Family Tree Welborn » Renaud de Ch√¢tillon lord of Hebron & Montr√©al (1125-1187)

Données personnelles Renaud de Ch√¢tillon lord of Hebron & Montr√©al 

  • Il est né en l'an 1125 dans Ch√¢tillon-sur-Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France.
  • Il est décédé le 4 juillet 1187 dans Hittin, Near Tiberius, Palestine, ~1097, il avait 62 ans.
  • Alternative: Il est décédé le 4 juillet 1187 dans Hittin, Near Tiberius, Palestine, il avait 62 ans.
  • Un enfant de Heus (Hugo) de Ch√¢tillon et FNU LNU
  • Cette information a été mise à jour pour la dernière fois le 8 octobre 2019.

Famille de Renaud de Châtillon lord of Hebron & Montréal

(1) Il est marié avec Constance de Hauteville.

Ils se sont mariés.


Enfant(s):



(2) Il est marié avec √âtiennette (Est√©f√©nie) de Milly.

Ils se sont mariés.


Enfant(s):



Notes par Renaud de Châtillon lord of Hebron & Montréal


Rénaud de Châtillon, lord of Hebron & Montréal is your 24th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn
your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith, Sr.
her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith
his mother ·Üí William M Lee, Will
her father ·Üí Britton Lee
his father ·Üí William Samuel Lee
his father ·Üí Lemuel Lee
his father ·Üí Mary Lee
his mother ·Üí Ann Allen
her mother ·Üí Elizabeth Agnes Spann
her mother ·Üí Marmaduke Gannaway
her father ·Üí Edward Gannaway
his father ·Üí Robert Gannaway
his father ·Üí John Gannaway
his father ·Üí Giovanni di Genova
his father ·Üí Ricardo di Genova
his father ·Üí Lenora Di Genova
his mother ·Üí Ginevra de' Medici
her mother ·Üí Costanza di Niccolò Cavalcanti
her mother ·Üí Niccolò Malaspina, marquis of Verrucola
her father ·Üí Isnardo Malaspina, marquis of Verrucola
his father ·Üí Gabriele Malaspina, marchese di Verrucola
his father ·Üí Cubitosa d'Este
his mother ·Üí Azzo VII d'Este, marquis of Ferrara
her father ·Üí Alix de Ch√¢tillon, d'Antochie
his mother ᆒ Rénaud de Châtillon, lord of Hebron & Montréal
her father

https://www.geni.com/people/Renaud-de-Ch√¢tillon-Prince-d-Antioche-Lord-of-Oultrejordain/6000000003051169280

Prince of Antioch Rénaud de Châtillon Princeps d'Antiochae (de Châtillon), Lord d'Oultrejordain
Spanish: Dn. Reinaldo Ch√¢tillon, Lord d'Oultrejordain, Croatian: gospodar Hebrona i Montreala Rajnold Chatillon, Lord d'Oultrejordain
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1125
Ch√¢tillon-sur-Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France
Death:
July 04, 1187 (62)
Hittin, Near Tiberius, Palestine, ~1097
Immediate Family:
Son of Herve II. Chatillon
Husband of Constance Chatillon, princess of Antioch and Étiennette (Estéfénie) de Milly, comtesse de Milly
Father of Inês - Agn√®s - Anne de Ch√¢tillon, Queen consort of Hungary; Joan (de Chatillon) of Antioch; Renald and Alix de Ch√¢tillon, d'Antochie

***************. old ***************
Rénaud de Châtillon Princeps d'Antiochae, Lord d'Oultrejordain
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1125
Ch√¢tillon-sur-Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France
Death:
July 4, 1187 (62)
Hittin,Near Tiberius,Palestine, ~1097
Immediate Family:
Son of Heus(Hugo) de Ch√¢tillon, Compte St. Pol and Yolande de Hainaut (van Henegouwen)
Husband of Jonkvrouwe Raoulsdr. de Coucy; Constance de Hauteville, Princess of Antioch and Étiennette (Estéfénie) de Milly, comtesse de Milly
Father of Rudolph I de Cocq van Ch√¢tillon, Heer van Weerdenburg; Inês - Agn√®s - Anne de Ch√¢tillon, Queen consort of Hungary; Joan (de Chatillon) of Antioch and Alix de Ch√¢tillon

https://www.geni.com/people/Renaud-de-Ch√¢tillon-Prince-d-Antioche-Lord-of-Oultrejordain/6000000003051169280

