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  1. Catrin ferch Owain Glyndŵr (died 1413) was one of the daughters (probably the eldest) of Margaret Hanmer and Owain Glyndŵr, and her marriage to a claimant on the English throne was used by her father to gain support.

  2. Owain ap Gruffydd (c. 1354 – c. 1415), commonly known as Owain Glyndŵr or Glyn Dŵr (pronounced [ˈoʊain ɡlɨ̞nˈduːr], anglicised as Owen Glendower), was a Welsh leader, soldier and military commander in the late Middle Ages, who led a 15-year-long revolt with the aim of ending English rule in Wales.

  3. Catrin was one of the children of Owain Glyndŵr; she and her daughters were held captive in the Tower of London. They were buried in St Swithun's Church that stood where the garden is now.

  4. Owain's alliance with Mortimer, cemented by marriage with his daughter Catherine - and with the younger Percy (Hotspur), son of the powerful earl of Northumberland, increased his prominence; though Percy was defeated and slain at Shrewsbury (1403), the arrangement was continued by the elder Percy, being amplified in the Tripartite Indenture ...

  5. Owain Glyndŵr / ˈoʊain ɡlɨ̞nˈduːr /, anglificado por William Shakespeare como Owen Glendower (1349 o 1359-1416) y coronado como Owain IV de Gales fue el último galés nativo que ostentó el título de Príncipe de Gales. Instigó una revuelta galesa de larga duración contra la dominación inglesa de Gales, pero en última instancia fallida.

  6. 27 de sept. de 2005 · Catrin ferch Owain Glyndwr. The daughter of Welsh rebel Owain Glendower, she and her children were imprisoned in the Tower of London on account of her father's activities. The site of her grave, quietly placed in Salter's Hall Court, contains a memorial statue dating from 2001 to the memory of all women prisoners.

  7. Catrin ferch Owain Glyndwr was the eldest daughter of Owain Glyndwr. In 1402, she married Edmund Mortimer, an unransomed English prisoner of Glyndwr who later allied with her father during his uprising against King Henry IV of England.