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William I of Bures

William of Bures (died before the spring of 1144, or around 1157) was Prince of Galilee from 1119 or 1120 to his death. He was descended from a French noble family which held estates near Paris. William and his brother, Godfrey, were listed among the chief vassals of Joscelin of Courtenay, Prince of Galilee, when their presence in the Holy Land was first recorded in 1115. After Joscelin received the County of Edessa from Baldwin II of Jerusalem in 1119, the king granted the Principality of Galilee (also known as Lordship of Tiberias) to William. He succeeded Eustace Grenier as constable and bailiff (or regent) in 1123. In his latter capacity, he administered the kingdom during the Baldwin II's captivity for more than a year, but his authority was limited.

William of Bures
Prince of Galilee
Reign1119/20–1143/44
1153–c. 1158 (?)
PredecessorJoscelin of Courtenay
Simon of Bures (?)
SuccessorElinand
Walter of Saint Omer (?)
Died1143/44 or c. 1158
SpouseAgnes
Ermengarde of Ibelin (?)
IssueElinand (?)
Eschiva of Bures (?)
FatherHugh of Crécy (?)
ReligionRoman Catholicism

William was the most prominent member of the embassy that Baldwin II sent to France in 1127 to start negotiations about the marriage of his eldest daughter, Melisende, and Fulk V of Anjou. William escorted Fulk from France to Jerusalem in 1129. Fulk, who succeeded Baldwin II in 1131, dismissed his father-in-law's many officials, but William retained the office of constable. Although most historians agree that he died in 1143 or 1144, Hans Eberhard Mayer says that Melisende forced William into exile after Fulk died in 1143, but he regained Galilee from her son, Baldwin III of Jerusalem in 1153.

Early life Edit

Albert of Aix recorded that William's brother, Godfrey, was "of the land of the city of Paris".[1] His statement evidence that William and Godfrey of Bures came from Bures-sur-Yvette.[2] Jonathan Riley-Smith identifies William as a son of Hugh of Crécy, and thus a great-grandson of Guy I of Montlhéry.[3] The descendants of Montlhéry and his wife, Hodierna of Gometz, played preeminent role in the history of the Kingdom of Jerusalem.[4] Both Baldwin of Le Bourcq (who was the second king of Jerusalem) and Joscelin of Courtenay (who was William's predecessor in Galilee) were their grandsons.[4][3] Historian Hans Eberhard Mayer emphasizes that William's ancestry has not been convincingly verified and his relationship to the Montlhéry clan is only an assumption.[4]

Mayer associates William with a William of Buris who was listed among the patrons of the confraternity that Hugh, Abbot of St. Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat, established around 1104.[2] If the identification is valid, William must have spent some time in Southern Italy before coming to the Kingdom of Jerusalem, because the list mentioned the benefactors who had come from Southern Italy.[2] The list, continues Mayer, also evidences that William was born before 1090, because he must have been of age when he joined the confraternity.[2] Riley-Smith writes that William settled in the Holy Land only in 1114, "presumably to expiate some act of violence perpetrated during the unsuccessful rebellion of a league of castellans against the king of France".[5]

The Gesta episcoporum Cennomannensium ("Deeds of the Bishops of Le Mans") recorded that William had come to the Holy Land "as an act of penance".[5][4] His presence in the kingdom was first documented in 1115, when he was listed among the principal vassals of Joscelin of Courteney, Prince of Galilee.[2] Joscelin made a plundering raid against a Bedouin tribe in the spring of 1119.[6] William and his brother accompanied him.[6] Joscelin divided his army to encircle the tribe's camp on the river Yarmouk, making the Bures brothers the commander of one of the corps.[6] When they were approaching the Bedouins' camp, they were ambushed by the Bedouins.[6] William could escape, but Godfrey died fighting most of their retainers were captured.[6]

Prince of Galilee Edit

Baldwin's baron Edit

 
Ruins of the crusaders' castle at Tiberias, the seat of the Principality of Galilee
 
