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Eustace Grenier

Eustace I Granier, also known as Eustace Grenier or Eustace Garnier, called in Latin Eustachius Granarius in the charters[1] (born around 1070 and died on 15 June 1123), was a Flemish crusader who took part in the First Crusade. He became lord of Caesarea in 1101 and lord of Sidon in 1110. On 18 April 1123, he was elected constable and bailiff of Jerusalem during the captivity of Baldwin II of Jerusalem.[2] Shortly before his death, he defeated a Fatimid army at the Battle of Yibneh near Ibelin.
Eustace Grenier is quoted in a text in verse written during his life in honour of the knights of the diocese of Thérouanne who accompanied Baldwin of Boulogne to the Holy Land.
Contemporary authors and historians identify Eustace Grenier as a nobleman from the diocese of Thérouanne in the County of Saint-Pol. Alan V. Murray, historian of the Crusades, writes: "However, his origins can be established with a high degree of certainty. The Versus de viris illustribus diocesis Tarvanensis qui in sacra fuere expeditione identifies him as a Fleming from the diocese of Therouanne".[3]

Eustace I Garnier
Lord of Sidon
Reignb. 1110–1123
SuccessorEustace II
Lord of Caesarea
Reign1110–1123
SuccessorWalter
Died15 June 1123
Burial
SpouseEmma of Chocques
IssueWalter
Gerard (also known as Eustace II)
Names
Eustachius Latin Granarius (Garnier)
HouseGranier or Grenier
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Origins edit

Eustace Granier's place of origin is given by a poem in Latin, the Versus de viris illustribus diocesis Tarvanensis qui in sacra fuere expeditione ("vers about illustrious men of the diocese of Thérouanne who took part in the Holy Expedition"),[4] written by an unknown author who was one of his contemporaries : The author writes nostris diebus ("it happened nowadays").[5] In this poem Eustace Grenier is cited among the knights of the Diocese of Thérouanne who accompanied Baldwin of Boulogne, the future king of Jerusalem, to the Holy Land.[6] The author writes :
"Par Belramensis, fit princeps Caesariensis
Eustachius notus miles, cognomine Gernirs"[6][3]
(Trad) :
"Peer of Belrem became prince of Caesarea
Eustace famous knight, named Garnier"

His name is given in Latin under different forms (Garnerius, Granerius, Granarius). He signed as Eustachius Garnerius, in 1110, in a deed of privilege given by Baldwin I of Jerusalem in favour of the church of Bethlehem; his name is Eustachius Granerius in a deed dated of May 5, 1116 in the Cartulary of the Holy Sepulchre, and in 1120 his signature is Eustachius Granarius, in a document signed by Baldwin II of Jerusalem.[7][8]

William of Tyre, who was contemporary of Eustace Grenier, indicates him as one of the barons of Baldwin of Boulogne.[9]

In the 16th century, Nicolas Despars (Chronicles of Flanders) and Jacques Meyer (Annals of Flanders) mention Eustace Garnier or Grenier in their lists of the Flemish knights who took an active part in the First Crusade.[10]
Jacques Meyer in his Annals of Flanders (1561) mentions that Eustace Grenier was from the diocese of Thérouanne.[11]

In the 16th century, Charles du Fresne, sieur du Cange writes : « I find several families with this name of Granier or Grenier in France (…) It is difficult to guess whether Eustache was originally from Aquitaine or Picardy, or even from Flanders, as Meyer wants and who gives him the nickname of Beccam, without I know why. He calls him Beccamensis, that is to say native of Beccam, place which was to be in Flanders or in the neighbouring areas, since the author notes that Godefroi of Bouillon, in the distribution of the conquered places made to the crusader barons, did not forget his compatriots. But we can’t find a town or a village called Beccam. Latin verses in honour of the characters from the diocese of Thérouanne who distinguished themselves in the First Crusade, tell us that Eustache, nicknamed Gernirs, became prince or lord of Caesarea ».[12]