Renaud de Ch√¢tillon, Prince d'Antioche, Lord of Oultrejordain is your 26th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn
your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith, Sr.
her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith
his mother ·Üí William M LEE, Will
her father ·Üí Britton Lee
his father ·Üí William Samuel Lee
his father ·Üí Lemuel Samuel Lee
his father ·Üí Edward Lee, Sr.
his father ·Üí Mary Lee
his mother ·Üí William Bryan, I
her father ·Üí John Smith Bryan
his father ·Üí William Bryan
his father ·Üí Sir Francis Bryan, II, Justicar of Ireland
his father ·Üí Sir Francis Bryan I "The Vicar of Hell", Lord Chief Justice of Ireland
his father ·Üí Margaret Bryan, Lady Bryan
his mother ·Üí Humphrey Bourchier, Sir
her father ·Üí John Bourchier, 1st Baron Berners
his father ·Üí Anne of Gloucester, Countess of Stafford
his mother ·Üí Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester
her father ·Üí Philippa of Hainault, Queen consort of England
his mother ·Üí Jeanne de Valois
her mother ·Üí Marguerite d'Anjou, comtesse d'Anjou et du Maine
her mother ·Üí Mary, Queen of Naples
her mother ᆒ ÁRPÁD(házi) V. István - Stephen V, King of Hungary and Croatia
her father ᆒ Bela Árpádházi, IV
his father ᆒ ÁRPÁD(házi) II. András - Andrew II, King of Hungary
his father ·Üí Inês - Agn√®s - Anne de Ch√¢tillon, Queen consort of Hungary
his mother ·Üí Renaud de Ch√¢tillon, Prince d'Antioche, Lord of Oultrejordain
her father

NOT the son of Hugues (IV) de St Pol and Yolande de Hainaut. His ancestry is obscure and confused.
interesting source: http://www.digplanet.com/wiki/Raynald_of_Ch%C3%A2tillon [BAD LINK]
Reynold de Ch√¢tillon (1)
M, #114112
Last Edited=8 Jun 2003
Child of Reynold de Ch√¢tillon
Agnes de Ch√¢tillon+ (1) d. 1184
Forr√°s / Source:
http://www.thepeerage.com/p11412.htm#i114112