The crusader states in 1135

Baldwin II of Jerusalem gave the County of Edessa to Joscelin in August or September 1119.[7][8] Before 15 January 1120, the king granted Joscelin's former principality to William,[9][10][2] who thus seized one of the largest fiefs in the kingdom.[4] William was one of the four or five secular lords to attend the Council of Nablus on 16 January 1120.[11] The council confirmed the right of the clergy to control the collection of the tithes and ordered the persecution of sexual misdemeneanours.[12][13] William donated estates in Lajjun and near Tiberias to the hospital of the Abbey of St. Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat on 1 February 1121.[14]

Balak ibn Bahram, the Artuqid ruler of Suruç and Mardin, captured Baldwin II on 18 April 1123.[15] The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Warmund of Picquigny, convoked an assembly which elected Eustace Grenier constable and bailiff to administer the kingdom, but Grenier died on 15 May or June.[16][17] The council again assembled and appointed William to both offices.[18] Meanwhile, a Venetian fleet had landed at the Holy Land, carrying 15,000 soldiers.[19] The patriarch, William and Pagan, the chancellor of Jerusalem, concluded a treaty with the Doge of Venice, Domenico Michiel on behalf of the king.[18][17] In accordance with Baldwin's previous promises to the Venetians, the treaty—the so-called Pactum Warmundi—granted privileges to them in both the Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Principality of Antioch in exchange for their assistance to besiege either Tyre or Ascalon.[17][20] The barons of the realm could not decide which town should be attacked, thus their debate was settled by lot in favor of Tyre.[21]

The crusaders and the Venetians laid siege to Tyre on 16 February 1124.[21] Patriarch Warmund was acknowledged as the supreme commander of the army.[22] The defenders of the town urged Toghtekin, Atabeg of Damascus, to attack the crusaders, but he only marched as far as Banyas.[23] The patriarch appointed William and Pons, Count of Tripoli, to launch a military expedition against Toghtekin, but he avoided any engagements and returned to Damascus.[23][24] The crusaders captured Tyre on 7 or 8 July.[21]

Baldwin II won his freedom in late August 1124, but he returned to Jerusalem only on 3 April 1125.[24][25] He had not fathered a son and decided to give her eldest daughter, Melisende, in marriage to an influential European ruler.[26] After consulting with his barons, he chose Fulk V of Anjou.[27] He appointed William and Guy I Brisebarre to lead an embassy to Anjou and to start negotiations with Fulk.[26][28] William was also authorized to pledge that Fulk could marry Melisende in fifty days after he came to the Holy Land and the marriage would secure his right to succeed Baldwin on the throne.[26]

The embassy departed in the autumn of 1127.[26][20] Fulk accepted the offer and took the Cross in token of his decision to go to the Holy Land at Le Mans on 31 May 1128.[26] William and Brisbarre accompanied Fulk from France to the Kingdom of Jerusalem in the spring of 1129.[29] They landed at Acre in May.[29] Fulk married Melisende before 2 June.[30] In the same year, William donated the village of St Job (at present-day Dayr Ayyub) to the Abbey of St. Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat, but secured the right of his nephew, William (who had become a monk) to the revenues from the leasing out of the estate.[31]

Fulk's supporter Edit

Baldwin II died on 21 August 1131.[32] In accordance with his last will, Fulk and Melisende were jointly crowned on 14 September, but Fulk wanted to secure the government for himself and to reduce his wife to background.[33][34][35] He replaced the castellans of the royal castles with his own retainers from Anjou and marginalized Baldwin II's most barons.[36] In contrast with them, William retained the office of constable during Fulk's reign.[28] He witnessed Fulk's three authentic charters as the first of the secular barons.[37] The king confirmed Willim's donation to the canons of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in 1132.[38] William accompanied Fulk during his unsuccessful campaign against Imad ad-Din Zengi, Atabeg of Mosul, who had laid siege to Montferrand (at present-day Baarin in Syria) in July 1137.[37][39]

Most historians agree that William died between September 1143 and April or May 1144.[28] They base their view on a memorandum that Guy, Abbot of St. Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat, compiled in the spring of 1146.[28] The abbot complained that Robert I, Archbishop of Nazareth, had cunningly installed his chaplain in the abbey's church at Lajjun after the news of Pope Innocent II's death reached the Holy Land (most probably in the spring of 1144).[28] The archbishop also instructed his chaplain to say Mass for William's soul.[28][40] Mayer emphasizes that the memorandum does not prove that William was actually dead, because the document does not refer to his death and a Mass could also be said for the benefit of a living person.[41]

