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Maria Komnene, Queen of Jerusalem

Maria Komnene (Greek: Μαρία Κομνηνή; c. 1154 – 1217), Latinized Comnena, was the queen of Jerusalem from 1167 until 1174 as the second wife of King Amalric. She occupied a central position in the Kingdom of Jerusalem for twenty years, earning a reputation for intrigue and ruthlessness.

Maria Komnene
Detail of a 13th-century French miniature
Queen consort of Jerusalem
Tenure29 August 1167 – 11 July 1174
Bornc. 1154
Died1217 (aged 62–63)
SpouseAmalric of Jerusalem
Balian of Ibelin
IssueIsabella I of Jerusalem
Helvis of Ibelin
John of Ibelin, the Old Lord of Beirut
Margaret of Tiberias
Philip of Ibelin
HouseKomnenos dynasty
FatherJohn Doukas Komnenos
MotherMaria Tarontinissa

Maria was a grandniece of Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Komnenos. Her marriage to Amalric in 1167 served to establish an alliance between the Byzantine Empire and the Kingdom of Jerusalem. When Amalric died in 1174, the crown passed to Maria's stepson, Baldwin IV, and she withdrew with her daughter, Isabella, to the city of Nablus, which she was to rule as queen dowager. Due to Baldwin's leprosy, Maria's stepdaughter, Sibylla, and daughter, Isabella, were regarded as potential successors. Maria married the lord of Ibelin, Balian, in 1177, with whom she had four more children.

From 1180, Maria was one of the leaders of the faction opposing Sibylla and her husband Guy of Lusignan. Baldwin IV died in 1185, leaving Sibylla's son, Baldwin V, as king. When Baldwin V died the next year, Maria and her party planned to crown her daughter Isabella and son-in-law Humphrey IV of Toron, but Humphrey submitted to Sibylla and Guy, who thus solidified their hold on the kingdom. The Egyptian ruler Saladin invaded in 1187, capturing Jerusalem and most of the kingdom. Sibylla died in 1190 while Guy was retaking Acre, and his opponents asserted that his reign had thus ended and that Maria's daughter Isabella was the rightful heir. Maria had Isabella's marriage to Humphrey annulled so that the new queen could marry the more capable candidate, Conrad of Montferrat. Maria died in the reign of her great-granddaughter Isabella II, having outlived all her allies and adversaries.

Background

Maria was the daughter of the Byzantine protosebastos John Doukas Komnenos and Maria Taronitissa, and grandniece of Emperor Manuel I Komnenos.[1] The Byzantine Empire was a Greek Orthodox state[2] that claimed suzerainty over the crusader states in the Levant.[3] Nearly all of the Christian peasants in the Kingdom of Jerusalem belonged to the Greek Orthodox Church, but the ruling class, the Franks, were Roman Catholics.[4] The crusader states were constantly threatened by neighbouring Muslim powers.[5]

Maria's cousin Theodora Komnene was queen of Jerusalem as the wife of King Baldwin III.[6] Their marriage was childless, and he was succeeded upon his death in 1163 by his brother, Amalric.[7] Amalric was forced by the High Court of Jerusalem to agree to an annulment of his marriage to Agnes of Courtenay, but he successfully appealed to Pope Alexander III to have their children, Sibylla and Baldwin, declared legitimate.[8]

Queenship

 
13th-century depiction of Maria and Amalric riding with entourage

Wishing to restore alliance with the powerful Byzantine Empire,[9] King Amalric took his vassals' advice and sent his butler, Odo of St Amand, and the archbishop of Caesarea, Ernesius, as envoys to Emperor Manuel.[10][11] Negotiations for Amalric's marriage with one of the emperor's relatives lasted two years. Maria was eventually selected and sent to the Levant.[1] She landed with the butler and the archbishop at Tyre in August. The Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, Amalric of Nesle, celebrated her marriage to the king at the Cathedral of Tyre on 29 August 1167.[12] Historian Bernard Hamilton concludes that the new queen was neither particularly attractive, as not even her supporters flattered her, nor endowed with an impressive dowry, as her cousin Theodora had been.[1]

Maria and her household represented Byzantine interests in the crusader states,[13] but like Theodora in Baldwin III's reign, she had no influence on the government as queen. Mindful of the power enjoyed by their mother and predecessor, Queen Melisende, King Amalric and his brother were keen to avoid sharing authority with their wives. Maria was also disadvantaged by having no son.[14] A daughter who died in infancy was likely born to the queen in 1171.[15] The royal couple's only surviving child was Isabella, born in 1172.[14] There was little affection in the relationship between the queen and her stepson, Baldwin. She proved markedly ambitious, and probably resented Baldwin's precedence over her own progeny in the line of succession.[16] The lack of a son in the royal marriage became troubling as suspicion grew that Baldwin had contracted leprosy, which used to be an incurable and much stigmatised illness.[14]