Wikipedia:
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaud_de_Ch√¢tillon
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raynald_of_Ch√¢tillon
Raynald of Ch√¢tillon
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Raynald of Châtillon tortures Patriarch Aimery of Antioch (From MS of William of Tyre's Historia and Old French Continuation, painted in Acre, 13th century Bibliothèque nationale de France.)
Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynald, Reynold, Renald, or Reginald; French: Renaud de Ch√¢tillon, old French: Reynaud de Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. He ruled as Prince of Antioch from 1153 to 1160 and through his second marriage became Lord of Oultrejordain. He was a controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond.
Contents
[show]
* 1 Background
* 2 Rise to prominence
* 3 Capture and execution
* 4 Personal life
* 5 In Media
* 6 Sources
* 7 References
[edit] Background
Raynald's origins are obscure; Du Cange believed he was from Châtillon-sur-Marne[1], but according to Jean Richard, he was a son of Hervé II of Donzy, and he inherited Châtillon-sur-Loing sometime before joining the Second Crusade in 1147. In the east, he entered the service of Constance of Antioch, whose first husband had died in 1149. She married Raynald in secret in 1153, without consulting her first cousin and liege lord, Baldwin III of Jerusalem. Neither King Baldwin nor Aimery of Limoges, the Latin Patriarch of Antioch, approved of Constance's choice of a husband of such low birth.
In 1156 Raynald claimed that the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus had reneged on his promise to pay Raynald a sum of money, and vowed to attack the island of Cyprus in revenge. When the Latin Patriarch of Antioch refused to finance this expedition, Raynald had the Patriarch seized, stripped naked, covered in honey, and left in the burning sun on top of the citadel. When the Patriarch was released, he collapsed in exhaustion and agreed to finance Raynald's expedition against Cyprus. Raynald's forces attacked Cyprus, ravaging the island and pillaging its inhabitants.
The Emperor Manuel I Comnenus raised an army and began a march into Syria. Faced with a much larger and more powerful force, Raynald was forced to grovel, barefoot and shabby, before the emperor's throne for forgiveness. In 1159 Raynald was forced to pay homage to Manuel as punishment for his attack, promising to accept a Greek Patriarch in Antioch. When Manuel came to Antioch later that year to meet with Baldwin III, King of Jerusalem, Raynald was forced to lead Manuel's horse into the city.
Soon after this, in 1160, Raynald was captured by the Muslims during a plundering raid against the Syrian and Armenian peasants of the neighbourhood of Marash. He was confined at Aleppo for the next seventeen years. As the stepfather of the Empress Maria, he was ransomed by Manuel for the extraordinary sum of 120,000 gold dinars (500 kg of gold-worth roughly US$12,500,000 today) in 1176.
[edit] Rise to prominence
Raynald depicted in captivity as part of a statue of Saladin in Damascus, Syria
Raynald served as Baldwin IV's envoy to Manuel and, because his wife Constance had died in 1163, was rewarded with marriage to another wealthy widow, Stephanie, the widow of both Humphrey III of Toron and Miles of Plancy and the heiress of the lordship of Oultrejordain, including the castles Kerak and Montreal to the southeast of the Dead Sea. These fortresses controlled the trade routes between Egypt and Damascus and gave Raynald access to the Red Sea. He became notorious for his wanton cruelty at Kerak, often having his enemies and hostages flung from its castle walls to be dashed to pieces on the rocks below.
In November 1177, at the head of the army of the kingdom, he helped King Baldwin defeat Saladin at the Battle of Montgisard; Saladin narrowly escaped. In 1181 the temptation of the caravans which passed by Kerak proved too strong and, in spite of a truce between Saladin and the king, Raynald began to plunder. Saladin demanded reparations from Baldwin IV, but Baldwin replied that he was unable to control his unruly vassal. As a result, war broke out between Saladin and the Latin kingdom in 1182. In the course of the hostilities, Raynald launched ships on the Red Sea, partly for piracy, but partly as a threat against Mecca and Medina, challenging Islam in its own holy places. His pirates ravaged villages up and down the Red Sea, before being captured by the army of Al-Adil I only a few miles from Medina. Although Raynald's pirates were taken to Cairo and beheaded, Raynald himself escaped to the Moab. Saladin vowed to behead Raynald himself, and at the end of the year Saladin attacked Kerak, during the marriage of Raynald's stepson Humphrey IV of Toron to Isabella of Jerusalem. The siege was raised by Count Raymond III of Tripoli, and Raynald was quiet until 1186.
That year he allied with Sibylla and Guy of Lusignan against Count Raymond, and his influence contributed to the recognition of Guy as king of Jerusalem, although Raymond and the Ibelins were attempting to advance the claim of his stepson Humphrey's wife Princess Isabella. Humphrey remained loyal to his stepfather and Guy.
Later in 1186 Raynald attacked a caravan travelling between Cairo and Damascus, breaking the truce between Saladin and the Crusaders. Saladin sent troops to protect a later caravan (in March 1187) in which his sister was returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca. Later writers (such as the 13th century Old French Continuation of William of Tyre and the Latin Continuation of William of Tyre) conflated these two incidents, claiming erroneously that Saladin's sister, aunt, or even mother, had been taken prisoner, but this is contradicted by Arabic sources, such as Abu Shama and Ibn al-Athir. King Guy chastised Raynald in an attempt to appease Saladin, but Raynald replied that he was lord of his own lands and that he had made no peace with Saladin. Saladin swore that Raynald would be executed if he was ever taken prisoner.