In 1865, Paul Edouard Didier Riant, writes that Eustache Grenier is "one of the Flemish vassals" of the king Baldwin I of Jerusalem.[13]

In 1892, the abbey and historian Daniel Haigneré in Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de la Morinie writes an article about the verse written from the time of Eustace Grenier quoting "Eustace, famous knight, named Garnier, prince of Caesarea" among the knights of the diocese of Thérouanne who accompanied Baldwin of Boulogne to the Holy Land.[6]

Charles Meller in The Flemish of the Ternois (1904) writes : "Among the Crusaders of the Ternois, Eustace made a great fortune, he held two of the large fiefs of the kingdom, the Lordship of Cæsarea, of which he was the first holder after its conquest in 1101 and the principality of Sidon (…) If we accept the variant Eustachii of the manuscript A verse 17, we might believe he was a illegitimate son of Count Eustache (Eustachii nothus). In this case, this kinship would explain the great favor of the king, his half brother, towards him, but it is a hazardous assumption".[14]

Contemporary sources about Eustace Grenier' origins

Joseph Ringel in Césarée de Palestine: étude historique et archéologique (1975) writes : "around 1108, the Flemish knight Eustache Granier received Caesarea in fief".[15]

Jean Richard in The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (1979) writes that Eustace Garnier was from the ) and one of the most loyal companions of Baldwin I of Jerusalem.[16]

Steven Tibble in Monarchy and Lordships in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1099-1291 (1989) writes that Eustace Grenier is "a Flemish knight who had arrived in the Near East some time between 1099 and August 1105".[17]

Historian Alan V. Murray in his book The Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem: A Dynastic History 1099-1125 (2000) writes :
"However, his origins can be established with a high degree of certainty. The Versus de viris illustribus diocesis Tarvanensis qui in sacra fuere expeditione identifies him as a Fleming from the Diocese of Thérouanne."[3] According to his analysis of the text and his research, Eustace Granier was a military official in the castle of Beaurainville in the County of Saint-Pol.[18] He was a rear-vassal of Eustace III of Boulogne,[19] because the counts of Saint-Pol held Beaurainville in fief from the counts of Boulogne.[18] Eustace's surname implies that either Eustace or one of his ancestors was responsible for the management of a store-house. Alan V. Murray says, Eustace most probably came to the Holy Land in the retinue of his lord, Hugh II of Saint-Pol, during the First Crusade.[18] Jonathan Riley-Smith writes that Eustace arrived to the Kingdom of Jerusalem after 1099.[20]

Susan B. Edgington in Albert of Aachen (2007) agrees with this analysis. She writes that Eustace Grenier probably came from Beaurain-Château in the County of Saint-Pol.[21]

In the Kingdom of Jerusalem edit

One of the most important lords of the Kingdom of Jerusalem edit

Eustace became one of the most trusted officials of the younger brother of Eustace III of Boulogne, Baldwin I of Jerusalem.[19] His participation in the Third Battle of Ramla in August 1105 was the first recorded event of his life in the Kingdom of Jerusalem.[22] Baldwin appointed him and Pagan of Haifa to start negotiations with Bertrand of Toulouse, William Jordan of Cerdanya and Tancred, the regent of Antioch, about the organization of a conference where they could resolve their conflicts.[19] The crusader leaders assembled near Tripoli and reached a compromise in June 1109.[23] Their reconciliation enabled their united armies to force the defenders of Tripoli to surrender on 26 June.[24]

Baldwin I granted Caesarea to Eustace before September 1110.[22][20] Eustace also received Sidon, which was captured by the united forces of Baldwin I and Sigurd I of Norway on 5 December.[22][25] He participated in Baldwin I's military campaigns against Shaizar in 1111.[22] In the same year, he financed the building of siege machines during the unsuccessful siege of Tyre.[22]