William II Edit

According to a widespread scholarly theory, two rulers of Galilee were named William.[28] However, William of Tyre mentioned only one William when listing the princes of Galilee in his chronicle.[42] Likewise, Walter of Saint Omer, who was Prince of Galilee from 1159 to 1174, regarded unnecessary to clarify which of the two assumed Williams had made the grant to the Holy Sepulchre in 1132 when confirming William's donation.[42] On the other hand, a Willelmus Tiberiadis (or William of Tiberias) witnessed a charter that Constance of Antioch issued at Latakia in 1151.[42] The Principality of Galilee was also known as the Lordship of Tiberias around that time.[28]

Taking into account these documents, Mayer concludes that there was only one Prince William of Galilee and "William II" was actually identical with William I.[42] He proposes that Melisende forced William to leave the Kingdom of Jerusalem shortly after Fulk died in November 1143.[41] According to Mayer, Melisende, who ruled the kingdom for years after her husband's death,[43] gave Galilee to Elinand (whom Mayer supposes to have been related to a former prince, Hugh of Fauquembergues).[44] William, Mayer continues, regained Galilee in 1153, shortly after Fulk and Melisende's son, Baldwin III of Jerusalem, started to rule independently of his mother.[45] William was last mentioned in a charter issued on 4 October 1157.[45]

Family Edit

William had a wife, named Agnes in 1115, but she must have died shortly thereafter, because she was not mentioned in other documents.[46] William and Agnes obviously had no children, because he named his nephews, Elias and William as his heirs in 1126.[38] His nephew and namesake became a monk at the Abbey of St. Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat in or before 1129.[38] William's 1129 charter to the same abbey was witnessed by Ralph of Issy.[38] Ralph and a Simon were identified as William's nephews in 1132.[38] Based on the four documents, Mayer concludes that William disinherited Elias and William in favor of Ralph of Issy and Simon shortly after he returned from France in 1129.[38] Historian Martin Rheinheimer associates Elias with Elinand who succeeded William in 1144.[42] In contrast with both Mayer and Rheinheimer, historian Malcolm Barber says that Elinand was William's son.[47]

Mayer proposes that Ermengarde of Ibelin (a sister of Hugh of Ibelin) who was styled as the lady of Tiberias in 1155 was William's second wife.[42] Historian Pirie-Gordon identified her as Elinand's wife, while Rheinheimer wrote that she was the wife of William II of Bures (William's nephew),[48] but Peter W. Edbury accepts Mayer's view.[49] Mayer also says that Ermengarde gave birth to Eschiva of Bures who was William's heiress in 1158.[50]

References Edit

  1. ^ Mayer 1977, p. 299.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Mayer 1994, p. 157.
  3. ^ a b Riley-Smith 1997, pp. 169–170, Appendix II (B: The Montlhery Clan).
  4. ^ a b c d e Mayer 1989, p. 15.
  5. ^ a b Riley-Smith 1997, p. 172.
  6. ^ a b c d e Runciman 1989, p. 147.
  7. ^ Barber 2012, pp. 128, 360.
  8. ^ Lock 2006, pp. 33–34.
  9. ^ Runciman 1989, p. 156.
  10. ^ Riley-Smith 1997, pp. 174–175.
  11. ^ Barber 2012, pp. 129–130.
  12. ^ Lock 2006, p. 34.
  13. ^ Barber 2012, pp. 130–131.
  14. ^ Pringle 1993, pp. 3–4.
  15. ^ Barber 2012, p. 138.
  16. ^ Runciman 1989, pp. 162–163, 166.
  17. ^ a b c Barber 2012, p. 140.
  18. ^ a b Runciman 1989, p. 166.
  19. ^ Barber 2012, pp. 139–140.
  20. ^ a b Lock 2006, p. 37.
  21. ^ a b c Barber 2012, p. 141.
  22. ^ Runciman 1989, p. 169.
  23. ^ a b Runciman 1989, p. 170.
  24. ^ a b Barber 2012, p. 142.
  25. ^ Lock 2006, p. 38.
  26. ^ a b c d e Barber 2012, p. 145.
  27. ^ Barber 2012, pp. 145–146.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h Mayer 1994, p. 158.
  29. ^ a b Runciman 1989, p. 178.
  30. ^ Barber 2012, p. 146.
  31. ^ Pringle 1993, p. 239.
  32. ^ Lock 2006, p. 40.
  33. ^ Lock 2006, p. 41.
  34. ^ Barber 2012, p. 155.
  35. ^ Mayer 1989, p. 1.
  36. ^ Mayer 1989, p. 4.
  37. ^ a b Mayer 1989, p. 12.
  38. ^ a b c d e f Mayer 1989, p. 16.
  39. ^ Lock 2006, p. 43.
  40. ^ Pringle 1993, p. 4.
  41. ^ a b Mayer 1994, pp. 158–159.
  42. ^ a b c d e f Mayer 1994, p. 159.
  43. ^ Barber 2012, p. 174.
  44. ^ Mayer 1994, pp. 159–160.
  45. ^ a b Mayer 1994, p. 160.
  46. ^ Mayer 1994, pp. 161–162.
  47. ^ Barber 2012, p. 177.
  48. ^ Mayer 1994, pp. 162, 165.
  49. ^ Edbury 1997, p. 5.
  50. ^ Mayer 1994, p. 163.