[edit] Capture and execution
Raynald of Ch√¢tillon's death
Guillaume de Tyr, Historia (BNF, Mss.Fr.68, folio 399)
In 1187 Saladin invaded the kingdom, defeating the Crusaders at the Battle of Hattin. The battle left Saladin with many prisoners. Most prominent among these prisoners were Raynald and King Guy, both of whom Saladin ordered brought to his tent. The chronicler Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani, who was present at the scene, relates:
·Äú Saladin invited the king [Guy] to sit beside him, and when Arnat [Raynald] entered in his turn, he seated him next to his king and reminded him of his misdeeds. "How many times have you sworn an oath and violated it? How many times have you signed agreements you have never respected?" Raynald answered through a translator: "Kings have always acted thus. I did nothing more." During this time King Guy was gasping with thirst, his head dangling as though drunk, his face betraying great fright. Saladin spoke reassuring words to him, had cold water brought, and offered it to him. The king drank, then handed what remained to Raynald, who slaked his thirst in turn. The sultan then said to Guy: "You did not ask permission before giving him water. I am therefore not obliged to grant him mercy." After pronouncing these words, the sultan smiled, mounted his horse, and rode off, leaving the captives in terror. He supervised the return of the troops, and then came back to his tent. He ordered Raynald brought there, then advanced before him, sword in hand, and struck him between the neck and the shoulder-blade. When Raynald fell, he cut off his head and dragged the body by its feet to the king, who began to tremble. Seeing him thus upset, Saladin said to him in a reassuring tone: "This man was killed only because of his maleficence and perfidy". ·Äù
King Guy was spared and was taken to Damascus for a time, then allowed to go free.
To a few Christians of his time, Raynald was considered a martyr killed at the hands of the Muslims. However, documentary evidence tends to refute this idealized picture, giving the impression of Raynald as a freebooter and pirate who had little concern for the welfare of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. It could be argued that the successes of the Kingdom were undone in large measure by Raynald's recklessness, which had the effect of provoking needlessly the Muslim states surrounding Outremer.
Saladin's actions ultimately proved to be beneficial to his own interests. By killing Raynald while sparing Guy, the faction struggle in Jerusalem continued. This struggle would later greatly diminish the potency of the Third Crusade.
[edit] Personal life
* Raynald and Constance had two daughters: Agnes de Châtillon, who married King Béla III of Hungary and Jeanne de Châtillon, probably the second wife of Marquis Boniface I of Montferrat.
* From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly, he had two children: a son, Raynald of Ch√¢tillon, who died young, and a daughter, Alix (Alice) de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo VI d'Este.
[edit] In Media
* The Passio Raginaldi principis Antiochae, an account of Raynald's death, was written by Peter of Blois c. 1200.
* Raynald is portrayed in the 1963 Egyptian movie Al Nasser Salah Ad-Din (film).
* A largely fictionalized version of Raynald is played by Brendan Gleeson in the 2005 movie Kingdom of Heaven.
* Raynald is featured as an NPC in the game Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings as one of Saladin's nemeses
* In the novel The Knights of Dark Renown (1969), by author, Graham Shelby, Raynald is depicted as the malevolent 'Red Wolf of Kerak'.
* Appears as a NPC in the computer game "Baldur's Gate 2", in the Bridge District of the city of Amn.
* In the historical Knights Templar Trilogy by the Swedish author Jan Guillou, Raynald is depicted as a scheming, incompetent and selfish villain accelerating the loss of the Holy Land to Saladin.
[edit] Sources
* Hamilton, Bernard, "The Elephant of Christ: Reynald of Ch√¢tillon", Studies in Church History 15 (Oxford, 1978), pp. 97·Äì108.
* Hamilton, Bernard, The Leper King and His Heirs, 2000.
* Hillenbrand, Carole, "Some reflections on the imprisonment of Reynald of Ch√¢tillon", in Texts, Documents and Artefacts: Islamic Studies in Honour of D.S. Richards, ed. C.F. Robinson, Leiden, 2003.
* Maalouf, Amin, Crusades Through Arab Eyes, 1985.
* Peter of Blois Petri Blesensis tractatus duo: Passio Raginaldi principis Antiochie, Conquestio de dilatione vie Ierosolimitane, ed. R.B.C Huygens, in Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaevalis vol. CXCIV, 2002.
* Richard, Jean, "Aux origines d'un grand lignage: des palladii Renaud de Ch√¢tillon", in Media in Francia: Recueil de m√©langes offert à Karl Ferdinand Werner, 1989.
* Runciman, Steven, A History of the Crusades: Volume 2, The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East (1952)
[edit] References
1. ^ Du Cange, Les Familles d'Outremer, ed. E. G. Rey (1869), p. 191
* This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
Preceded by
Raymond and Constance Prince of Antioch
1153·Äì1160 Succeeded by
Constance
[hide]
v ·Ä¢ d ·Ä¢ e
Princes of the Principality of Antioch
Reigning Princes
(1098·Äì1268)

