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Eustace, count of Bologne - Ida, daughter of Godfrey le Barbu, of

Lorraine.

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6. Almeric. † 1173.

Mary, daughter of Sabastocrator Isaac Comnenus.

Isabella, married to, 1. Humphry of Thoron, 2. Conrad, a lord of Montferrat, 3. Henry, count of Champagne, 11th king, † 1197; and 4. Almeric of Lusignan, 12th king, † 1205. HER ISSUE. Hugh, king of Cyprus.

2. Mary-John de Brienne, 13th king, who abdicated.

Violente.. Frederick II. 14th king, † 1250.

3. Alice

4. Melesinda. Bohemond IV. of

Antioch.

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No. II.

PRINCES OF ANTIOCH, 1098-1187, AND PRINCES OF ANTIOCH AND TRIPOLI.

1187

1268 1288.

1. Bohemond, prince of Antioch, son of Robert Guiscard, duke of Apulia,

— Constantia, daughter of Philip I., king of France. † 1111.

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II. Bohemond, Alice, daughter of Baldwin II. king of Jerusalem.

Constantia, married, 1. Raymond of Poitiers.-III. Prince of Antioch. † 1149. 2. Reginald de Chatillion.-IV. Prince of Antioch. † 1163.

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Raymond, godson of Raymond of Tripoli, and himself count of Tripoli, died before his father-Alice, daughter of Rupin of Armenia. † 1200.

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VI. Bohemond IV. prince of Antioch, and count of Tripoli, by usurpation.-1. Plaisance, daughter of Lord Gibelet. 2. Melesinda, daughter of Almeric, king of Cyprus, and of Isabel, queen of Jerusalem. † 1233.

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VIII. Bohemond VI.-Sibilla, daughter of Haiton, king of Armenia. †1275. In 1268, Antioch was taken.

Bohemond VI

vil.

1287.-Tripoli was taken in 1288.

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From 1109 to the Junction of the County with the Principality of Antioch.

I. Bertrand, son of Raymond, count of Thoulouse.-Alice, daughter of Eudes I. duke of Burgundy. t 1112.

II. Pontius.-Cecilia, daughter of king Philip I. of France, and widow of Tancred. † 1137.

III. Raymond I.-Hodierna, daughter of Baldwin II. king of Jerusalem. † 1151.

IV. Raymond II.-Eschive, Lady of Tiberias. No issue. Gave Tripoli to his cousin and godson Raymond, son of Bohemond, fifth prince of Antioch. † 1187.

275

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belard, his character contrasted with his contemporary St. Bernard, 119. Icre, siege of, 153. Arrival of the English at, 158. Surrender to the French and English, 160. Emperor Frederic II. sails to, 203. Arrival of the French at, under Louis IX. 222. Last siege of, 225.

Adhemar, Bishop of Puy, first solicits a cross from the Pope, 29. His heroism at the battle

of Antioch, 75. His death, 78. Albara, the city of, carried by assault, 78. Aleppo, Joscelyn de Courtenay sent a captive to, 128.

Alexius, Emperor of Constantinople, his treachery, 52. Interview of the crusading chiefs with, 53. Abandons his allies, 72. Alexius, second Emperor of Constantinople, murdered by his uncle, 177. Alexius, son of the emperor Isaac, arrives at Zara, 178. Accompanies the French and Venetians to Constantinople, 178. Exhibited by them to the people, 179. the empire with his father, 180. united from his father, 181.

Shares

Is dis

Is immured in a dungeon, 182. Is murdered, 183. Alison, Mr., quotation from. Note I. Alexander, Pope III. endeavours to restore peace to the religious orders, 145. Almeric, death and character of, 136. Amalfi, its state from the ninth to the eleventh century, 6. Rebellion at, quelled by Bohemond, 45.

Antioch, arrival of the Latins at, 61. Investment of, 61. Taken by stratagem, 68. Battle of, 75. Pestilence at, 78. Affairs of, 98. Arrival of the French at, 125. History of, after the second crusade, 142. History of, 219. Taken by the Egyptians, 219 Apamea, fortress of, yields to Noureddin, 142. Armour, mail, 49, and note E.