The lordships of Caesarea and Sidon and his wife's dowry made Eustace the most powerful noblemen in the entire kingdom.[18] He also had preeminent position in the royal council.[18] He was one of the four secular lords to attend the legislative assembly that Baldwin I's successor, Baldwin II of Jerusalem, and Warmund, Patriarch of Jerusalem held at Nablus on 16 January 1120.[26] The assembly passed decrees that regulated the collection and spending of tithes and ordered the persecution of adultery, procuring, homosexuality, bigamy and sexual relations between Christians and Muslims.[27]

Constable and Bailiff of Jerusalem edit

After The Artuqid prince Belek Ghazi captured Baldwin II on 18 April 1123.[28] Patriarch Warmund convoked an assembly to Acre where Eustace was elected Constable of Jerusalem and Bailiff of Jerusalem to administer the kingdom during the king's captivity.[2] Baldwin took possession of the fortress of Kharpurt where he had been held in captivity.[29] Eustace soon sent reinforcements to Kharpurt to assist the king, but Balak ibn Bahram recaptured the fortress by the time the crusader troops reached it.[29]

A Fatimid army invaded the kingdom from Ascalon in May 1123.[30][31] Eustace attacked the invaders near Ibelin and defeated them on 29 May.[30][31] He did not long survive his victory, because he died on 15 June 1123.[32] He was buried in the Church of Saint Mary of the Latins.[18] According to William of Tyre he was "a wise and prudent man, with great experience in military matters".[33]

Family edit

Eustace married Emma of Chocques, the niece of Arnulf of Chocques, the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem.[18] Arnulf gave Jericho to Eustace as Emma's dowry, although the town had been the property of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.[18][34]

With Emma, Eustace was the father of the twins, Gerard (also known as Eustace II) and Walter, who succeeded him in Sidon and Caesarea respectively.[18][20][35] Emma married Hugh II of Le Puiset, Count of Jaffa.[35] The relationship between her second husband and her sons was tense.[36]

His descendant Julian Grenier sold the Lordship of Sidon to the Knights Templar after it was destroyed by the Mongols in 1260 after the Battle of Ain Jalut.[citation needed]

His descendants continued to rule the Lordship of Caesarea until it became the property of John Aleman by right of his marriage to Margaret Grenier in 1238 or 1243.[37]

The Granier or Grenier family became extinct with two brothers : Balian II (who died at Botron in 1277) and John (who died in Armenia in 1289), they were the sons of Julian Grenier (died in 1275), lord of Sidon and his wife Euphemia, daughter of Hethum I, King of Armenia.