Bohemond I ¬âˆ‘ Tancred (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond II ¬âˆ‘ Roger (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Baldwin (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Constance ¬âˆ‘ Fulk (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Raymond I (by marriage) ¬âˆ‘ Raynald (by marriage) ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond III ¬âˆ‘ Raymond II (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond IV ¬âˆ‘ Raymond-Roupen ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond IV (restored) ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond V ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond VI

Armoiries Bohémond VI d'Antioche.svg
Titular Princes
(1268·Äì1457)

Bohemond VI ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond VII ¬âˆ‘ Lucia ¬âˆ‘ Philip ¬âˆ‘ Marguerite ¬âˆ‘ John I ¬âˆ‘ John II ¬âˆ‘ John III
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raynald_of_Ch%C3%A2tillon"
Categories: Princes of Antioch | Christians of the Second Crusade | French knights | 1120s births | 1187 deaths | People executed by decapitation | French people executed abroad
Hidden categories: Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
* This page was last modified on 10 May 2010 at 14:46.

Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynaud, Renaud, Reynald, Reynold, Renald or Reginald of Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. He ruled as Prince of Antioch from 1153 to 1160 and through his second marriage became Lord of Oultrejordain. He was a controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond.
Raynald and Constance had one daughter: Agnes de Châtillon, who married king Béla III of Hungary
From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly, he had two children: a son, Raynald of Ch√¢tillon, who died young, and a daughter, Alix (Alice) de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo VI d'Este.