Dowager

 
Death of King Amalric as depicted in the 13th century

Maria's husband, Amalric, came down with dysentery in June 1174.[17] On his deathbed, he granted the city of Nablus, formerly held by his mother, to Maria to be held in fief as dower.[14] He died on 11 July.[17] Maria may have taken part in the ensuing discussion about succession to the throne.[18] Having no other son, Amalric was succeeded by 13-year-old Baldwin, who had not yet been formally diagnosed with leprosy.[19] Despite ominous symptoms, he was seen as a better candidate than his slightly older sister, Sibylla, because she was a girl and unmarried. The claim of Maria's daughter, Isabella, was unviable because she was only two years old.[20]

Diplomatic role

Maria found herself in an unusual situation after Amalric's death; she was the queen dowager, but the new king, Baldwin IV, had a living mother, Agnes of Courtenay.[14] She thus had no right to rule the kingdom as regent for the underage monarch.[21] Having no role at court, Maria retired from public life with her daughter.[14] When Count Raymond III of Tripoli assumed regency, Agnes returned to court.[22] Soon after his accession it became clear that Baldwin was indeed afflicted with leprosy,[23] meaning that he could not father an heir.[24] Amalric's daughters, Sibylla and Isabella, therefore became crucial figures.[24]

After reaching the age of majority in 1176, Baldwin started planning an invasion of Egypt, ruled by the Muslim sultan Saladin,[25] who had encircled the crusader states during Raymond's regency.[26] Baldwin sought the help of Manuel, who wanted a Byzantine protectorate in the crusader states in return. Having retired from public life, Maria could not be relied upon to act as the emperor's representative in Jerusalem, and so Manuel proposed the restoration of the Greek Orthodox patriarch of Jerusalem instead.[13]

Baldwin's cousin Count Philip I of Flanders arrived in Jerusalem in 1177[27] and was tasked by his liege, King Louis VII of France, with discussing a Franco-Byzantine alliance with Emperor Manuel on his way back to Europe.[28] Philip was expected to assist in the Egyptian campaign, but prevaricated when he realized that he would not be granted sovereignty over conquered territory.[29] In 1178 he visited his aunt Maria in Nablus to seek her advice about the Byzantine court. The queen dowager must have been in contact with the Byzantines in the Levant and aware of their intention to cancel the expedition due to their allies' failure to cooperate. It is likely she who explained to Philip that the High Court would pin the blame on him, thereby damaging his standing with Manuel.[30] Philip quickly announced his readiness to assist, but the Byzantines doubted his sincerity and broke off the alliance.[31]

Ibelin alliance

 
Seal of Balian of Ibelin

In late 1177, Queen Maria married Balian of Ibelin. The match may have been a consolation prize to the House of Ibelin, as Balian's brother Baldwin had been denied marriage to Maria's stepdaughter, Sibylla, who was heir presumptive to the throne. The acquisition of Maria's fief of Nablus made the Ibelin brothers the most powerful noblemen in the kingdom after Count Raymond III of Tripoli; Nablus commanded twice as many knights as Balian's lordships of Ibelin and Mirabel.[32] Their union was happy and Maria played a great role in Balian's politics.[33] They had four children: Helvis, John, Margaret, and Philip.[34] Remarriage ended any possibility that Maria might manage the king's court; the role was assumed by Agnes, whose influence over Sibylla and Baldwin steadily increased.[35]

Maria's brother-in-law Baldwin of Ibelin was captured by Saladin in 1179. It is probably she who informed her granduncle Manuel about the scheme to have Baldwin marry Sibylla, prompting the Byzantine emperor to pay his extortionate ransom.[36] Sibylla was instead married to Guy of Lusignan in early 1180, leading to a rift among the nobility. Guy had the support of the king, the king's mother and maternal family, and the lord of Oultrejordain, Raynald of Châtillon, while the opposing faction consisted of the queen dowager, the Ibelin brothers, Count Raymond III of Tripoli, and Prince Bohemond III of Antioch.[37] In October, King Baldwin arranged the betrothal of his half-sister Isabella, Maria's daughter, to Raynald's stepson, Humphrey IV of Toron. This served to prevent the faction of the Ibelins from using her as a pawn in a dynastic conflict. Isabella was sent to live at Kerak Castle with Humphrey's mother, Stephanie of Milly, who prevented her from visiting Maria at Nablus.[38]