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hans Eberhard Mayer, Kings and Lords in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, Variorum, 1994, p. 122.
  2. ^ a b Runciman 1989, pp. 162–163.
  3. ^ a b c Alan V. Murray, The Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem: A Dynastic History 1099-1125, Occasional Publications UPR, 2000, pp. 193-194.
  4. ^ Abbey Daniel Haigneré, Les hommes illustres du diocèse de Thérouanne qui après la première croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte in Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de la Morinie, volume 8, 1892, pages 474-475.
  5. ^ Abbey Daniel Haigneré, Les hommes illustres du diocèse de Thérouanne qui après la première croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte, in Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de la Morinie, volume 8, 1892, p. 472.
  6. ^ a b c Abbey Daniel Haigneré, Les hommes illustres du diocèse de Thérouanne qui après la première croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte, in Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de la Morinie, volume 8, 1892, p. 475.
  7. ^ Abbey Daniel Haigneré, Les hommes illustres du diocèse de Thérouanne qui après la première Croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte, in Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de la Morinie, volume 8, 1892, page 481.
  8. ^ Patrologiae cursus completus.' tome CLV, Cartulaire du Saint Sépulcre, colonne 1213, nº CXVII, 1854, Jacques Paul Migne publisher, 1854.
  9. ^ M. Paulin Paris, Guillaume de Tyr et ses continuateurs: texte français du 13e siècle. Des choses avenues en la terre d'outremer, tome premier, Firmin-Didot, 1879, XI, chap XIV, page 404.
  10. ^ Mémoires de l'Académie royale des sciences, des lettres et des beaux-arts de Belgique, Volume 32, 1861, page 6.
  11. ^ baron de Reiffenberg, Le chevalier au Cygne et Godefroid de Bouillon, poëme historique, Volume 2, Hayez, 1848, page CXLIV.
  12. ^ Charles du Fresne du Cange, Emmanuel Guillaume Rey, Les familles d'outre-mer de Du Cange, Imprimerie Impériale, 1869, page 275.
  13. ^ Paul Edouard Didier Riant, Expéditions et pèlerinages des Scandinaves en Terre Sainte au temps des Croisades, Volume 1, Imprimerie de Ad. Lainé & J. Havard, 1865, page 192.
  14. ^ Charles Meller, Les Flamands du Ternois, in Mélanges Paul Frédéricq: hommage de la Société pour le progrès des études philologiques et historiques, Société pour le progrès des études philologiques et historiques, Brussels, 1904, page 198.
  15. ^ Joseph Ringel, Césarée de Palestine: étude historique et archéologique, Éditions Ophrys, 1975, page 169.
  16. ^ Jean Richard, The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, Volume 1, North-Holland Publishing Company, 1979, p. 87.
  17. ^ Steven Tibble, Monarchy and Lordships in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1099-1291, Clarendon Press, 1989, page 103.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i Murray 2000, p. 194.
  19. ^ a b c Barber 2012, p. 91.
  20. ^ a b c Riley-Smith 1973, p. 33.
  21. ^ Susan B. Edgington, Albert of Aachen: Historia Ierosolimitana, History of the Journey to Jerusalem, Oxford University Press, 2007, page 707.
  22. ^ a b c d e Murray 2000, p. 193.
  23. ^ Barber 2012, pp. 91–92.
  24. ^ Barber 2012, p. 92.
  25. ^ Barber 2012, p. 93.
  26. ^ Barber 2012, p. 129.
  27. ^ Barber 2012, pp. 128–129.
  28. ^ Runciman 1989, pp. 161–162.
  29. ^ a b Runciman 1989, p. 164.
  30. ^ a b Lock 2006, p. 37.
  31. ^ a b Runciman 1989, p. 166.
  32. ^ Barber 2012, p. 140.
  33. ^ William of Tyre, A History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea, Volume 1, Octagon Books, 1976, p. 541.
  34. ^ Runciman 1989, p. 85.
  35. ^ a b Barber 2012, p. 154.
  36. ^ Runciman 1989, p. 191.
  37. ^ Lamonte, John L. (1947). "The Lords of Caesarea in the Period of the Crusades". Speculum. 22 (2): 158–59. doi:10.2307/2854723. JSTOR 2854723. S2CID 162771820.

Sources edit

  • Murray, Alan V. (2000). The Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem: A Dynastic History, 1099–1125. Prosopographica et Geneologica. ISBN 978-1-9009-3403-9. [1]
  • Haigneré (abbey), Daniel (1892). Les hommes illustres du diocèse de Thérouanne qui après la première Croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte in Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de la Morinie, pages 471-490). Société des antiquaires de la Morinie. [2]
  • Meller, Charles (1904). Les Flamands du Ternois (in Mélanges Paul Frédéricq: hommage de la Société pour le progrès des études philologiques et historiques). Société pour le progrès des études philologiques et historiques, Brussels. [3]
  • Barber, Malcolm (2012). The Crusader States. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11312-9.
  • Lock, Peter (2006). The Routledge Companion to the Crusades. Routledge. ISBN 9-78-0-415-39312-6.
  • Riley-Smith, Jonathan (1973). The Feudal Nobility and the Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1174-1277. Macmillan.
  • Runciman, Steven (1989). A History of the Crusades, Volume II: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East, 1100-1187. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-06163-6.
Preceded by
Hugh Caulis
Constable of Jerusalem
1123
Succeeded by
Preceded by
none
Lord of Caesarea
aft. 1101–1123
Succeeded by
Preceded by
none
Lord of Caesarea
1111–1123
Succeeded by
Eustace II

