Guy of Lusignan
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Guy of Lusignan (Template:Circa 1150 – 1194) was king of Jerusalem, first as the husband and co-ruler of Queen Sibylla from 1186 to 1190, then as disputed ruler from 1190 to 1192. He was also lord of Cyprus from 1192 to 1194. As king, Guy was highly unpopular amongst the nobles of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, and is often blamed for the fall of the kingdom to Saladin.
A Frankish Poitevin knight, Guy was the youngest son of Hugh VIII of Lusignan and the younger brother of Aimery of Lusignan. After killing Patrick, 1st Earl of Salisbury, in a failed attempt to kidnap Eleanor of Aquitaine, he was banished from Poitou. After arriving in the Holy Land at an unknown date from 1173 to 1180, Guy was hastily married to Sibylla, the sister of Baldwin IV of Jerusalem, in 1180 to prevent a political coup. As Baldwin's health deteriorated due to his leprosy, he appointed Guy as regent in 1183. However, Guy proved to be unpopular and incompetent as a leader, and Baldwin IV resumed power later that year. He stripped Guy of his inheritance, naming Baldwin V, Sibylla's son by her first husband William, as his co-king and eventual successor instead. Baldwin IV died in 1185, followed shortly by the sickly Baldwin V in 1186, leading to the succession of Sibylla. Sibylla was told to annul her marriage to Guy in order to ascend to the throne on the condition that she would be allowed to pick her next husband, but astonished the court by choosing to remarry and crown Guy. Guy's reign was marked by increased hostilities with the Ayyubids, ruled by Saladin, culminating in the Battle of Hattin in July 1187—during which Guy was captured—and the fall of Jerusalem itself three months later.
Following a year of imprisonment in Damascus, Guy was released by Saladin and reunited with his wife. After being denied entry to Tyre, one of the last crusader strongholds, by Conrad of Montferrat, Guy besieged Acre in 1189. The siege, during which Guy's wife and children died during an epidemic, developed into a rallying point for the Third Crusade, led by Philip II of France and Richard I of England. Conrad married Sibylla's half-sister Isabella and entered a bitter conflict with Guy over the kingship of Jerusalem. Despite Richard's support for the widower king, the kingdom's nobility elected Conrad king in 1192, and Richard compensated Guy for the dispossession of his crown by giving him lordship of Cyprus. Conrad was killed by Assassins days after the election; Guy ruled the Kingdom of Cyprus until he died in 1194 when he was succeeded by his brother Aimery.
Early life
Born in around 1150,Template:Efn Guy was a member of the House of Lusignan,Template:Sfn the youngest son of Hugh VIII of Lusignan and his wife, Burgundia of Rancon.Template:Sfn The family's land holdings were in Poitou, which was a part of King Henry II of England's territories within the Kingdom of France.Template:Sfn Both the Lusignans and the Rancons had a long history of involvement in the Crusades, starting with the participation of Guy's great-grandfather Hugh VI of Lusignan at the Battle of Ramla in 1102. Guy's grandfather, Hugh VII of Lusignan,Template:Sfn and maternal uncle, Geoffrey the Poitevin, both took part in the Second Crusade.Template:Sfn Guy's father also came to Jerusalem on a crusade, dying in Muslim captivity in the 1160s after the Battle of Harim.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
On 27 March 1168,Template:Sfn Guy and his brothers ambushed and killed Patrick, 1st Earl of Salisbury and governor of Poitou, who was escorting Eleanor of Aquitaine to Poitiers.Template:Sfn They captured Patrick's nephew William the Marshal, then a knight-errant serving in his uncle's household, and allowed Eleanor to pay for his freedom. The brothers were subsequently banished from Poitou.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Guy went to Jerusalem at some date between 1173 and 1180,Template:Sfn initially either as a pilgrim or Crusader. He also may have arrived with the French Crusaders of 1179.Template:Sfn In 1174, his older brother Aimery married Eschiva, daughter of the powerful nobleman Baldwin of Ibelin, and entered court circles.Template:Sfn Aimery also obtained the support of King Baldwin IV and of his mother Agnes of Courtenay, and he was appointed Agnes's Constable in Jaffa and later Constable of the Kingdom.Template:Sfn Aimery's success likely facilitated Guy's social and political advancement whenever he arrived. However, as King Baldwin had leprosy, he was not expected to live much longer, making the kingdom's succession uncertain.Template:Sfn
Marriage and countship

During the Holy Week in 1180, Raymond III of Tripoli and Bohemond III of Antioch, two of the most powerful men in the kingdom, were preparing to invade Jerusalem.Template:Sfn The historian Bernard Hamilton believed that they wished to force King Baldwin to have his sister, Sibylla, marry Baldwin of Ibelin, Aimery of Lusignan's father-in-law, and then to abdicate. They would therefore remove the king's mother, Agnes, from power and promote a local noble to the throne instead of a foreigner.Template:Sfn Guy and Sibylla were hastily married at Eastertide to prevent this coup.Template:Sfn The ceremony was noticeably hurried; the wedding was canonically invalid and there was no public notice.Template:Sfn