Muslim threat

 
Kerak Castle

Isabella and Humphrey's wedding was held at Kerak in late 1183. Maria attended despite being a personal enemy of the groom's stepfather, Raynald. Extravagant festivities were cut short by news of the approach of the Muslim army under Saladin.[39] The sultan had heard about the gathering and carefully planned his attack to increase the odds of obtaining valuable prisoners. It is probably from Maria, wife of his patron, that the chronicler Ernoul derives his account of the siege of Kerak.[40] According to him, Humphrey's mother sent dishes from the wedding banquet to Saladin in return for his promise not to bombard the newlywed's lodgings.[41] King Baldwin had meanwhile fallen out with Guy; he disinherited him and Sibylla, had Sibylla's son, Baldwin V, crowned as co-king,[42] and led his army to the relief of Kerak.[43]

In 1184, Saladin again besieged Kerak and once more fled before Baldwin IV's army.[44] Knowing that all the king's troops were at Kerak, he attacked Nablus between 8 and 10 September. As Balian was at Kerak too, it was presumably Maria who conducted the defence. The city was unwalled and she could do nothing to prevent Saladin from sacking it, but no Franks were killed because she took the entire population inside the citadel.[45]

Succession dispute

 
Death of Baldwin IV, Baldwin V carried by Balian, and Raymond's assumption of regency as depicted in Acre in the 13th century

Completely disabled due to leprosy, Baldwin IV lay on his deathbed in early 1185. He arranged for Sibylla's son, Baldwin V, to undergo a crown-wearing ceremony after which Balian expressed his family's support by carrying the boy to banquet on his shoulders.[46] The High Court awarded regency to Raymond of Tripoli. Raymond demanded that, in the case of Baldwin V's death, the decision of whether the crown should pass to "Sibylla, who was the daughter of Countess Agnes" or "Isabella, who was the daughter of Queen Maria", would be made by the pope, the Holy Roman emperor, and the kings of England and France.[47] Baldwin died after the barons promised to uphold this condition.[48]

Baldwin V died in mid-1186. Sibylla hurried to Jerusalem to claim the throne. She and her supporters secured most of the royal domain while Raymond summoned the High Court to Nablus. The meeting was attended by Maria, Isabella, Humphrey, the Ibelins, and likely Raymond's stepsons.[49] When news reached of Sibylla and Guy's coronation in Jerusalem reached them, Raymond suggested crowning Isabella and Humphrey as rival monarchs.[50] The argument that Isabella had better claim than Sibylla because she was born in their father's reign while Sibylla had been born earlier probably came from Maria and the Byzantine tradition of porphyrogeniture.[51] Humphrey was unwilling to cause a civil war, however, and foiled the plan by sneaking out of Nablus and submitting to Sibylla.[52] The rest of the nobility convened in Nablus then arrived to submit as well, except Baldwin of Ibelin and Raymond.[53]

Third Crusade

Saladin took advantage of the discord between the nobles. He invaded the kingdom in April 1187[54] and won the Battle of Hattin on 4 July, which proved to be decisive.[55] King Guy was captured, Lord Raynald executed, and Count Raymond died of an illness soon afterwards.[56] Queen Maria and her children left Nablus and joined her stepdaughter, Queen Sibylla, in Jerusalem.[57] After besieging the capital, Saladin arranged for Maria, her children, household, and possessions to be escorted to Tyre.[58] Jerusalem fell on 2 October.[59] Maria reunited with Sibylla in Tripoli. Guy, who was released in 1188, he decided to besiege Acre. The queens, Balian, Isabella, and Humphrey accompanied him, and the Third Crusade ensued.[60]

 
The Kingdom of Jerusalem without Jerusalem, as reconstituted in 1192

Unity appeared to have been restored during the crusade until Sibylla and her daughters died of an epidemic in mid-1190.[60] Isabella was Sibylla's heir, but Guy attempted to retain the throne.[61] The unpopularity of her husband, Humphrey, weakened Isabella's chances of supplanting Guy. Humphrey had alienated Guy's opponents by refusing to oppose him in 1186, while Maria had not forgiven him for his role in separating her from Isabella.[61] Maria immediately allied with Conrad of Montferrat, the leader of the defence of Tyre, who desired the kingship.[60] With her party, which included Balian, Reynald of Sidon, and Pagan II of Haifa, she abducted her daughter from her tent next to Humphrey's.[62] Isabella was happy with Humphrey, and Maria had to browbeat her into agreeing to have their marriage annulled,[60] arguing that her succession rights could not otherwise be enforced.[63] Maria then stated before the papal legate, Archbishop Ubaldo Lanfranchi of Pisa, and the bishop of Beauvais, Philip of Dreux,[64] that Isabella had been forced by Baldwin IV to marry Humphrey and that she was underage at the time.[60] Isabella was subsequently crowned and married to Conrad.[34]