Raynald of Chatillon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynaud, Renaud, Reynald, Reynold, Renald or Reginald of Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. He ruled as Prince of Antioch from 1153 to 1160 and through his second marriage became Lord of Oultrejordain. He was a controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond.
Background
Raynald's origins are obscure; Du Cange believed he was from Châtillon-sur-Marne, but according to Jean Richard, he was a son of Hervé II of Donzy, and he inherited Châtillon-sur-Loing sometime before joining the Second Crusade in 1147. Other sources, however, say he was a second son of Henri I de Châtillon, Lord of Châtillon-sur-Loing, and wife Ermengarde de Montjay, dame and heiress of Montjay[1]. In the east, he entered the service of Constance of Antioch, whose first husband had died in 1149. She married Raynald in secret in 1153, without consulting her first cousin and liege lord, Baldwin III of Jerusalem. Neither King Baldwin nor Aimery of Limoges, the Latin Patriarch of Antioch, approved of Constance's choice of a husband of such low birth.
In 1156 Raynald claimed that the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus had reneged on his promise to pay Raynald a sum of money, and vowed to attack the island of Cyprus in revenge. When the Latin Patriarch of Antioch refused to finance this expedition, Raynald had the Patriarch seized, stripped naked, covered in honey, and left in the burning sun on top of the citadel. When the Patriarch was released, he collapsed in exhaustion and agreed to finance Raynald's expedition against Cyprus. Raynald's forces attacked Cyprus, ravaging the island and pillaging its inhabitants.
The Emperor Manuel I Comnenus raised an army and began a march into Syria. Faced with a much larger and more powerful force, Raynald was forced to grovel, barefoot and shabby, before the emperor's throne for forgiveness. In 1159 Raynald was forced to pay homage to Manuel as punishment for his attack, promising to accept a Greek Patriarch in Antioch. When Manuel came to Antioch later that year to meet with Baldwin III, King of Jerusalem, Raynald was forced to lead Manuel's horse into the city.
Soon after this, in 1160, Raynald was captured by the Muslims during a plundering raid against the Syrian and Armenian peasants of the neighbourhood of Marash. He was confined at Aleppo for the next seventeen years. As the stepfather of the Empress Maria, he was ransomed by Manuel for the extraordinary sum of 120,000 gold dinars (500 kg of gold-worth of 12 500 000 US $ today) in 1176.
[edit]Rise to prominence
Raynald served as Baldwin IV's envoy to Manuel and, because his wife Constance had died in 1163, was rewarded with marriage to another wealthy widow, Stephanie, the widow of both Humphrey III of Toron and Miles of Plancy and the heiress of the lordship of Oultrejordain, including the castles Kerak and Montreal to the southeast of the Dead Sea. These fortresses controlled the trade routes between Egypt and Damascus and gave Raynald access to the Red Sea. He became notorious for his wanton cruelty at Kerak, often having his enemies and hostages flung from its castle walls to be dashed to pieces on the rocks below.
In November 1177, at the head of the army of the kingdom, he helped King Baldwin defeat Saladin at the Battle of Montgisard; Saladin narrowly escaped. In 1181 the temptation of the caravans which passed by Kerak proved too strong and, in spite of a truce between Saladin and the king, Raynald began to plunder. Saladin demanded reparations from Baldwin IV, but Baldwin replied that he was unable to control his unruly vassal. As a result, war broke out between Saladin and the Latin kingdom in 1182. In the course of the hostilities, Raynald launched ships on the Red Sea, partly for piracy, but partly as a threat against Mecca and Medina, challenging Islam in its own holy places. His pirates ravaged villages up and down the Red Sea, before being captured by the army of Al-Adil I only a few miles from Medina. Although Raynald's pirates were taken to Cairo and beheaded, Raynald himself escaped to the Moab. Saladin vowed to behead Raynald himself, and at the end of the year Saladin attacked Kerak, during the marriage of Raynald's stepson Humphrey IV of Toron to Isabella of Jerusalem. The siege was raised by Count Raymond III of Tripoli, and Raynald was quiet until 1186.
That year he allied with Sibylla and Guy of Lusignan against Count Raymond, and his influence contributed to the recognition of Guy as king of Jerusalem, although Raymond and the Ibelins were attempting to advance the claim of his stepson Humphrey's wife Princess Isabella. Humphrey remained loyal to his stepfather and Guy.
Later in 1186 Raynald attacked a caravan travelling between Cairo and Damascus, breaking the truce between Saladin and the Crusaders. Saladin sent troops to protect a later caravan (in March 1187) in which his sister was returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca. Later writers (such as the 13th century Old French Continuation of William of Tyre and the Latin Contination of William of Tyre) conflated these two incidents, claiming erroneously that Saladin's sister, aunt, or even mother, had been taken prisoner, but this is contradicted by Arabic sources, such as Abu Shama and Ibn al-Athir. King Guy chastised Raynald in an attempt to appease Saladin, but Raynald replied that he was lord of his own lands and that he had made no peace with Saladin. Saladin swore that Raynald would be executed if he was ever taken prisoner.
[edit]Raynald's death
In 1187 Saladin invaded the kingdom, defeating the Crusaders at the Battle of Hattin. The battle left Saladin with many prisoners. Most prominent among these prisoners were Raynald and King Guy, both of whom Saladin ordered brought to his tent. The chronicler Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani, who was present at the scene, relates:
·Äú Saladin invited the king [Guy] to sit beside him, and when Arnat [Raynald] entered in his turn, he seated him next to his king and reminded him of his misdeeds. "How many times have you sworn an oath and violated it? How many times have you signed agreements you have never respected?" Raynald answered through a translator: "Kings have always acted thus. I did nothing more." During this time King Guy was gasping with thirst, his head dangling as though drunk, his face betraying great fright. Saladin spoke reassuring words to him, had cold water brought, and offered it to him. The king drank, then handed what remained to Raynald, who slaked his thirst in turn. The sultan then said to Guy: "You did not ask permission before giving him water. I am therefore not obliged to grant him mercy." After pronouncing these words, the sultan smiled, mounted his horse, and rode off, leaving the captives in terror. He supervised the return of the troops, and then came back to his tent. He ordered Raynald brought there, then advanced before him, sword in hand, and struck him between the neck and the shoulder-blade. When Raynald fell, he cut off his head and dragged the body by its feet to the king, who began to tremble. Seeing him thus upset, Saladin said to him in a reassuring tone: "This man was killed only because of his maleficence and perfidy". ·Äù
King Guy was spared and was taken to Damascus for a time, then allowed to go free.
To a few Christians of his time, Raynald was considered a martyr killed at the hands of the Muslims. However, documentary evidence tends to refute this idealized picture, giving the impression of Reynald as a freebooter and pirate who had little concern for the welfare of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. It could be argued that the successes of the Kingdom were undone in large measure by Raynald's recklessness, which had the effect of provoking needlessly the Muslim states surrounding Outremer.
Saladin, however, acted well in accordance with his own interests. He killed Raynald, his bitter enemy, and spared the life of Guy knowing that to kill him was to end the faction struggle in the remnants of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. He kept him in Damascus until he was sure that he would not be able to destroy all of the Kingdom outright. The factional struggle later greatly diminished the potency of the Third Crusade.
[edit]Personal life
Raynald and Constance had one daughter: Agnes de Châtillon, who married king Béla III of Hungary
From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly, he had another daughter: Alix de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo V d'Este. (Perhaps she was a daughter by Constance[2].)
[edit]In Literature and Film
The Passio Raginaldi principis Antiochae, an account of Raynald's death, was written by Peter of Blois c. 1200.
Raynald is portrayed in the 1963 Egyptian movie Al Nasser Salah Ad-Din.
A largely fictionalized version of Raynald is played by Brendan Gleeson in the 2005 movie Kingdom of Heaven.
Raynald is featured as an NPC in the game Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings as one of Saladin's nemeses
In the novel The Knights of Dark Renown (1969), by author, Graham Shelby, Raynald is depicted as the malevolent 'Red Wolf of Kerak'.
Appears as a NPC in the computer game "Baldur's Gate 2", in the Bridge District of the city of Amn.
In the historical Knights Templar Trilogy by the Swedish author Jan Guillou, Raynald is depicted as a scheming, incompetent and selfish villain accelerating the loss of the Holy Land to Saladin.
[edit]Sources
Hamilton, Bernard, "The Elephant of Christ: Reynald of Ch√¢tillon", Studies in Church History 15 (Oxford, 1978), pp. 97-108.
Hamilton, Bernard, The Leper King and His Heirs, 2000.
Maalouf, Amin, Crusades Through Arab Eyes, 1985.
Peter of Blois Petri Blesensis tractatus duo: Passio Raginaldi principis Antiochie, Conquestio de dilatione vie Ierosolimitane, ed. R.B.C Huygens, in Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaevalis vol. CXCIV, 2002.
Richard, Jean, "Aux origines d'un grand lignage: des palladii Renaud de Châtillon", in Media in Francia: Recueil de mélanges offert à Karl Ferdinand Werner, 1989.
Runciman, Steven, A History of the Crusades: Volume 2, The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East (1952)
References
^ web.genealogie
^ web.genealogie
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

