85:. Baldwin of Marash marched with the Antiochenes. However Baldwin’s overlord, Count Joscelin II of Edessa, Leo’s nephew, helped the Armenians defeat the Antiochene army. After the battle, Baldwin convinced Leo to meet him. At the meeting Baldwin seized him and sent him off to Antioch as a prisoner.
129:, has left us a funeral oration in honour of Baldwin which praises him for his military skill, bravery and charm but criticises him for his “innumerable, endless and merciless injuries and blasphemies”. The troubadour
122:
in which the
Christians were defeated. Count Joscelin managed to escape, however Baldwin of Marash died on the field of battle. His body was not recovered.
35:
195:
The
Crusades and the Christian World of the East: Rough Tolerance - Christopher MacEvitt - University of Pennsylvania Press - pages 94-97
110:
from the
Muslims who had conquered the city two years earlier. They entered the city but could not take the citadel before
239:
62:. Baldwin’s fiefdom was in the northern border region of the Crusader states where the population was largely
111:
51:
153:
A History of the
Crusades: Part 2 The Kingdom of Jerusalem - Steven Runciman (Penguin) - pages 201-202
106:
In
October 1146, Baldwin accompanied Joscelin on an expedition attempting to recapture the city of
70:
162:
A History of the
Crusades: Part 2 The Kingdom of Jerusalem - Steven Runciman (Penguin) - page 240
43:
114:
surrounded Edessa with a large force. In a desperate situation
Baldwin and Joscelin undertook a
119:
244:
209:
Beech, George T. (1996). "The
Crusader Lordship of Marash in Armenian Cilicia, 1104–1149".
8:
137:, when he asks God to "conduct the count to His washing-place and lay his soul to rest".
89:
39:
59:
218:
126:
78:
28:
24:
222:
233:
92:
74:
77:
from
Baldwin of Marash. Sarventikar was a fortress on the slopes of the
63:
130:
100:
81:. In 1136 Raymond of Antioch attacked Leo I’s Armenian Kingdom in
82:
20:
118:
at night. The following day Nur ad-Din caught up with them and
115:
107:
96:
55:
47:
178:(or Tales of the Undead): Who Was the Count in Marcabru's
58:(modern KahramanmaraĹź) and the strategic fortress of
186:(Manchester University Press, 2001), pp. 133–149.
231:
133:may refer to Baldwin in the final stanza of his
38:says that Baldwin was the brother of Prince
184:The Second Crusade: Scope and Consequences
182:?", in Jonathan Phillips and Martin Hoch,
170:
168:
174:Linda Paterson, "Syria, Poitou and the
165:
232:
208:
13:
202:
14:
256:
189:
156:
147:
125:Baldwin's Armenian confessor,
42:and therefore the son of Duke
1:
140:
112:Nur ad-Din, atabeg of Aleppo
99:but the city was retaken by
54:. He controlled the city of
52:Joscelin II, Count of Edessa
7:
103:forces the following year.
10:
261:
240:Christians of the Crusades
223:10.1484/j.viator.2.301121
71:Leo I, Prince of Armenia
46:. Baldwin was the chief
44:William IX of Aquitaine
31:from at least 1136.
88:That same year the
40:Raymond of Antioch
36:Gregory the Priest
23:baron in northern
19:(died 1146) was a
95:briefly captured
17:Baldwin of Marash
252:
226:
196:
193:
187:
172:
163:
160:
154:
151:
135:Vers del lavador
79:Amanus Mountains
260:
259:
255:
254:
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230:
229:
205:
203:Further reading
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199:
194:
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180:Vers de lavador
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166:
161:
157:
152:
148:
143:
120:a battle ensued
34:The chronicler
12:
11:
5:
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164:
155:
145:
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29:lord of Marash
9:
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105:
87:
68:
66:Christians.
33:
16:
15:
245:1146 deaths
176:Reconquista
93:Danishmends
75:Sarventikar
234:Categories
141:References
217:: 35–52.
69:In 1135,
131:Marcabru
101:Crusader
90:Turkoman
64:Armenian
21:Crusader
127:Barsegh
83:Cilicia
73:seized
211:Viator
116:sortie
108:Edessa
97:Marash
60:Kaysun
56:Marash
48:vassal
27:, the
25:Syria
219:doi
50:of
236::
215:27
213:.
167:^
225:.
221::
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