From 1180, Guy held Jaffa and Ascsalon alongside SibyllaTemplate:Sfn and had four daughters with her.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Their marriage split the nobles into two factions: One faction supporting Guy primarily composed of Sibylla's maternal kin, and one faction opposing him, composed primarily of Sibylla's paternal kin.Template:Sfn In order to prevent the opposing party from setting up a rival claimant, King Baldwin took his mother's advice and, in October 1180, betrothed his half-sister Isabella, the stepdaughter of Baldwin of Ibelin's brother Balian, to Humphrey IV of Toron.Template:Sfn From March 1181, both Guy and Sibylla were associated with Baldwin IV in public acts such as charters.Template:Sfn
Baldwin IV's leprosy worsened quickly; by 1183, he became blind and could no longer walk unsupported or use his hands.Template:Sfn Having developed a deadly fever, Baldwin summoned the High Court to his bedside in June and made Guy regent.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Since Guy was next in line to the throneTemplate:Sfn and Baldwin was not expected to survive,Template:Sfn this regency was supposed to be permanent.Template:Sfn The king kept only his royal title and his authority over the city of Jerusalem, but he made Guy swear that he would not crown himself king or alienate parts of the royal demesne as long as Baldwin was alive.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Disinheritance
The powerful nobles of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, namely Raymond III of Tripoli, Bohemond III of Antioch, and the grand masters of the military orders, refused to cooperate with Guy.Template:Sfn Not wanting to anger them, Baldwin failed to give Guy any training in military leadership before making him regent.Template:Sfn Baldwin unexpectedly recovered from his sickness and, now believing Guy to be incompetent and foolish,Template:Sfn returned to Jerusalem to resume power.Template:Sfn Finding that the coastal climate was better for his health, Baldwin offered Jerusalem to Guy in exchange for Tyre. Guy refused, likely because Tyre was more wealthy, leaving Baldwin deeply offended.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The wedding of Sibylla's half-sister, Isabella, and Humphrey IV of Toron was celebrated in Kerak in late 1183. Saladin attacked during the ceremony and laid siege to the castle, hoping to capture the newlyweds.Template:Sfn The defence of the castle and the king's half-sister within it could not be entrusted to Guy, who was not able to effectively command the troops. Although Heraclius, along with the grand masters of the Templars and Hospitallers, tried to mediate in Guy's favor, it did not work; Raymond and Bohemond convinced the king to dismiss Guy from the regency.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Since Guy's removal from power was essentially disinheritance, the nobles discussed the kingdom's succession. They accepted Agnes's proposal that Sibylla's five-year-old son from her first husband, Baldwin V, be crowned co-king. The coronation took place on 20 November, and the boy received the homage of all the barons except for Guy, who was not invited.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Conflicts
Despite his leprosy, Baldwin went with his troops to relieve the siege at Kerak.Template:Sfn Although he was disgraced, Guy still led the men of Jaffa and Ascalon.Template:Sfn After the battle, he went directly to Ascalon and asked Sibylla to join him there; the king wanted to annul Guy's marriage to her, which could not happen if the couple refused to show up in court.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Guy and Sibylla refused to leave Ascalon despite the king's summons, foiling his plan to make them annul their marriage.Template:Sfn

Early in 1184, Baldwin ordered Guy to attend him as a vassal in Jerusalem, but Guy refused to go, citing poor health.Template:Sfn When Baldwin sent for Guy again, Guy insisted that the king should see him in person and deliver his command with his own voice.Template:Sfn Baldwin had himself carried to Ascalon in the company of the High Court, where Guy refused to let him into the city.Template:Sfn The king was then welcomed in Jaffa, where he installed a governor, thereby depriving Guy of half of his county.Template:Sfn
In late 1184,Template:Sfn Guy massacred the Bedouin people of the royal fief of Darum, who were under royal protection and gave Baldwin information about the Egyptians' movements.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, these Bedouin in particular could have also been giving information to Saladin.Template:Sfn The king was very distressed by this,Template:Sfn but he quickly developed another fever, bestowing regency on Raymond of Tripoli.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On his deathbed, the king summoned the High Court to appoint a permanent regent for his nephew, Baldwin V, and Raymond was chosen;Template:Sfn Baldwin IV died in March 1185.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Accession