Last years

The Third Crusade brought the reconquest of a strip of coast from Jaffa to Tyre in 1192,[65] but the kingdom remained without Jerusalem itself.[66] Balian died in 1194 and Maria did not remarry again. She retained an active role in family affairs.[34] Isabella I married twice more and died in 1205.[65] Maria's native Byzantine state, which had ceased to be a great power in the 1180s, was all but destroyed in the Fourth Crusade, while the Kingdom of Jerusalem was reduced to a rump state centred in Acre; yet, Maria's influence only increased.[9]

In 1208 Maria arranged the marriage of Isabella I's daughter Alice of Champagne to King Hugh I of Cyprus. Having outlived all the principal figures of Christian-ruled Jerusalem, Maria may have provided valuable recollections of the kingdom's laws and customs to her son John. She died in mid-1217, in the reign of her great-granddaughter Isabella II. All the kings of Jerusalem and Cyprus and much of the 13th-century nobility of both Cyprus and the mainland kingdom descended from her.[34]

Character

A very hostile source, the Itinerarium Regis Ricardi, describes Maria as being "steeped in Greek filth from the cradle",[67] and says that the character of her husband Balian "matched her own":

Where he was savage, she was godless; where he was shallow-minded, she was fickle; where he was treacherous, she was scheming.[35]

Maria was resilient and adaptable, which enabled her to thrive politically in spite of unfavourable circumstances. Like her mother-in-law Melisende and rival Agnes, Maria desired power, but Hamilton notes that she differed from them in being interested more in practical matters than in appearances and thus worked to acquire power in "more devious" ways.[9] Her opponents described her as ruthless and scheming, and Hamilton concludes that "there was some truth" in their view.[34]

References

  1. ^ a b c Hamilton 1978, p. 161.
  2. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 50.
  3. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 31.
  4. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 49.
  5. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 54.
  6. ^ Hamilton 1978, pp. 159, 161.
  7. ^ Hamilton 1978, p. 159.
  8. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 26.
  9. ^ a b c Hamilton 1978, p. 174.
  10. ^ Runciman 1952, p. 370.
  11. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 36.
  12. ^ Runciman 1952, p. 377.
  13. ^ a b Hamilton 2005, p. 113.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Hamilton 1978, p. 163.
  15. ^ Runciman 1952, p. 404, 443.
  16. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 27.
  17. ^ a b Hamilton 2005, p. 32.
  18. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 35.
  19. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 38.
  20. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 40.
  21. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 84.
  22. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 95.
  23. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 100.
  24. ^ a b Hodgson 2007, p. 78.
  25. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 111.
  26. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 106.
  27. ^ Runciman 1952, p. 414.
  28. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 121.
  29. ^ Hamilton 2005, pp. 127–128.
  30. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 129.
  31. ^ Hamilton 2005, pp. 129–130.
  32. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 139.
  33. ^ Runciman 1952, p. 404.
  34. ^ a b c d e Hamilton 1978, p. 173.
  35. ^ a b Hamilton 1978, p. 165.
  36. ^ Hamilton 1978, p. 166.
  37. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 158.
  38. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 161.
  39. ^ Runciman 1952, p. 440.
  40. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 192.
  41. ^ Hamilton 2005, pp. 192–193.
  42. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 194.
  43. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 196.
  44. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 202.
  45. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 203.
  46. ^ Hamilton 2005, pp. 208–209.
  47. ^ Hamilton 2005, pp. 206–207.
  48. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 220.
  49. ^ Hamilton 2005, pp. 217–218.
  50. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 221.
  51. ^ Riley-Smith 1973, p. 108.
  52. ^ Runciman 1952, p. 448.
  53. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 222.
  54. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 227.
  55. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 230.
  56. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 231.
  57. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 172.
  58. ^ Runciman 1952, p. 463.
  59. ^ Runciman 1952, p. 465.
  60. ^ a b c d e Hamilton 1978, p. 172.
  61. ^ a b Riley-Smith 1973, p. 114.
  62. ^ Riley-Smith 1973, p. 115.
  63. ^ Hodgson 2007, p. 188.
  64. ^ Runciman 1954, pp. 22, 35.
  65. ^ a b Hamilton 2005, p. 232.
  66. ^ Hamilton 2005, p. 234.
  67. ^ Hodgson 2007, p. 189.