eustace, grenier, eustace, granier, also, known, eustace, garnier, called, latin, eustachius, granarius, charters, born, around, 1070, died, june, 1123, flemish, crusader, took, part, first, crusade, became, lord, caesarea, 1101, lord, sidon, 1110, april, 1123. Eustace I Granier also known as Eustace Grenier or Eustace Garnier called in Latin Eustachius Granarius in the charters 1 born around 1070 and died on 15 June 1123 was a Flemish crusader who took part in the First Crusade He became lord of Caesarea in 1101 and lord of Sidon in 1110 On 18 April 1123 he was elected constable and bailiff of Jerusalem during the captivity of Baldwin II of Jerusalem 2 Shortly before his death he defeated a Fatimid army at the Battle of Yibneh near Ibelin Eustace Grenier is quoted in a text in verse written during his life in honour of the knights of the diocese of Therouanne who accompanied Baldwin of Boulogne to the Holy Land Contemporary authors and historians identify Eustace Grenier as a nobleman from the diocese of Therouanne in the County of Saint Pol Alan V Murray historian of the Crusades writes However his origins can be established with a high degree of certainty The Versus de viris illustribus diocesis Tarvanensis qui in sacra fuere expeditione identifies him as a Fleming from the diocese of Therouanne 3 Eustace I GarnierLord of SidonReignb 1110 1123SuccessorEustace IILord of CaesareaReign1110 1123SuccessorWalterDied15 June 1123BurialChurch of Saint Mary of the Latins JerusalemSpouseEmma of ChocquesIssueWalterGerard also known as Eustace II NamesEustachius Latin Granarius Garnier HouseGranier or GrenierReligionRoman Catholicism Contents 1 Origins 2 In the Kingdom of Jerusalem 2 1 One of the most important lords of the Kingdom of Jerusalem 2 2 Constable and Bailiff of Jerusalem 3 Family 4 Notes 5 References 6 SourcesOrigins editEustace Granier s place of origin is given by a poem in Latin the Versus de viris illustribus diocesis Tarvanensis qui in sacra fuere expeditione vers about illustrious men of the diocese of Therouanne who took part in the Holy Expedition 4 written by an unknown author who was one of his contemporaries The author writes nostris diebus it happened nowadays 5 In this poem Eustace Grenier is cited among the knights of the Diocese of Therouanne who accompanied Baldwin of Boulogne the future king of Jerusalem to the Holy Land 6 The author writes Par Belramensis fit princeps CaesariensisEustachius notus miles cognomine Gernirs 6 3 Trad Peer of Belrem became prince of Caesarea Eustace famous knight named Garnier His name is given in Latin under different forms Garnerius Granerius Granarius He signed as Eustachius Garnerius in 1110 in a deed of privilege given by Baldwin I of Jerusalem in favour of the church of Bethlehem his name is Eustachius Granerius in a deed dated of May 5 1116 in the Cartulary of the Holy Sepulchre and in 1120 his signature is Eustachius Granarius in a document signed by Baldwin II of Jerusalem 7 8 William of Tyre who was contemporary of Eustace Grenier indicates him as one of the barons of Baldwin of Boulogne 9 In the 16th century Nicolas Despars Chronicles of Flanders and Jacques Meyer Annals of Flanders mention Eustace Garnier or Grenier in their lists of the Flemish knights who took an active part in the First Crusade 10 Jacques Meyer in his Annals of Flanders 1561 mentions that Eustace Grenier was from the diocese of Therouanne 11 In the 16th century Charles du Fresne sieur du Cange writes I find several families with this name of Granier or Grenier in France It is difficult to guess whether Eustache was originally from Aquitaine or Picardy or even from Flanders as Meyer wants and who gives him the nickname of Beccam without I know why He calls him Beccamensis that is to say native of Beccam place which was to be in Flanders or in the neighbouring areas since the author notes that Godefroi of Bouillon in the distribution of the conquered places made