Baldwin V died in 1186, only a year after he was crowned.Template:Sfn The High Court of Jerusalem ruled that neither Sibylla nor her half-sister, Isabella, could be crowned without the decision of the pope, the Holy Roman Emperor, and the kings of France and England.Template:Sfn Joscelin of Courtenay, Sibylla's uncle and ally, convinced Raymond of Tripoli to go to Tiberias to prepare for a general assembly and let the Templars bring Baldwin's body to Jerusalem.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Raymond and the nobles went to Nablus, the fief of Balian of Ibelin.Template:Sfn According to the chroniclers Arnold of Lübeck and Ibn al-Athir, Raymond tried to become king at the assembly, but was not successful.Template:Sfn Taking advantage of Raymond's absence, Joscelin then garrisoned Acre and Beirut.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Meanwhile, Guy and Sibylla hurried to Jerusalem to attend her son's funeral.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Heraclius, the patriarch of Jerusalem, the grand masters of the Templars and Hospitallers, and Raynald of Châtillon were also present. They decided to offer Sibylla the crown without waiting for the decision of the western monarchs.Template:Sfn Sibylla announced that the kingdom had passed to her by hereditary right,Template:Sfn but the nobles at Nablus did not acknowledge her queenship, claiming that crowning Sibylla would breach their oaths taken at Baldwin IV's deathbed.Template:Sfn They forbade the coronation and sent two abbots to Jerusalem to tell her of their veto.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The city gates were consequently barred before the ceremony to prevent interruption by Raymond's men. Sibylla was then acclaimed queen by the citizens of Jerusalem at Raynald's request.Template:Sfn
However, before she was crowned, Sibylla agreed with oppositional court members that she would annul her marriage with Guy to please them, as long as she was given free choice in her next husband and her children with Guy were declared legitimate.Template:Sfn The leaders of the High Court agreed, and Sibylla was crowned queen regnant. After crowning her, the patriarch gave Sibylla a second crown and asked her to choose a new husband. She shocked the attendees by choosing to remarry Guy, who was unpopular even among her supporters,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and crowning him.Template:Sfn However, there is no mention of Sibylla and Guy being anointed, which was expected at the time.Template:Sfn
Guy's opponents wished to make Humphrey IV of Toron, Raynald's stepson, claim the crown on his wife Isabella's behalf; they believed Sibylla's legitimacy to be dubious since her parents' marriage was annulledTemplate:Sfn and emphasized that Isabella was born after her father was crowned.Template:Sfn However, Humphrey did not want to become king.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He left Nablus at night and rode to Jerusalem to swear fealty to Guy.Template:Sfn Sibylla initially turned him down, but after Humphrey explained his intentions, she led him to the king.Template:Sfn Humphrey swore fealty to Guy,Template:Sfn and most of the nobles followed shortly after, swearing fealty before 1187.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, Raymond of Tripoli returned to Tiberias without paying homage to Guy and Sibylla.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Fall of Jerusalem
Raymond and Saladin
Guy accused Raymond of betrayal and invaded Galilee in October 1186.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He ordered an assessment of Raymond's regency; Raymond replied that he spent all of his royal income on his administration.Template:Sfn The count, with assistance from Saladin, decided to resist Guy. The sultan's troops went to Tiberias, forcing Guy's army to withdraw. Arnold of Lübeck wrote that Raymond promised to let Saladin's army invade the kingdom across Galilee in exchange for the sultan's assistance in seizing the throne.Template:Sfn According to Ibn al-Athir, Saladin offered to make Raymond "an independent king for the Franks one and all".Template:Sfn

Saladin started mustering forces from his entire kingdom in early 1187, preparing to launch a full-scale attack against the Kingdom of Jerusalem. The nobles asked Guy to seek reconciliation with Raymond; Archbishop Joscius of Tyre, Reginald of Sidon, Balian of Ibelin, and the masters of the two military orders, Gerard of Ridefort and Roger de Moulins, were appointed to begin negotiations with him in Tiberias. When Saladin's son, al-Afdal, sent Muzaffar al-Din, lord of Harenc and Edessa, to attack the kingdom, Raymond gave the Syrian troops free entry into Galilee thanks to his treaty with Saladin.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After al-Afdal began attacking Nazareth, the masters of the military orders attacked the invaders despite being seriously outnumbered.Template:Sfn The raiders killed nearly every crusader at the Battle of Cresson on 1 May;Template:Sfn only Ridefort and a handful of knights escaped death.Template:Sfn The Muslims returned to Syria across Galilee, showing off the heads of crusaders killed in battle on the points of their lances.Template:Sfn