Artois, count of, his impetuosity at Massoura,

213.

Arnold, chaplain of Raymond, his character, 81.
Exhorts the Croises to virtue, 85. Wishes to
obtain the bishopric of Bethlehem, 89.
Ashmoun canal, the French unable to cross, 213.
Ascalon, battle of, 129.

Asia Minor, history of, 20.

Azotus, march of the Croises to, 160.

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Bernard, St. preacher of the second crusade, his character, 119.

Berrington, Mr., quotation from, 250, note. Blondel de Nesle, Richard the First's minstrel, discovers his lord, note X.

Bibars, attempts the conquest of Cyprus, but his fleet is dispersed, 220. Bossuet, his character of the Count of Champagne's peotry, note B b.

Bohemond, Prince of Tarentum, his character, 44. Means by which the Emperor Alexius gains his homage, 46. Returns to Italy, 99. Burke, quotation from, 143, note, 256. Cannibalism of the Croises, 79. Canterbury, Baldwin, archbishop of, accompanies a crusade, 154. Dies of grief at the profligacy of the Croises, 154.

Cairo, Hugh of Cesarea and Geoffrey Fulk sent to, by Almeric, 131.

Celestine Ill. Pope, promotes a crusade, 170. Chaucer, quotation from, 230, note. Chatillion, Reginald de, marries Constantia, widow of Raymond, 142. Is taken prisoner and sent to Aleppo, 142.

Cicero, quotation from, 103, note. Clairvaux, monastery of, founded by St. Bernard, 119.

Clermont, council of, 25.

Church establishment of Jerusalem, 104. Conrad III. Emperor of Gerinany, prevailed on by the preaching of St. Bernard to undertake a crusade, 121. Passes into Asia, 123. Returns to Europe, 126.

Constance, peace of, establishes the indepen

pendence of the northern States of Italy, 255. Constantinople, march of the Italians to, 45. Politics of, 177. The Croises sails to, 178. Their astonishment at its grandeur, 178. Attack and siege of the city, 179. Taken, 184. Sack of, 184.

Coronation, forms of the kings of Jerusalem, 103. Clement V., Pope, commands an inquiry into the conduct of the Templars, 233. Holds a

council at Vienna, 238.

Courcon, De, preacher of the sixth crusade, his
character, 193.

Courtenay, Joscelyn de, Prince of Edessa, 100.
Courtenays, the family of, 101, note.

De- Cross, the, a sign of those who engaged in the
holy war, 29. Manner of wearing, and mate-
rials, 29, note.

feat of Saladin at, 161. Bacon, Lord, his opinion of the crusades, 243. Baghasian, governor of Antioch, his death, 70. Balduc, lord of the fortress of Samosat, 59. Baldwin, brother of Godfrey of Bouillon, 38. His expedition into Egypt, 56.

War be

tween him and Tancred, 57. Becomes lord of Edessa, 59. Succeeds Godfrey as king of Jerusalem, 91. Dies in Egypt, 91. Bearn, Gaston of, 84.

Baldwin II. his death and character, 92.

Baldwin III. his death, 129.

Crusade of children, note G g.

Augmented the Did not reduce

Crusades, the consequences of, 242. Their
policy and justice, 243. Encouraged san-
guinary fanaticism, 245.
wealth of the clergy, 246.
the power of the aristocracy, 248. Did not
greatly promote the revival of learning, 250.
Were not favourable to civil liberty, 255.
Crimes of the Crusaders, passim.
Cyprus, subjugation of, by.Richard I., 157.

Baldwin IV. or the Leper, his disposition of his D'Aimbert, patriarch of Jerusalem, 99.

kingdom, 145. His death, 145.

Bayle, quotation from, 144; 234.

Barthelemi, Peter, contrives the fraud of the
Sacred Lance, 73.
Perishes in undergoing
the trial of ordeal by fire, 81.

Dalmatia, Richard I. lands in, 166.

Damascus, siege of, by the Croises, 126. Their disgraceful failure, 126.

Damietta, sicge of, 197. Surrenders to the Muselmans, 200.

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