to the crusader barons did not forget his compatriots But we can t find a town or a village called Beccam Latin verses in honour of the characters from the diocese of Therouanne who distinguished themselves in the First Crusade tell us that Eustache nicknamed Gernirs became prince or lord of Caesarea 12 In 1865 Paul Edouard Didier Riant writes that Eustache Grenier is one of the Flemish vassals of the king Baldwin I of Jerusalem 13 In 1892 the abbey and historian Daniel Haignere in Bulletin de la Societe des antiquaires de la Morinie writes an article about the verse written from the time of Eustace Grenier quoting Eustace famous knight named Garnier prince of Caesarea among the knights of the diocese of Therouanne who accompanied Baldwin of Boulogne to the Holy Land 6 Charles Meller in The Flemish of the Ternois 1904 writes Among the Crusaders of the Ternois Eustace made a great fortune he held two of the large fiefs of the kingdom the Lordship of Caesarea of which he was the first holder after its conquest in 1101 and the principality of Sidon If we accept the variant Eustachii of the manuscript A verse 17 we might believe he was a illegitimate son of Count Eustache Eustachii nothus In this case this kinship would explain the great favor of the king his half brother towards him but it is a hazardous assumption 14 Contemporary sources about Eustace Grenier originsJoseph Ringel in Cesaree de Palestine etude historique et archeologique 1975 writes around 1108 the Flemish knight Eustache Granier received Caesarea in fief 15 Jean Richard in The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem 1979 writes that Eustace Garnier was from the and one of the most loyal companions of Baldwin I of Jerusalem 16 Steven Tibble in Monarchy and Lordships in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem 1099 1291 1989 writes that Eustace Grenier is a Flemish knight who had arrived in the Near East some time between 1099 and August 1105 17 Historian Alan V Murray in his book The Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem A Dynastic History 1099 1125 2000 writes However his origins can be established with a high degree of certainty The Versus de viris illustribus diocesis Tarvanensis qui in sacra fuere expeditione identifies him as a Fleming from the Diocese of Therouanne 3 According to his analysis of the text and his research Eustace Granier was a military official in the castle of Beaurainville in the County of Saint Pol 18 He was a rear vassal of Eustace III of Boulogne 19 because the counts of Saint Pol held Beaurainville in fief from the counts of Boulogne 18 Eustace s surname implies that either Eustace or one of his ancestors was responsible for the management of a store house Alan V Murray says Eustace most probably came to the Holy Land in the retinue of his lord Hugh II of Saint Pol during the First Crusade 18 Jonathan Riley Smith writes that Eustace arrived to the Kingdom of Jerusalem after 1099 20 Susan B Edgington in Albert of Aachen 2007 agrees with this analysis She writes that Eustace Grenier probably came from Beaurain Chateau in the County of Saint Pol 21 In the Kingdom of Jerusalem editOne of the most important lords of the Kingdom of Jerusalem edit Eustace became one of the most trusted officials of the younger brother of Eustace III of Boulogne Baldwin I of Jerusalem 19 His participation in the Third Battle of Ramla in August 1105 was the first recorded event of his life in the Kingdom of Jerusalem 22 Baldwin appointed him and Pagan of Haifa to start negotiations with Bertrand of Toulouse William Jordan of Cerdanya and Tancred the regent of Antioch about the organization of a conference where they could resolve their conflicts 19 The crusader leaders assembled near Tripoli and reached a compromise in June 1109 23 Their reconciliation enabled their united armies to force the defenders of Tripoli to surrender on 26 June 24 Baldwin I granted Caesarea to Eustace