Sources Edit

  • Barber, Malcolm (2012). The Crusader States. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11312-9.
  • Edbury, Peter W. (1997). John of Ibelin and the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-85115-703-0.
  • Lock, Peter (2006). The Routledge Companion to the Crusades. Routledge. ISBN 9-78-0-415-39312-6.
  • Mayer, Hans Eberhard (1977). Bistümer, Klöster und Stifte im Königreich Jerusalem. Hiersemann. ISBN 3-7772-7719-3.
  • Mayer, Hans Eberhard (1989). "Angevins versus Normans: The New Men of King Fulk of Jerusalem". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 133 (1): 1–25. ISSN 0003-049X.
  • Mayer, Hans Eberhard (1994). "The crusader principality of Galilee between Saint-Omer and Bures-sur-Yvette". In Gyselen, R. (ed.). Itinéraires d'Orient: Hommages à Claude Cahen. Groupe pour l'Étude de la Civilisation du Moyen-orient. pp. 157–167. ISBN 978-2-9508266-0-2.
  • Pringle, Denys (1993). The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem: A Corpus: Volume 2, L-Z (excluding Tyre). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-39037-0.
  • Riley-Smith, Jonathan (1997). The First Crusaders, 1095-1131. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-59005-1.
  • 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.
William I of Bures
House of Bures
 Died: 1143/1144
Preceded by Prince of Galilee
1119/1120–1143/1144
Succeeded by
Preceded by Bailiff of Jerusalem
1123–1125
Vacant
Title next held by
Raymond III of Tripoli
Preceded by Constable of Jerusalem
1123–1143/1144
Succeeded by