Balian of Ibelin arrived at Tiberias the following day.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Ernoul, Balian of Ibelin's squire, wrote that Raymond agreed to pay homage to Guy after the news of the crusaders' crushing defeat astonished him.Template:Sfn According to Ibn al-Athir, however, Raymond only agreed after his vassals threatened him with insubordination and the prelates threatened to excommunicate him and annul his marriage to Eschiva of Bures, stripping him of Galilee.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Raymond forced the Muslim garrison, which was in Tiberias since his alliance with Saladin, out of the kingdom.Template:Sfn Guy then met Raymond near Jerusalem at Fort St Job. Raymond knelt to Guy in homage, and according to Ernoul, Guy lifted him up and apologized to him for the strange circumstances of his coronation.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Hattin
Template:Main Guy ordered the assembly of the Christian troops at Sepphoris.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Raymond joined the royal troops with the knights from Galilee and Tripoli, leaving his wife in Tiberias with a small garrison. On 2 July 1187, Saladin invaded Galilee and besieged Tiberias; this sparked conflict among the crusaders since Raymond and Gerard of Ridefort created opposite strategies. Stating that the town could resist this siege, Raymond did not want a battle with SaladinTemplate:Sfn and suggested that Guy send envoys to Antioch asking Bohemond III for reinforcements.Template:Sfn However, Gerard and Raynald of Châtillon accused him of cowardice, saying that inactivity would cost the crusaders Jerusalem. Guy was more inclined to accept Raymond's suggestion, but Raynald reminded him of Raymond's alliance with Saladin.Template:Sfn Guy then decided to fight against the sultan and ordered his army to march towards Tiberias.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
After Saladin's troops launched an attack against the rear held by the Templars, the crusaders halted at Maskana, but the local well could not provide enough water for a large army.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The anonymous author of the chronicle Libellus de expugnatione Terrae Sanctae per Saladinum, who participated in the campaign, wrote that Guy decided to stop there against Raymond's advice.Template:Sfn Saladin's troops encircled the crusaders' camp and killed all crusaders who left it in search of water. The crusader army then continued marching towards Tiberias the following day, with Raymond commanding the vanguard and Saladin's troops attacking them.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After Raymond forced the Muslim troops to open a pass, he and the crusaders who had accompanied him (including Reginald of Sidon, Balian of Ibelin, and Joscelin III of Edessa) escaped to Safed and then to Tyre.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The rest of the crusaders were annihilated,Template:Sfn and Saladin captured almost all of the towns of the kingdom over the following month.Template:Sfn Eschiva of Bures surrendered Tiberias to Saladin and joined her husband in Tyre. Most commanders of the Christian army were captured on the battlefield, including Guy and Raynald.Template:Sfn
Capture

The exhausted captives were brought to Saladin's tent, where Guy was given a goblet of iced rose water as a sign of Saladin's generosity, for offering a prisoner food or beverage meant that he would not be killed.Template:Sfn Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani recorded that Raynald drank from the cup after Guy offered him the goblet,Template:Sfn and Saladin pointed out that it was Guy who had offered the goblet to Raynald, not him.Template:Sfn According to Ernoul, however, Raynald refused to drink from the cup that Guy handed to him.Template:Sfn
After calling Raynald to his tent, Saladin accused him of various crimes, including brigandage and blasphemy. According to Imad ad-Din and Ibn al-Athir, Saladin offered Raynald the choice between conversion to Islam or death,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and Raynald flatly refused to convert; Saladin consequently struck and beheaded him on the spot.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Baha ad-Din wrote that Raynald's fate astonished and terrified Guy, but Saladin comforted him, stating "A king does not kill a king, but that man's perfidy and insolence went too far".Template:Sfn
