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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. 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.

  3. The county of Saint-Pol (or Sint-Pols) was a county around the French city of Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise (Sint-Pols-aan-de-Ternas) on the border of Artois and Picardy, formerly the county of Ternois.

  4. Bibliographie. Marie de Châtillon-Saint-Pol (v. 1303 ou 1304 – 16 ou 17 mars 1377) est une noble française devenue comtesse de Pembroke de par son mariage avec Aymar de Valence. Elle est célèbre pour avoir fondé le Pembroke College de Cambridge . Biographie. Origines et mariage.

  5. 2 de mar. de 2010 · Cite. Permissions. Share. 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.