william, bures, william, bures, died, before, spring, 1144, around, 1157, prince, galilee, from, 1119, 1120, death, descended, from, french, noble, family, which, held, estates, near, paris, william, brother, godfrey, were, listed, among, chief, vassals, josce. William of Bures died before the spring of 1144 or around 1157 was Prince of Galilee from 1119 or 1120 to his death He was descended from a French noble family which held estates near Paris William and his brother Godfrey were listed among the chief vassals of Joscelin of Courtenay Prince of Galilee when their presence in the Holy Land was first recorded in 1115 After Joscelin received the County of Edessa from Baldwin II of Jerusalem in 1119 the king granted the Principality of Galilee also known as Lordship of Tiberias to William He succeeded Eustace Grenier as constable and bailiff or regent in 1123 In his latter capacity he administered the kingdom during the Baldwin II s captivity for more than a year but his authority was limited William of BuresPrince of GalileeReign1119 20 1143 441153 c 1158 PredecessorJoscelin of CourtenaySimon of Bures SuccessorElinandWalter of Saint Omer Died1143 44 or c 1158SpouseAgnesErmengarde of Ibelin IssueElinand Eschiva of Bures FatherHugh of Crecy ReligionRoman CatholicismWilliam was the most prominent member of the embassy that Baldwin II sent to France in 1127 to start negotiations about the marriage of his eldest daughter Melisende and Fulk V of Anjou William escorted Fulk from France to Jerusalem in 1129 Fulk who succeeded Baldwin II in 1131 dismissed his father in law s many officials but William retained the office of constable Although most historians agree that he died in 1143 or 1144 Hans Eberhard Mayer says that Melisende forced William into exile after Fulk died in 1143 but he regained Galilee from her son Baldwin III of Jerusalem in 1153 Contents 1 Early life 2 Prince of Galilee 2 1 Baldwin s baron 2 2 Fulk s supporter 2 3 William II 3 Family 4 References 5 SourcesEarly life EditAlbert of Aix recorded that William s brother Godfrey was of the land of the city of Paris 1 His statement evidence that William and Godfrey of Bures came from Bures sur Yvette 2 Jonathan Riley Smith identifies William as a son of Hugh of Crecy and thus a great grandson of Guy I of Montlhery 3 The descendants of Montlhery and his wife Hodierna of Gometz played preeminent role in the history of the Kingdom of Jerusalem 4 Both Baldwin of Le Bourcq who was the second king of Jerusalem and Joscelin of Courtenay who was William s predecessor in Galilee were their grandsons 4 3 Historian Hans Eberhard Mayer emphasizes that William s ancestry has not been convincingly verified and his relationship to the Montlhery clan is only an assumption 4 Mayer associates William with a William of Buris who was listed among the patrons of the confraternity that Hugh Abbot of St Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat established around 1104 2 If the identification is valid William must have spent some time in Southern Italy before coming to the Kingdom of Jerusalem because the list mentioned the benefactors who had come from Southern Italy 2 The list continues Mayer also evidences that William was born before 1090 because he must have been of age when he joined the confraternity 2 Riley Smith writes that William settled in the Holy Land only in 1114 presumably to expiate some act of violence perpetrated during the unsuccessful rebellion of a league of castellans against the king of France 5 The Gesta episcoporum Cennomannensium Deeds of the Bishops of Le Mans recorded that William had come to the Holy Land as an act of penance 5 4 His presence in the kingdom was first documented in 1115 when he was listed among the principal vassals of Joscelin of Courteney Prince of Galilee 2 Joscelin made a plundering raid against a Bedouin tribe in the spring of 1119 6 William and his brother accompanied him 6 Joscelin divided his army to encircle the tribe s camp on the river Yarmouk making the Bures brothers the commander of one of the corps 6 When they were approaching the Bedouins camp they were ambushed by the Bedouins 6 William could escape but Godfrey died fighting most of their retainers were captured 6 Prince of Galilee EditBaldwin s baron Edit nbsp Ruins of the crusaders castle at Tiberias the seat of the Principality of Galilee nbsp The crusader states in 1135Baldwin II of Jerusalem gave the County of Edessa to Joscelin in August or September 1119 7 8 Before 15 January 1120 the king granted Joscelin s former principality to William 9 10 2 who thus seized one of the largest fiefs in the kingdom 4 William was one of the four or five secular lords to attend the Council of Nablus on 16 January 1120 11 The council confirmed the right of the clergy to control the collection of the tithes and ordered the persecution of sexual misdemeneanours 12 13 William donated estates in Lajjun and near Tiberias to the hospital of the Abbey of St Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat on 1 February 1121 14 Balak ibn Bahram the Artuqid ruler of Suruc and Mardin captured Baldwin II on 18 April 1123 15 The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Warmund of Picquigny convoked an assembly which elected Eustace Grenier constable and bailiff to administer the kingdom but Grenier died on 15 May or June 16 17 The council again assembled and appointed William to both offices 18 Meanwhile a Venetian fleet had landed at the Holy Land carrying 15 000 soldiers 19 The patriarch William and Pagan the chancellor of Jerusalem concluded a treaty with the Doge of Venice Domenico Michiel on behalf of the king 18 17 In accordance with Baldwin s previous promises to the Venetians the treaty the so called Pactum Warmundi granted privileges to them in both the Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Principality of Antioch in exchange for their assistance to besiege either Tyre or Ascalon 17 20 The barons of the realm could not decide which town should be attacked thus their debate was settled by lot in favor of Tyre 21 The crusaders and the Venetians laid siege to Tyre on 16 February 1124 21 Patriarch Warmund was acknowledged as the supreme commander of the army 22 The defenders of the town urged Toghtekin Atabeg of Damascus to attack the crusaders but he only marched as far as Banyas 23 The patriarch appointed William and Pons Count of Tripoli to launch a military expedition against Toghtekin but he avoided any engagements and returned to Damascus 23 24 The crusaders captured Tyre on 7 or 8 July 21 Baldwin II won his freedom in late August 1124 but he returned to Jerusalem only on 3 April 1125 24 25 He had not fathered a son and decided to give her eldest daughter Melisende in marriage to an influential European ruler 26 After consulting with his barons he chose Fulk V of Anjou 27 He appointed William and Guy I Brisebarre to lead an embassy to Anjou and to start negotiations with Fulk 26 28 William was also authorized to pledge that Fulk could marry Melisende in fifty days after he came to the Holy Land and the marriage would secure his right to succeed Baldwin on the throne 26 The embassy departed in the autumn of 1127 26 20 Fulk accepted the offer and took the Cross in token of his decision to go to the Holy Land at Le Mans on 31 May 1128 26 William and Brisbarre accompanied Fulk from France to the Kingdom of Jerusalem in the spring of 1129 29 They landed at Acre in May 29 Fulk married Melisende before 2 June 30 In the same year William donated the village of St Job at present day Dayr Ayyub to the Abbey of St Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat but secured the right of his nephew William who had become a monk to the revenues from the leasing out of the estate 31 Fulk s supporter Edit Baldwin II died on 21 August 1131 32 In accordance with his last will Fulk and Melisende were jointly crowned on 14 September but Fulk wanted to secure the government for himself and to reduce his wife to background 33 34 35 He replaced the castellans of the royal castles with his own retainers from Anjou and marginalized Baldwin II s most barons 36 In contrast with them William retained the office of constable during Fulk s reign 28 He witnessed Fulk s three authentic charters as the first of the secular barons 37 The king confirmed Willim s donation to the canons of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in 1132 38 William accompanied Fulk during his unsuccessful campaign against Imad ad Din Zengi Atabeg of Mosul who had laid siege to Montferrand at present day Baarin in Syria in July 1137 37 39 Most historians agree that William died between September 1143 and April or May 1144 28 They base their view on a memorandum that Guy Abbot of St Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat compiled in the spring of 1146 28 The abbot complained that Robert I Archbishop of Nazareth had cunningly installed his chaplain in the abbey s church at Lajjun after the news of Pope Innocent II s death reached the Holy Land most probably in the spring of 1144 28 The archbishop also instructed his chaplain to say Mass for William s soul 28 40 Mayer emphasizes that the memorandum does not prove that William was actually dead because the document does not refer to his death and a Mass could also be said for the benefit of a living person 41 William II Edit Main article William II of Bures According to a widespread scholarly theory two rulers of Galilee were named William 28 However William of Tyre mentioned only one William when listing the princes of Galilee in his chronicle 42 Likewise Walter of Saint Omer who was Prince of Galilee from 1159 to 1174 regarded unnecessary to clarify which of the two assumed Williams had made the grant to the Holy Sepulchre in 1132 when confirming William s donation 42 On the other hand a Willelmus Tiberiadis or William of Tiberias witnessed a charter that Constance of Antioch issued at Latakia in 1151 42 The