130 x 85 mm), 424 ff. Marie de Saint-Pol was born around 1303 to Gui de Châtillon, Count of Saint-Pol and Grand Boutellier of ...

  5. Marie of Luxembourg-Saint-Pol (c. 1472 — 1 April 1547) was the ruling Countess Regnant of Soissons and Saint-Pol between 25 October 1482 and 1 April 1547. She was additionally made Countess consort of Vendôme through her marriage to Francis, Count of Vendôme.

  6. Marie de St. Pol, a French noblewoman, was the daughter and heir of Count Guy de Chatillon of St. Pol and Mary of Brittany . In 1321, Marie married the powerful and wealthy English count, Aymer de Valence, earl of Pembroke, who was in his 50s at the time.

  7. 2 mar 2010 · Abstract. This article analyses all the available evidence for Marie of Saint-Pol's association with books. It attempts to shed new light on this fourteenth-century countess of Pembroke's networks of literary patronage, which included identifiable figures including three queens, an abbess, and a Franciscan confessor.