before September 1110 22 20 Eustace also received Sidon which was captured by the united forces of Baldwin I and Sigurd I of Norway on 5 December 22 25 He participated in Baldwin I s military campaigns against Shaizar in 1111 22 In the same year he financed the building of siege machines during the unsuccessful siege of Tyre 22 The lordships of Caesarea and Sidon and his wife s dowry made Eustace the most powerful noblemen in the entire kingdom 18 He also had preeminent position in the royal council 18 He was one of the four secular lords to attend the legislative assembly that Baldwin I s successor Baldwin II of Jerusalem and Warmund Patriarch of Jerusalem held at Nablus on 16 January 1120 26 The assembly passed decrees that regulated the collection and spending of tithes and ordered the persecution of adultery procuring homosexuality bigamy and sexual relations between Christians and Muslims 27 Constable and Bailiff of Jerusalem edit After The Artuqid prince Belek Ghazi captured Baldwin II on 18 April 1123 28 Patriarch Warmund convoked an assembly to Acre where Eustace was elected Constable of Jerusalem and Bailiff of Jerusalem to administer the kingdom during the king s captivity 2 Baldwin took possession of the fortress of Kharpurt where he had been held in captivity 29 Eustace soon sent reinforcements to Kharpurt to assist the king but Balak ibn Bahram recaptured the fortress by the time the crusader troops reached it 29 A Fatimid army invaded the kingdom from Ascalon in May 1123 30 31 Eustace attacked the invaders near Ibelin and defeated them on 29 May 30 31 He did not long survive his victory because he died on 15 June 1123 32 He was buried in the Church of Saint Mary of the Latins 18 According to William of Tyre he was a wise and prudent man with great experience in military matters 33 Family editEustace married Emma of Chocques the niece of Arnulf of Chocques the Latin patriarch of Jerusalem 18 Arnulf gave Jericho to Eustace as Emma s dowry although the town had been the property of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre 18 34 With Emma Eustace was the father of the twins Gerard also known as Eustace II and Walter who succeeded him in Sidon and Caesarea respectively 18 20 35 Emma married Hugh II of Le Puiset Count of Jaffa 35 The relationship between her second husband and her sons was tense 36 His descendant Julian Grenier sold the Lordship of Sidon to the Knights Templar after it was destroyed by the Mongols in 1260 after the Battle of Ain Jalut citation needed His descendants continued to rule the Lordship of Caesarea until it became the property of John Aleman by right of his marriage to Margaret Grenier in 1238 or 1243 37 The Granier or Grenier family became extinct with two brothers Balian II who died at Botron in 1277 and John who died in Armenia in 1289 they were the sons of Julian Grenier died in 1275 lord of Sidon and his wife Euphemia daughter of Hethum I King of Armenia Notes editReferences edit Hans Eberhard Mayer Kings and Lords in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem Variorum 1994 p 122 a b Runciman 1989 pp 162 163 a b c Alan V Murray The Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem A Dynastic History 1099 1125 Occasional Publications UPR 2000 pp 193 194 Abbey Daniel Haignere Les hommes illustres du diocese de Therouanne qui apres la premiere croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte in Bulletin de la Societe des antiquaires de la Morinie volume 8 1892 pages 474 475 Abbey Daniel Haignere Les hommes illustres du diocese de Therouanne qui apres la premiere croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte in Bulletin de la Societe des antiquaires de la Morinie volume 8 1892 p 472 a b c Abbey Daniel Haignere Les hommes illustres du diocese de Therouanne qui apres la premiere croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte in Bulletin de la Societe des antiquaires de la Morinie volume 8 