Bibliography

  • Hamilton, Bernard (1978). "Women in the Crusader States: The Queens of Jerusalem". In Baker, Derek (ed.). Medieval Women. Ecclesiastical History Society. ISBN 978-0631192602.
  • Hamilton, Bernard (2005). The Leper King and His Heirs: Baldwin IV and the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521017473.
  • Hodgson, Natasha R. (2007). Women, Crusading and the Holy Land in Historical Narrative. Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1843833321.
  • Riley-Smith, Jonathan (1973). The feudal nobility and the kingdom of Jerusalem, 1147 - 1277. Macmillan.
  • Runciman, Steven (1952). A History of the Crusades: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East, 1100–1187. Vol. 2. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0241298768.
  • Runciman, Steven (1954). A History of the Crusades: The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades. Vol. 3. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-06163-6.
Royal titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Theodora Komnene
Queen consort of Jerusalem
1167–1174
Vacant
Title next held by
Elisabeth of Bavaria

maria, komnene, queen, jerusalem, maria, komnene, greek, Μαρία, Κομνηνή, 1154, 1217, latinized, comnena, queen, jerusalem, from, 1167, until, 1174, second, wife, king, amalric, occupied, central, position, kingdom, jerusalem, twenty, years, earning, reputation. Maria Komnene Greek Maria Komnhnh c 1154 1217 Latinized Comnena was the queen of Jerusalem from 1167 until 1174 as the second wife of King Amalric She occupied a central position in the Kingdom of Jerusalem for twenty years earning a reputation for intrigue and ruthlessness Maria KomneneDetail of a 13th century French miniatureQueen consort of JerusalemTenure29 August 1167 11 July 1174Bornc 1154Died1217 aged 62 63 SpouseAmalric of JerusalemBalian of IbelinIssueIsabella I of JerusalemHelvis of IbelinJohn of Ibelin the Old Lord of BeirutMargaret of TiberiasPhilip of IbelinHouseKomnenos dynastyFatherJohn Doukas KomnenosMotherMaria TarontinissaMaria was a grandniece of Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Komnenos Her marriage to Amalric in 1167 served to establish an alliance between the Byzantine Empire and the Kingdom of Jerusalem When Amalric died in 1174 the crown passed to Maria s stepson Baldwin IV and she withdrew with her daughter Isabella to the city of Nablus which she was to rule as queen dowager Due to Baldwin s leprosy Maria s stepdaughter Sibylla and daughter Isabella were regarded as potential successors Maria married the lord of Ibelin Balian in 1177 with whom she had four more children From 1180 Maria was one of the leaders of the faction opposing Sibylla and her husband Guy of Lusignan Baldwin IV died in 1185 leaving Sibylla s son Baldwin V as king When Baldwin V died the next year Maria and her party planned to crown her daughter Isabella and son in law Humphrey IV of Toron but Humphrey submitted to Sibylla and Guy who thus solidified their hold on the kingdom The Egyptian ruler Saladin invaded in 1187 capturing Jerusalem and most of the kingdom Sibylla died in 1190 while Guy was retaking Acre and his opponents asserted that his reign had thus ended and that Maria s daughter Isabella was the rightful heir Maria had Isabella s marriage to Humphrey annulled so that the new queen could marry the more capable candidate Conrad of Montferrat Maria died in the reign of her great granddaughter Isabella II having outlived all her allies and adversaries Contents 1 Background 2 Queenship 3 Dowager 3 1 Diplomatic role 3 2 Ibelin alliance 3 3 Muslim threat 3 4 Succession dispute 3 5 Third Crusade 4 Last years 5 Character 6 References 6 1 BibliographyBackground EditMaria was the daughter of the Byzantine protosebastos John Doukas Komnenos and Maria Taronitissa and grandniece of Emperor Manuel I Komnenos 1 The Byzantine Empire was a Greek Orthodox state 2 that claimed suzerainty over the crusader states in the Levant 3 Nearly all of the Christian peasants in the Kingdom of Jerusalem belonged to the Greek Orthodox Church but the ruling class the Franks were Roman Catholics 4 The crusader states were constantly threatened by neighbouring Muslim powers 5 Maria s cousin Theodora Komnene was queen of Jerusalem as the wife of King Baldwin III 6 Their marriage was childless and he was succeeded upon his death in 1163 by his brother Amalric 7 Amalric was forced by the High Court of Jerusalem to agree to an annulment of his marriage to Agnes of Courtenay but he successfully appealed to Pope Alexander III to have their children Sibylla and Baldwin declared legitimate 8 Queenship Edit 13th century depiction of Maria and Amalric riding with entourage Wishing to restore alliance with the powerful Byzantine Empire 9 King Amalric took his vassals advice and sent his butler Odo of St Amand and the archbishop of Caesarea Ernesius as envoys to Emperor Manuel 10 11 Negotiations for Amalric s marriage with one of the emperor s relatives lasted two years Maria was eventually selected and sent to the Levant 1 She landed