Katheryn of Berain

Katheryn of Berain (Welsh: Catrin o Ferain) (born 1540 or 1541; died 27 August 1591), sometimes called Mam Cymru ("mother of Wales"), was a Welsh noblewoman noted for her four marriages and her extensive network of descendants and relations.

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Family

Katheryn was the heiress to the Berain and Penymynydd estates in Denbighshire and Anglesey. She is sometimes referred to as Katheryn Tudor, her father being Tudor ap Robert Vychan and her mother Jane Velville. Her maternal grandfather Sir Roland de Velville (1474 - 25 June 1535) was thought to be an illegitimate son of King Henry VII of England by "a Breton lady".

Assuming Katheryn was a great-granddaughter of Henry VII, then King Henry VIII would be her half-great-granduncle. Her half first cousins twice removed would be King Edward VI, Queen Mary I, and Queen Elizabeth I and her second cousins would include (among others) Mary, Queen of Scots, Lady Jane Grey (Queen of England for nine days), James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray, Robert Stewart, 1st Earl of Orkney, Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, Charles Stuart, 1st Earl of Lennox, Lady Catherine Grey, Lady Mary Grey and Lady Margaret Clifford.

Marriages

Katheryn's first husband was John Salusbury (son of Sir John Salusbury, died 1578) of the prestigious Salusbury Family of Lleweni, Denbigh, by whom she had two sons:

Following his death, she married Sir Richard Clough, an extremely wealthy merchant, by whom she had two daughters:

The Cloughs lived for a time in Antwerp, where Katheryn's portrait was painted, probably by Adriaen van Cronenburgh, as the National Museum now suggests, or perhaps Lucas de Heere, a previous attribution.

Sir Richard died within three years of their marriage, and Katheryn then married Maurice Wynn[1] of Gwydir, who is said to have proposed to her immediately after the funeral of her first husband, only to find that Sir Richard had got in before him. Katheryn had a further two children by Maurice Wynn:

Her fourth and last husband was Edward Thelwall of Plas-y-Ward, who outlived her. Her many descendants included Hester Thrale and the 18th century explorer John Salusbury.

In view of the fact that three of Katheryn's four husbands predeceased her, a legend later grew up that she had poisoned them.

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