1892 p 475 Abbey Daniel Haignere Les hommes illustres du diocese de Therouanne qui apres la premiere Croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte in Bulletin de la Societe des antiquaires de la Morinie volume 8 1892 page 481 Patrologiae cursus completus tome CLV Cartulaire du Saint Sepulcre colonne 1213 nº CXVII 1854 Jacques Paul Migne publisher 1854 M Paulin Paris Guillaume de Tyr et ses continuateurs texte francais du 13e siecle Des choses avenues en la terre d outremer tome premier Firmin Didot 1879 XI chap XIV page 404 Memoires de l Academie royale des sciences des lettres et des beaux arts de Belgique Volume 32 1861 page 6 baron de Reiffenberg Le chevalier au Cygne et Godefroid de Bouillon poeme historique Volume 2 Hayez 1848 page CXLIV Charles du Fresne du Cange Emmanuel Guillaume Rey Les familles d outre mer de Du Cange Imprimerie Imperiale 1869 page 275 Paul Edouard Didier Riant Expeditions et pelerinages des Scandinaves en Terre Sainte au temps des Croisades Volume 1 Imprimerie de Ad Laine amp J Havard 1865 page 192 Charles Meller Les Flamands du Ternois in Melanges Paul Fredericq hommage de la Societe pour le progres des etudes philologiques et historiques Societe pour le progres des etudes philologiques et historiques Brussels 1904 page 198 Joseph Ringel Cesaree de Palestine etude historique et archeologique Editions Ophrys 1975 page 169 Jean Richard The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem Volume 1 North Holland Publishing Company 1979 p 87 Steven Tibble Monarchy and Lordships in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem 1099 1291 Clarendon Press 1989 page 103 a b c d e f g h i Murray 2000 p 194 a b c Barber 2012 p 91 a b c Riley Smith 1973 p 33 Susan B Edgington Albert of Aachen Historia Ierosolimitana History of the Journey to Jerusalem Oxford University Press 2007 page 707 a b c d e Murray 2000 p 193 Barber 2012 pp 91 92 Barber 2012 p 92 Barber 2012 p 93 Barber 2012 p 129 Barber 2012 pp 128 129 Runciman 1989 pp 161 162 a b Runciman 1989 p 164 a b Lock 2006 p 37 a b Runciman 1989 p 166 Barber 2012 p 140 William of Tyre A History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea Volume 1 Octagon Books 1976 p 541 Runciman 1989 p 85 a b Barber 2012 p 154 Runciman 1989 p 191 Lamonte John L 1947 The Lords of Caesarea in the Period of the Crusades Speculum 22 2 158 59 doi 10 2307 2854723 JSTOR 2854723 S2CID 162771820 Sources editMurray Alan V 2000 The Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem A Dynastic History 1099 1125 Prosopographica et Geneologica ISBN 978 1 9009 3403 9 1 Haignere abbey Daniel 1892 Les hommes illustres du diocese de Therouanne qui apres la premiere Croisade furent au nombre des dignitaires de la terre sainte in Bulletin de la Societe des antiquaires de la Morinie pages 471 490 Societe des antiquaires de la Morinie 2 Meller Charles 1904 Les Flamands du Ternois in Melanges Paul Fredericq hommage de la Societe pour le progres des etudes philologiques et historiques Societe pour le progres des etudes philologiques et historiques Brussels 3 Barber Malcolm 2012 The Crusader States Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11312 9 Lock Peter 2006 The Routledge Companion to the Crusades Routledge ISBN 9 78 0 415 39312 6 Riley Smith Jonathan 1973 The Feudal Nobility and the Kingdom of Jerusalem 1174 1277 Macmillan Runciman Steven 1989 A History of the Crusades Volume II The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East 1100 1187 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 06163 6 Preceded byHugh Caulis Constable of Jerusalem1123 Succeeded byWilliam I of BuresPreceded bynone Lord of Caesareaaft 1101 1123 Succeeded byWalter IPreceded bynone Lord of Caesarea1111 1123 Succeeded byEustace II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eustace Grenier amp oldid 1193523783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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