with the butler and the archbishop at Tyre in August The Latin patriarch of Jerusalem Amalric of Nesle celebrated her marriage to the king at the Cathedral of Tyre on 29 August 1167 12 Historian Bernard Hamilton concludes that the new queen was neither particularly attractive as not even her supporters flattered her nor endowed with an impressive dowry as her cousin Theodora had been 1 Maria and her household represented Byzantine interests in the crusader states 13 but like Theodora in Baldwin III s reign she had no influence on the government as queen Mindful of the power enjoyed by their mother and predecessor Queen Melisende King Amalric and his brother were keen to avoid sharing authority with their wives Maria was also disadvantaged by having no son 14 A daughter who died in infancy was likely born to the queen in 1171 15 The royal couple s only surviving child was Isabella born in 1172 14 There was little affection in the relationship between the queen and her stepson Baldwin She proved markedly ambitious and probably resented Baldwin s precedence over her own progeny in the line of succession 16 The lack of a son in the royal marriage became troubling as suspicion grew that Baldwin had contracted leprosy which used to be an incurable and much stigmatised illness 14 Dowager Edit Death of King Amalric as depicted in the 13th century Maria s husband Amalric came down with dysentery in June 1174 17 On his deathbed he granted the city of Nablus formerly held by his mother to Maria to be held in fief as dower 14 He died on 11 July 17 Maria may have taken part in the ensuing discussion about succession to the throne 18 Having no other son Amalric was succeeded by 13 year old Baldwin who had not yet been formally diagnosed with leprosy 19 Despite ominous symptoms he was seen as a better candidate than his slightly older sister Sibylla because she was a girl and unmarried The claim of Maria s daughter Isabella was unviable because she was only two years old 20 Diplomatic role Edit Maria found herself in an unusual situation after Amalric s death she was the queen dowager but the new king Baldwin IV had a living mother Agnes of Courtenay 14 She thus had no right to rule the kingdom as regent for the underage monarch 21 Having no role at court Maria retired from public life with her daughter 14 When Count Raymond III of Tripoli assumed regency Agnes returned to court 22 Soon after his accession it became clear that Baldwin was indeed afflicted with leprosy 23 meaning that he could not father an heir 24 Amalric s daughters Sibylla and Isabella therefore became crucial figures 24 After reaching the age of majority in 1176 Baldwin started planning an invasion of Egypt ruled by the Muslim sultan Saladin 25 who had encircled the crusader states during Raymond s regency 26 Baldwin sought the help of Manuel who wanted a Byzantine protectorate in the crusader states in return Having retired from public life Maria could not be relied upon to act as the emperor s representative in Jerusalem and so Manuel proposed the restoration of the Greek Orthodox patriarch of Jerusalem instead 13 Baldwin s cousin Count Philip I of Flanders arrived in Jerusalem in 1177 27 and was tasked by his liege King Louis VII of France with discussing a Franco Byzantine alliance with Emperor Manuel on his way back to Europe 28 Philip was expected to assist in the Egyptian campaign but prevaricated when he realized that he would not be granted sovereignty over conquered territory 29 In 1178 he visited his aunt Maria in Nablus to seek her advice about the Byzantine court The queen dowager must have been in contact with the Byzantines in the Levant and aware of their intention to cancel the expedition due to their allies failure to cooperate It is likely she who explained to Philip that the High Court would pin the blame on him thereby damaging his standing with Manuel 30 Philip quickly announced his readiness to assist but the Byzantines doubted his sincerity and broke off the alliance 31 Ibelin alliance Edit Seal of Balian of Ibelin In late 1177 Queen Maria married Balian of Ibelin The match may have been a consolation prize to the House of Ibelin as Balian s brother Baldwin had been denied marriage to Maria s stepdaughter Sibylla who was heir presumptive to the throne The acquisition of Maria s fief of Nablus made the Ibelin brothers the most powerful noblemen in the kingdom after Count Raymond III of Tripoli Nablus commanded twice as many knights as Balian s lordships of Ibelin and Mirabel 32 Their union was happy and Maria played a great role in Balian s politics 33 They had four children Helvis John Margaret and Philip 34 Remarriage ended any possibility that Maria might manage the king s court the role was assumed by Agnes whose influence over Sibylla and Baldwin steadily increased 35 Maria s brother in law Baldwin of Ibelin was captured by Saladin in 1179 It is probably she who informed her granduncle Manuel about the scheme to have Baldwin marry Sibylla prompting the Byzantine emperor to pay his extortionate ransom 36 Sibylla was