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In page Joan de Geneville, 2nd Baroness Geneville:

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Following her husband's execution, Joan – as the wife of a traitor – was imprisoned again, this time in Hampshire where years before she had been placed under house arrest; her children were also taken into custody. In 1331, she was given an allowance for household expenses; however, her lands were only restored to her in 1336 after King Edward III granted her a full pardon for her late husband's crimes.[4] In 1347 she received back the Liberty of Trim.[5] The majority of the remaining family lands and honours were restored to her grandson Roger Mortimer, 2nd Earl of March.[citation needed]