Principality of Galilee was also known as the Lordship of Tiberias around that time 28 Taking into account these documents Mayer concludes that there was only one Prince William of Galilee and William II was actually identical with William I 42 He proposes that Melisende forced William to leave the Kingdom of Jerusalem shortly after Fulk died in November 1143 41 According to Mayer Melisende who ruled the kingdom for years after her husband s death 43 gave Galilee to Elinand whom Mayer supposes to have been related to a former prince Hugh of Fauquembergues 44 William Mayer continues regained Galilee in 1153 shortly after Fulk and Melisende s son Baldwin III of Jerusalem started to rule independently of his mother 45 William was last mentioned in a charter issued on 4 October 1157 45 Family EditWilliam had a wife named Agnes in 1115 but she must have died shortly thereafter because she was not mentioned in other documents 46 William and Agnes obviously had no children because he named his nephews Elias and William as his heirs in 1126 38 His nephew and namesake became a monk at the Abbey of St Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat in or before 1129 38 William s 1129 charter to the same abbey was witnessed by Ralph of Issy 38 Ralph and a Simon were identified as William s nephews in 1132 38 Based on the four documents Mayer concludes that William disinherited Elias and William in favor of Ralph of Issy and Simon shortly after he returned from France in 1129 38 Historian Martin Rheinheimer associates Elias with Elinand who succeeded William in 1144 42 In contrast with both Mayer and Rheinheimer historian Malcolm Barber says that Elinand was William s son 47 Mayer proposes that Ermengarde of Ibelin a sister of Hugh of Ibelin who was styled as the lady of Tiberias in 1155 was William s second wife 42 Historian Pirie Gordon identified her as Elinand s wife while Rheinheimer wrote that she was the wife of William II of Bures William s nephew 48 but Peter W Edbury accepts Mayer s view 49 Mayer also says that Ermengarde gave birth to Eschiva of Bures who was William s heiress in 1158 50 References Edit Mayer 1977 p 299 a b c d e f Mayer 1994 p 157 a b Riley Smith 1997 pp 169 170 Appendix II B The Montlhery Clan a b c d e Mayer 1989 p 15 a b Riley Smith 1997 p 172 a b c d e Runciman 1989 p 147 Barber 2012 pp 128 360 Lock 2006 pp 33 34 Runciman 1989 p 156 Riley Smith 1997 pp 174 175 Barber 2012 pp 129 130 Lock 2006 p 34 Barber 2012 pp 130 131 Pringle 1993 pp 3 4 Barber 2012 p 138 Runciman 1989 pp 162 163 166 a b c Barber 2012 p 140 a b Runciman 1989 p 166 Barber 2012 pp 139 140 a b Lock 2006 p 37 a b c Barber 2012 p 141 Runciman 1989 p 169 a b Runciman 1989 p 170 a b Barber 2012 p 142 Lock 2006 p 38 a b c d e Barber 2012 p 145 Barber 2012 pp 145 146 a b c d e f g h Mayer 1994 p 158 a b Runciman 1989 p 178 Barber 2012 p 146 Pringle 1993 p 239 Lock 2006 p 40 Lock 2006 p 41 Barber 2012 p 155 Mayer 1989 p 1 Mayer 1989 p 4 a b Mayer 1989 p 12 a b c d e f Mayer 1989 p 16 Lock 2006 p 43 Pringle 1993 p 4 a b Mayer 1994 pp 158 159 a b c d e f Mayer 1994 p 159 Barber 2012 p 174 Mayer 1994 pp 159 160 a b Mayer 1994 p 160 Mayer 1994 pp 161 162 Barber 2012 p 177 Mayer 1994 pp 162 165 Edbury 1997 p 5 Mayer 1994 p 163 Sources EditBarber Malcolm 2012 The Crusader States Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11312 9 Edbury Peter W 1997 John of Ibelin and the Kingdom of Jerusalem The Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 703 0 Lock Peter 2006 The Routledge Companion to the Crusades Routledge ISBN 9 78 0 415 39312 6 Mayer Hans Eberhard 1977 Bistumer Kloster und Stifte im Konigreich Jerusalem Hiersemann ISBN 3 7772 7719 3 Mayer Hans Eberhard 1989 Angevins versus Normans The New Men of King Fulk of Jerusalem Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 133 1 1 25 ISSN 0003 049X Mayer Hans Eberhard 1994 The crusader principality of Galilee between Saint Omer and Bures sur Yvette In Gyselen R ed Itineraires d Orient Hommages a Claude Cahen Groupe pour l Etude de la Civilisation du Moyen orient pp 157 167 ISBN 978 2 9508266 0 2 Pringle Denys 1993 The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem A Corpus Volume 2 L Z excluding Tyre Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 39037 0 Riley Smith Jonathan 1997 The First Crusaders 1095 1131 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 59005 1 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 William I of BuresHouse of Bures Died 1143 1144Preceded byJoscelin of Courtenay Prince of Galilee1119 1120 1143 1144 Succeeded byElinandPreceded byEustace Grenier Bailiff of Jerusalem1123 1125 VacantTitle next held byRaymond III of TripoliPreceded byEustace Grenier Constable of Jerusalem1123 1143 1144 Succeeded byManasses of Hierges Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William I of Bures amp oldid 1151219933, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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