instead married to Guy of Lusignan in early 1180 leading to a rift among the nobility Guy had the support of the king the king s mother and maternal family and the lord of Oultrejordain Raynald of Chatillon while the opposing faction consisted of the queen dowager the Ibelin brothers Count Raymond III of Tripoli and Prince Bohemond III of Antioch 37 In October King Baldwin arranged the betrothal of his half sister Isabella Maria s daughter to Raynald s stepson Humphrey IV of Toron This served to prevent the faction of the Ibelins from using her as a pawn in a dynastic conflict Isabella was sent to live at Kerak Castle with Humphrey s mother Stephanie of Milly who prevented her from visiting Maria at Nablus 38 Muslim threat Edit Kerak Castle Isabella and Humphrey s wedding was held at Kerak in late 1183 Maria attended despite being a personal enemy of the groom s stepfather Raynald Extravagant festivities were cut short by news of the approach of the Muslim army under Saladin 39 The sultan had heard about the gathering and carefully planned his attack to increase the odds of obtaining valuable prisoners It is probably from Maria wife of his patron that the chronicler Ernoul derives his account of the siege of Kerak 40 According to him Humphrey s mother sent dishes from the wedding banquet to Saladin in return for his promise not to bombard the newlywed s lodgings 41 King Baldwin had meanwhile fallen out with Guy he disinherited him and Sibylla had Sibylla s son Baldwin V crowned as co king 42 and led his army to the relief of Kerak 43 In 1184 Saladin again besieged Kerak and once more fled before Baldwin IV s army 44 Knowing that all the king s troops were at Kerak he attacked Nablus between 8 and 10 September As Balian was at Kerak too it was presumably Maria who conducted the defence The city was unwalled and she could do nothing to prevent Saladin from sacking it but no Franks were killed because she took the entire population inside the citadel 45 Succession dispute Edit Death of Baldwin IV Baldwin V carried by Balian and Raymond s assumption of regency as depicted in Acre in the 13th century Completely disabled due to leprosy Baldwin IV lay on his deathbed in early 1185 He arranged for Sibylla s son Baldwin V to undergo a crown wearing ceremony after which Balian expressed his family s support by carrying the boy to banquet on his shoulders 46 The High Court awarded regency to Raymond of Tripoli Raymond demanded that in the case of Baldwin V s death the decision of whether the crown should pass to Sibylla who was the daughter of Countess Agnes or Isabella who was the daughter of Queen Maria would be made by the pope the Holy Roman emperor and the kings of England and France 47 Baldwin died after the barons promised to uphold this condition 48 Baldwin V died in mid 1186 Sibylla hurried to Jerusalem to claim the throne She and her supporters secured most of the royal domain while Raymond summoned the High Court to Nablus The meeting was attended by Maria Isabella Humphrey the Ibelins and likely Raymond s stepsons 49 When news reached of Sibylla and Guy s coronation in Jerusalem reached them Raymond suggested crowning Isabella and Humphrey as rival monarchs 50 The argument that Isabella had better claim than Sibylla because she was born in their father s reign while Sibylla had been born earlier probably came from Maria and the Byzantine tradition of porphyrogeniture 51 Humphrey was unwilling to cause a civil war however and foiled the plan by sneaking out of Nablus and submitting to Sibylla 52 The rest of the nobility convened in Nablus then arrived to submit as well except Baldwin of Ibelin and Raymond 53 Third Crusade Edit Saladin took advantage of the discord between the nobles He invaded the kingdom in April 1187 54 and won the Battle of Hattin on 4 July which proved to be decisive 55 King Guy was captured Lord Raynald executed and Count Raymond died of an illness soon afterwards 56 Queen Maria and her children left Nablus and joined her stepdaughter Queen Sibylla in Jerusalem 57 After besieging the capital Saladin arranged for Maria her children household and possessions to be escorted to Tyre 58 Jerusalem fell on 2 October 59 Maria reunited with Sibylla in Tripoli Guy who was released in 1188 he decided to besiege Acre The queens Balian Isabella and Humphrey accompanied him and the Third Crusade ensued 60 The Kingdom of Jerusalem without Jerusalem as reconstituted in 1192 Unity appeared to have been restored during the crusade until Sibylla and her daughters died of an epidemic in mid 1190 60 Isabella was Sibylla s heir but Guy attempted to retain the throne 61 The unpopularity of her husband Humphrey weakened Isabella s chances of supplanting Guy Humphrey had alienated Guy s opponents by refusing to oppose him in 1186 while Maria had not forgiven him for his role in separating her from Isabella 61 Maria immediately allied with Conrad of Montferrat the leader of the defence of Tyre who desired the kingship 60 With her party which included Balian Reynald of Sidon and Pagan II of Haifa she abducted