In the months after Hattin, all of the kingdom fell to Saladin except Tyre.Template:Sfn Additionally, Raymond III of Tripoli died in September of that year.Template:Sfn Sibylla went to Ascalon and surrendered the city to Saladin in exchange for Guy's release, but the sultan kept him imprisoned. However, none of these requests for aid were written in Sibylla's name.Template:Sfn Guy was only set free in 1188, and he and Sibylla happily reunited on the island of Arwad near Tortosa.Template:Sfn The couple then went to Antioch and later to Tripoli, gathering troops as they travelled.Template:Sfn
Guy and Conrad
Siege of Acre

Tyre's defender, Conrad of Montferrat, the brother of Sibylla's first husband William, denied sanctuary to Guy and Sibylla,Template:Sfn who camped outside the city walls for months.Template:Sfn Guy then took the initiative, beginning the siege of Acre in anticipation of the arrival of the vanguard of the Third Crusade, but James of Avesnes, Louis III of Thuringia and various other crusaders who came to Jerusalem questioned his claim to the throne.Template:Sfn An epidemic struck the crusaders' camp in 1190, and Queen Sibylla died on 25 July;Template:Sfn her daughters also died just a few days later.Template:Sfn As soon as Sibylla was dead, Conrad challenged Guy for the throne.Template:Sfn Conrad of Montferrat then decided to marry Sibylla's half-sister Isabella.Template:Sfn However, Guy still wanted to be recognized as king.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Conrad and Isabella then returned to Tyre.Template:Sfn
After Philip II of France, who landed at Acre on 20 April 1191, supported Conrad's claim to Jerusalem, Guy, joined by Conrad's opponents (including Humphrey IV of Toron and Bohemond III of Antioch), needed assistance from Richard I of England, who chose to support Guy.Template:Sfn Guy then took the title of "king-elect of Jerusalem" in May.Template:Sfn In 1191, Guy left Acre with a small fleet and various nobles, including his brother, Geoffrey of Lusignan, Humphrey IV of Toron, and Bohemond III of Antioch. He landed in Cyprus to seek support from Richard I of England, whose vassal he had been in Poitou.Template:Sfn When Richard arrived at Acre on 8 June 1191, he supported Guy against Conrad, who had the support of his kinsmen Philip II of France and Leopold V of Austria.Template:Sfn

The crusaders captured Acre on 11 July 1191.Template:Sfn A temporary settlement was then reached, by which Guy was to remain king for the rest of his life, but Conrad would rule Tyre, Beirut and Sidon; Guy would then be succeeded by Conrad and Isabella or their heirs, who would unite the kingdom.Template:Sfn Three days later, Philip returned to France and Richard became the primary commander of the crusaders.Template:Sfn The nobles of the kingdom remained extremely hostile to Guy, with many supporting Conrad instead.Template:Sfn
On 16 April 1192, King Richard held an assembly.Template:Sfn The prelates and the noblemen there unanimously voted for Conrad to become king.Template:Sfn Richard accepted their choice, but feeling a sense of loyalty to Guy, he granted Cyprus to him, which he annexed during the third crusade.Template:Sfn Richard sent his nephew, Count Henry II of Champagne, to tell Conrad about the assembly.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Henry arrived at Tyre about four days later, and it was decided that Isabella and Conrad would be crowned at Acre.Template:Sfn Only days later on 28 April 1192, Conrad was murdered by the Order of Assassins.Template:Sfn The betrothal of Isabella and Henry II of Champagne was announced just two days after Conrad's death,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and the marriage was celebrated on 10 May 1192 in Acre.Template:Sfn
Lord of Cyprus and death

After the agreement, Guy settled in Cyprus by early May 1192.Template:Sfn Contrary to his career in Jerusalem, he proved to be a competent ruler in Cyprus, which he ruled until his death in 1194.Template:Sfn According to Ernoul, by the end of Guy's reign, the treasury of Cyprus was emptied; Guy had granted most landed property on the island to his supporters.Template:Sfn
Guy died around the end of 1194;Template:Sfn the latest surviving document mentioning him as alive is a charter from 18 August.Template:Sfn Since he had no surviving issue, Guy bequeathed Cyprus to his brother Geoffrey. Geoffrey had already returned to Poitou, and Guy's vassals elected his brother Aimery as their new lord instead.Template:Sfn
In popular culture

Guy appears as the main leading character in a tale of Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio, where the censure of a Gascon lady rouses the King of Cyprus from lethargy to take responsibility for his realm.<ref>Decameron, Giovanni Boccaccio (day 1, tale 9)</ref>
In the 2005 movie Kingdom of Heaven, Guy is portrayed as an arrogant, scheming villain (and a Templar) played by Marton Csokas.<ref name="Smith">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Clear
Notes
References
Sources
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Further reading
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