• service of his cousin Count Baldwin II of Edessa (in the army of Godfrey of Bouillon), who invested him with the lordship of Turbessel. Later Joscelin served...
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  • Thumbnail for Joscelin II, Count of Edessa
    Joscelin II (died 1159) was the fourth and last ruling count of Edessa. He was son of his predecessor, Joscelin I, and Beatrice, daughter of Constantine...
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  • Thumbnail for County of Edessa
    The County of Edessa passed to his cousin Baldwin of Bourcq. He was joined by Joscelin of Courtenay, who became lord of the fortress of Turbessel on...
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  • Joscelin III (1139 – after 1190) was the titular count of Edessa, who during his lifetime managed to amass enough land to establish a lordship in the Kingdom...
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  • Joscelin of Courtenay may refer to: Joscelin I, Lord of Courtenay (died after 1065) Joscelin I, Count of Edessa (died 1131), son of prec. Joscelin II,...
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  • de Château-Landon, married c.1060 to Joscelin I, Lord of Courtenay; his famous son was Joscelin I, Count of Edessa by a different partner. Geoffrey III...
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  • Jocelyn (redirect from Joscelin)
    surgery Joscelin, Bishop of Paris, 9th-century French cleric Joscelin I, Count of Edessa (died 1131), Crusader lord Joscelin II, Count of Edessa (died 1159)...
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  • Hodierne of Courtenay, married to Geoffroy II, Seigneur of Joinville Miles, Seigneur of Courtenay, married Ermengarde of Nevers Joscelin I, Count of Edessa and...
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  • of Courtenay. Mother of Joscelin I, Count of Edessa Guy II the Red (d. 1108), lord of Rochefort Beatrice of Rochefort (1069–1117), married Anseau of Garlande...
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  • Thumbnail for Baldwin II of Jerusalem
    Joscelin of Courtenay, lord of Turbessel, in the summer of 1108. Tancred attempted to retain Edessa, but Bernard of Valence, the Latin patriarch of Antioch...
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  • Thumbnail for Siege of Edessa (1144)
    and although Edessa recovered somewhat after the Battle of Azaz in 1125, Joscelin was killed in battle in 1131. His successor Joscelin II was forced...
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  • Thumbnail for House of Courtenay
    son Joscelin, who had three sons: Miles, who was Lord of Courtenay after him; Prince Joscelin, who joined the First Crusade and became Count of Edessa; and...
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  • Thumbnail for Raymond III, Count of Tripoli
    and Bohemond III of Antioch sought to diminish the influence of his mother, Agnes of Courtenay, and her brother, Joscelin III of Edessa, over the government...
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  • besieged the place in which Joscelin I, Count of Edessa, had installed the Jacobite Patriarch of Antioch. Though Joscelin was dying at that time, he was...
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  • Geoffrey the Monk as regent of the county of Edessa for the captured Joscelin of Courtenay. He may have already been the lord of Marash by 1119, when he had...
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  • Thumbnail for Leo I, Prince of Armenia
    with Baldwin of Marash against Leo. But Leo, with the help of Count Joscelin II of Edessa (who was his nephew), drove back the Antiochene army. Triumphant...
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  • Thumbnail for Fulk, King of Jerusalem
    after the death of her father. In 1132, she allied with Pons of Tripoli and Joscelin II of Edessa to prevent Fulk from marching north. Fulk and Pons fought...
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  • of Courtenay, mother of Joscelin I, Count of Edessa Guy II the Red (d. 1108), lord of Rochefort Beatrice of Rochefort (1069–1117), married Anseau of Garlande...
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  • Thumbnail for Crusades
    Crusades (category Medieval history of the Middle East)
    campaigning north of Edessa, along with Joscelin I, Count of Edessa. He was released in August 1024 in return for 80,000 gold pieces and the city of Azaz. In 1129...
    135 KB (17,499 words) - 19:23, 3 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Constantine I, Prince of Armenia
    1118), the wife of Count Joscelin I of Edessa Thoros I, Lord of Armenian Cilicia (? – February 17, 1129 / February 16, 1130) Leo I, Lord of Armenian Cilicia...
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  • Gündoğan, Oğuzeli (category County of Edessa)
    became Count of Edessa in 1098. In 1100, when Godfrey of Bouillon died, Baldwin entrusted the county of Edessa to his cousin Baldwin II, then Joscelin I joined...
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  • Thumbnail for Principality of Antioch
    allies, Prince Raymond of Poitiers and Count Joscelin II of Edessa, sat around playing dice instead of helping John to press the Siege of Shaizar.[citation...
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  • Thumbnail for Harpoot
    William of Tyre wrote that Joscelin I, Count of Edessa (Jocelyn) of Courtenay, and King Baldwin II of Jerusalem were prisoners of Belek Ghazi in Kharput's...
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  • his wife. In 1119, the king travelled to Edessa to install his cousin Joscelin of Courtenay as the new count and to bring his wife and their daughters...
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  • Thumbnail for Amalric of Jerusalem
    Agnes, daughter of Joscelin II of Edessa, had lived in Jerusalem since the western regions of the former crusader County of Edessa were lost in 1150....
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  • of Salerno, who was the regent of the Principality of Antioch. His daughter Maria married Joscelin I, Count of Edessa. Beech 1993, p. 25. Beech, George...
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  • Thumbnail for Vassals of the Kingdom of Jerusalem
    counts became kings of Jerusalem, and the county was bestowed as a royal gift on Joscelin I of Edessa. The County of Tripoli, the nearest of them, is sometimes...
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  • However, Joscelin I, Count of Edessa, was able to seize the chrism and ritual objects necessary for the consecration of a patriarch after the death of Athanasius...
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  • Thumbnail for Nur al-Din Zengi
    take advantage of the situation by reoccupying Edessa in November 1146, led by Joscelin II and Baldwin of Marash, failed utterly, the count fleeing ignominiously...
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  • Thumbnail for 1144
    who has made an alliance with Joscelin II, count of Edessa. In support of the alliance Joscelin marches out of Edessa with a Crusader army down to the...
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