her daughter from her tent next to Humphrey s 62 Isabella was happy with Humphrey and Maria had to browbeat her into agreeing to have their marriage annulled 60 arguing that her succession rights could not otherwise be enforced 63 Maria then stated before the papal legate Archbishop Ubaldo Lanfranchi of Pisa and the bishop of Beauvais Philip of Dreux 64 that Isabella had been forced by Baldwin IV to marry Humphrey and that she was underage at the time 60 Isabella was subsequently crowned and married to Conrad 34 Last years EditThe Third Crusade brought the reconquest of a strip of coast from Jaffa to Tyre in 1192 65 but the kingdom remained without Jerusalem itself 66 Balian died in 1194 and Maria did not remarry again She retained an active role in family affairs 34 Isabella I married twice more and died in 1205 65 Maria s native Byzantine state which had ceased to be a great power in the 1180s was all but destroyed in the Fourth Crusade while the Kingdom of Jerusalem was reduced to a rump state centred in Acre yet Maria s influence only increased 9 In 1208 Maria arranged the marriage of Isabella I s daughter Alice of Champagne to King Hugh I of Cyprus Having outlived all the principal figures of Christian ruled Jerusalem Maria may have provided valuable recollections of the kingdom s laws and customs to her son John She died in mid 1217 in the reign of her great granddaughter Isabella II All the kings of Jerusalem and Cyprus and much of the 13th century nobility of both Cyprus and the mainland kingdom descended from her 34 Character EditA very hostile source the Itinerarium Regis Ricardi describes Maria as being steeped in Greek filth from the cradle 67 and says that the character of her husband Balian matched her own Where he was savage she was godless where he was shallow minded she was fickle where he was treacherous she was scheming 35 Maria was resilient and adaptable which enabled her to thrive politically in spite of unfavourable circumstances Like her mother in law Melisende and rival Agnes Maria desired power but Hamilton notes that she differed from them in being interested more in practical matters than in appearances and thus worked to acquire power in more devious ways 9 Her opponents described her as ruthless and scheming and Hamilton concludes that there was some truth in their view 34 References Edit a b c Hamilton 1978 p 161 Hamilton 2005 p 50 Hamilton 2005 p 31 Hamilton 2005 p 49 Hamilton 2005 p 54 Hamilton 1978 pp 159 161 Hamilton 1978 p 159 Hamilton 2005 p 26 a b c Hamilton 1978 p 174 Runciman 1952 p 370 Hamilton 2005 p 36 Runciman 1952 p 377 a b Hamilton 2005 p 113 a b c d e f Hamilton 1978 p 163 Runciman 1952 p 404 443 Hamilton 2005 p 27 a b Hamilton 2005 p 32 Hamilton 2005 p 35 Hamilton 2005 p 38 Hamilton 2005 p 40 Hamilton 2005 p 84 Hamilton 2005 p 95 Hamilton 2005 p 100 a b Hodgson 2007 p 78 Hamilton 2005 p 111 Hamilton 2005 p 106 Runciman 1952 p 414 Hamilton 2005 p 121 Hamilton 2005 pp 127 128 Hamilton 2005 p 129 Hamilton 2005 pp 129 130 Hamilton 2005 p 139 Runciman 1952 p 404 a b c d e Hamilton 1978 p 173 a b Hamilton 1978 p 165 Hamilton 1978 p 166 Hamilton 2005 p 158 Hamilton 2005 p 161 Runciman 1952 p 440 Hamilton 2005 p 192 Hamilton 2005 pp 192 193 Hamilton 2005 p 194 Hamilton 2005 p 196 Hamilton 2005 p 202 Hamilton 2005 p 203 Hamilton 2005 pp 208 209 Hamilton 2005 pp 206 207 Hamilton 2005 p 220 Hamilton 2005 pp 217 218 Hamilton 2005 p 221 Riley Smith 1973 p 108 Runciman 1952 p 448 Hamilton 2005 p 222 Hamilton 2005 p 227 Hamilton 2005 p 230 Hamilton 2005 p 231 Hamilton 2005 p 172 Runciman 1952 p 463 Runciman 1952 p 465 a b c d e Hamilton 1978 p 172 a b Riley Smith 1973 p 114 Riley Smith 1973 p 115 Hodgson 2007 p 188 Runciman 1954 pp 22 35 a b Hamilton 2005 p 232 Hamilton 2005 p 234 Hodgson 2007 p 189 Bibliography Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maria Comnena Hamilton Bernard 1978 Women in the Crusader States The Queens of Jerusalem In Baker Derek ed Medieval Women Ecclesiastical History Society ISBN 978 0631192602 Hamilton Bernard 2005 The Leper King and His Heirs Baldwin IV and the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521017473 Hodgson Natasha R 2007 Women Crusading and the Holy Land in Historical Narrative Boydell Press ISBN 978 1843833321 Riley Smith Jonathan 1973 The feudal nobility and the kingdom of Jerusalem 1147 1277 Macmillan Runciman Steven 1952 A History of the Crusades The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East 1100 1187 Vol 2 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0241298768 Runciman Steven 1954 A History of the Crusades The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades Vol 3 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 06163 6 Royal titlesVacantTitle last held byTheodora Komnene Queen consort of Jerusalem1167 1174 VacantTitle next held byElisabeth of Bavaria Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maria Komnene Queen of Jerusalem amp oldid 1127595963, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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