Raymond, Prince of Antioch
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raymond of Poitiers (c. 1115 ·Äì June 29, 1149) was Prince of Antioch 1136·Äì1149. He was the younger son of William IX, Duke of Aquitaine and his wife Philippa, Countess of Toulouse, born in the very year that his father the Duke began his infamous liaison with Dangereuse de Chatelherault.
Assumes control
Following the regencies of Baldwin II of Jerusalem (1130-1131) and Fulk of Jerusalem (1131-1136), Raymond assumed control of the principality of Antioch by his marriage in 1136 to the heiress of Bohemund II of Antioch, Constance, a child of ten years of age. The marriage had the blessing of the Patriarch of Antioch, but not of Alice of Antioch, the mother of the bride, who believed that Raymond was intended to be her husband.
The first years of Raymond and Constance's joint rule were spent in conflicts with the Byzantine Emperor John II Comnenus, who had come south partly to recover Cilicia from Leo of Armenia, and to reassert his rights over Antioch. Raymond was forced to pay homage, and even to promise to cede his principality as soon as he was recompensed by a new fief, which John promised to carve out for him in the Muslim territory to the east of Antioch. The expedition of 1138, in which Raymond joined with John, and which was to conquer this territory, naturally proved a failure. Raymond was not anxious to help the emperor to acquire new territories, when their acquisition only meant for him the loss of Antioch. John Comnenus returned unsuccessful to Constantinople, after demanding from Raymond, without response, the surrender of the citadel of Antioch.
[edit]Struggles
There followed a struggle between Raymond and the patriarch. Raymond was annoyed by the homage which he had been forced to pay to the patriarch in 1135 and the dubious validity of the patriarch's election offered a handle for opposition. Eventually Raymond triumphed, and the patriarch was deposed (1139). In 1142 John Comnenus returned to the attack, but Raymond refused to recognize or renew his previous submission, and John, though he ravaged the neighborhood of Antioch, was unable to effect anything against him. When, however Raymond demanded from Manuel, who had succeeded John in 1143, the cession of some of the Cilician towns, he found that he had met his match. Manuel forced him to a humiliating visit to Constantinople, during which he renewed his oath of homage and promised to acknowledge a Greek patriarch.
In the last year of Raymond's life Louis VII and his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine (Raymond's niece) visited Antioch. Raymond sought to prevent Louis from going south to Jerusalem and to induce him to stay in Antioch and help in the conquest of Aleppo and Caesarea. Raymond was also suspected of having an incestuous affair with his beautiful niece Eleanor. According to John of Salisbury, Louis became suspicious of the attention Raymond lavished on Eleanor, and the long conversations they enjoyed. William of Tyre claims that Raymond seduced Eleanor to get revenge on her husband, who refused to aid him in his wars against the Saracens, and that "contrary to [Eleanor's] royal dignity, she disregarded her marriage vows and was unfaithful to her husband." Most modern historians dismiss such rumours, however, pointing out the closeness of Raymond and his niece during her early childhood, and the effulgent Aquitainian manner of behaviour.
Louis hastily left Antioch and Raymond was balked in his plans. In 1149 he was killed in the Battle of Inab during an expedition against Nur ad-Din. He was beheaded by Shirkuh, the uncle of Saladin, and his head was placed in a silver box and sent to the Caliph of Baghdad as a gift.
[edit]Personality and family
Raymond is described by William of Tyre (the main authority for his career) as "a lord of noble descent, of tall and elegant figure, the handsomest of the princes of the earth, a man of charming affability and conversation, open-handed and magnificent beyond measure"; pre-eminent in the use of arms and military experience; litteratorum, licet ipse illiteratus esset, cultor ("although he was himself illiterate, he was a cultivator of literature" - he caused the Chanson des chétifs to be composed); a regular churchman and faithful husband; but headstrong, irascible and unreasonable, with too great a passion for gambling (bk. xiv. c. xxi.). For his career see Rey, in the Revue de l'orient latin, vol. iv.
With Constance, Raymond had three children, a son and heir Bohemund III of Antioch and daughters Maria of Antioch and Philippa of Antioch.
[edit]Sources
Maalouf, Amin. The Crusades Through Arab Eyes, 1984
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynaud, Renaud, Reynald, Reynold, Renald or Reginald of Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. He ruled as Prince of Antioch from 1153 to 1160 and through his second marriage became Lord of Oultrejordain. He was a controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond.
Raynald and Constance had one daughter: Agnes de Châtillon, who married king Béla III of Hungary
From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly, he had two children: a son, Raynald of Ch√¢tillon, who died young, and a daughter, Alix (Alice) de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo VI d'Este.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raynald_of_Ch%C3%A2tillon

Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynald, Reynold, Renald, or Reginald; French: Renaud de Ch√¢tillon, old French: Reynaud de Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. Raynald was an enormously controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond; Muslim writers often took him to be the chief enemy of Islam.[1]

Through marriage he ruled as Prince of Antioch (through his marriage to Princess Constance, granddaughter of Prince Bohemond of Antioch) from 1153 to 1160. During this time he was in conflict with the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus and attacked Cyprus but later was forced to submit to the emperor. Captured by the Muslims in 1161, he was imprisoned in Aleppo for fifteen years. Through his second marriage he became Lord of Oultrejordain in 1177. In the same year, he led the Crusader army that defeated Saladin at the Battle of Montgisard. Later he broke a truce with Saladin, attacking several Muslim caravans and sending pirate ships into the Red Sea towards Mekka and Medina. Captured at the Battle of Hattin, where the Crusaders where decisively defeated, he was executed by Saladin himself. Raynald's origins are obscure; Du Cange believed he was from Châtillon-sur-Loire,[2] but according to Jean Richard, he was a son of Hervé II of Donzy, and he inherited Châtillon-sur-Loing sometime before joining the Second Crusade in 1147. In the east, he entered the service of Constance of Antioch, whose first husband Raymond of Poitiers had died in 1149. She married Raynald in secret in 1153, without consulting her first cousin and liege lord, King Baldwin III of Jerusalem. Neither King Baldwin nor Aimery of Limoges, the Latin Patriarch of Antioch, approved of Constance's choice of a husband of such low birth. With Constance he had a daughter, Agnes of Châtillon, in 1154.
In 1156 Raynald claimed that the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus had reneged on his promise to pay Raynald a sum of money, and vowed to attack the island of Cyprus in revenge. When Patriarch Aimery of Limoges refused to finance this expedition, Raynald had the Patriarch seized, stripped naked, beaten, covered in honey, and left in the burning sun on top of the citadel. When the Patriarch was released, he collapsed in exhaustion and agreed to finance Raynald's expedition against Cyprus. Raynald's forces attacked Cyprus, ravaging the island and pillaging its Christian inhabitants.
The Emperor Manuel I Comnenus raised an army and began a march into Syria. Faced with a much larger and more powerful force, Raynald was forced to grovel, barefoot and shabby, before the emperor's throne for forgiveness. In 1159 Raynald was forced to pay homage to Manuel as punishment for his attack, promising to accept a Greek Patriarch in Antioch. When Manuel came to Antioch later that year to meet with Baldwin III, King of Jerusalem, Raynald was forced to lead Manuel's horse into the city.
Soon after this, in 1161, Raynald was captured by the Muslims while he was engaged in a plundering raid against the Syrian and Armenian peasants of the neighbourhood of Marash. He was confined at Aleppo for the next fifteen years. He was ransomed by his supporters in Jerusalem for the extraordinary sum of 120,000 gold dinars (500 kg of gold) in 1176. By that time, his stepdaughter Maria had become Empress, having married Emperor Manuel I in 1161. His wife Constance had died in 1163, and their daughter Agnes had become queen of Hungary by marriage. In 1174, the thirteen-year-old leper Baldwin IV had become King of Jerusalem. Raynald rose to a powerful position in the kingdom.[1] He served as the king's envoy to Emperor Manuel and was rewarded with marriage to Stephanie, the wealthy widow of both Humphrey III of Toron and Miles of Plancy and the heiress of the lordship of Oultrejordain, including the castles Kerak and Montreal to the southeast of the Dead Sea. These fortresses controlled the trade routes between Egypt and Damascus and gave Raynald access to the Red Sea. He became notorious for his wanton cruelty at Kerak, often having his enemies and hostages flung from its castle walls to be dashed to pieces on the rocks below.
In November 1177, heading the army of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, he helped King Baldwin defeat Saladin at the Battle of Montgisard; Saladin narrowly escaped. In spite of a truce between Saladin and the king negotiated in 1180, Raynald plundered a Muslim pilgrim caravan in 1182.[1] Saladin demanded reparations from Baldwin IV, who replied that he was unable to control his unruly vassal. As a result, war broke out between Saladin and the Latin kingdom in 1182. In the course of the hostilities, Raynald launched ships on the Red Sea, partly for piracy, but partly as a threat against Mecca and Medina, challenging Islam in its own holy places. His pirates ravaged villages up and down the Red Sea, before being captured by the army of Al-Adil I only a few miles from Medina. Although Raynald's pirates were taken to Cairo and beheaded, Raynald himself escaped to the Moab. Saladin vowed to behead Raynald himself, and at the end of the year Saladin attacked Kerak, during the marriage of Raynald's stepson Humphrey IV of Toron to Isabella of Jerusalem, half-sister of King Baldwin IV. The siege was raised by Count Raymond III of Tripoli, and Raynald was quiet until 1186.
That year he allied with Sibylla and Guy of Lusignan against Count Raymond, and his influence contributed to the recognition of Guy as king of Jerusalem, although Raymond and the Ibelins were attempting to advance the claim of his stepson Humphrey's wife Princess Isabella. Humphrey remained loyal to his stepfather and Guy.
In 1185 the Crusaders and Saladin signed another truce for 4 years. In 1186 Raynald attacked a large Muslim caravan travelling between Cairo and Damascus. He took all the merchants and their families prisoner, made a large amount of booty and refused to receive envoys from Saladin demanding compensation. This led directly to the end of the truce.[3] Saladin sent troops to protect a later caravan (in March 1187) in which his sister was returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca. Later writers (such as the 13th century Old French Continuation of William of Tyre and the Latin Continuation of William of Tyre) conflated these two incidents, claiming erroneously that Saladin's sister, aunt, or even mother, had been taken prisoner, but this is contradicted by Arabic sources, such as Abu Shrama and Ibn al-Athir. King Guy chastised Raynald in an attempt to appease Saladin, but Raynald replied that he was lord of his own lands and that he had made no peace with Saladin. Saladin swore that Raynald would be executed if he was ever taken prisoner. In 1187 Saladin invaded the kingdom and decisively defeated the Crusaders at the Battle of Hattin. The battle left Saladin with many prisoners. Most prominent among them were Raynald and King Guy, both of whom Saladin ordered brought to his tent. The chronicler Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani, who was present at the scene, relates:
Saladin invited the king [Guy] to sit beside him, and when Arnat [Raynald] entered in his turn, he seated him next to his king and reminded him of his misdeeds. "How many times have you sworn an oath and violated it? How many times have you signed agreements you have never respected?" Raynald answered through a translator: "Kings have always acted thus. I did nothing more." During this time King Guy was gasping with thirst, his head dangling as though drunk, his face betraying great fright. Saladin spoke reassuring words to him, had cold water brought, and offered it to him. The king drank, then handed what remained to Raynald, who slaked his thirst in turn. The sultan then said to Guy: "You did not ask permission before giving him water. I am therefore not obliged to grant him mercy." After pronouncing these words, the sultan smiled, mounted his horse, and rode off, leaving the captives in terror. He supervised the return of the troops, and then came back to his tent. He ordered Raynald brought there, then advanced before him, sword in hand, and struck him between the neck and the shoulder-blade. When Raynald fell, he cut off his head and dragged the body by its feet to the king, who began to tremble. Seeing him thus upset, Saladin said to him in a reassuring tone: "This man was killed only because of his maleficence and perfidy".
Seeing the execution of Raynald, Guy of Lusignan feared he would be next. But his life was spared by Saladin, who said of the execution:
It is not the wont of kings, to kill kings; but that man had transgressed all bounds, and therefore did I treat him thus.
According to other sources, Saladin offered Raynald the choice between apostasy and death, and Raynold chose the latter.
Raynald and Constance had two daughters: Agnes de Châtillon, who married the Hungarian Prince Béla who was living at the court of the Emperor in Constantinople and eventually became King Béla III of Hungary, and Jeanne de Châtillon, probably the second wife of Marquis Boniface I of Montferrat.
From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly he had two children: a son, Raynald of Ch√¢tillon, who died young, and a daughter, Alix (Alice) de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo VI d'Este.
Gebeurtenisse;
1. Lewensskets van sy vader Renaud, "Le Loup"de Chatillon se lewe:-
Gebeurtenisse:
i. Was vir 16 jaar gevangen in Aleppo.
ii. Trou 1176 met Stephanie van Transjordanië
iii. Renaud de Ch√¢tillon het die 2e Kruistocht hoofsaaklik meegemaak om hom te verryk.
iv. Na ·Äòn vredesverdrag met die Moeslims bly Renaud de Ch√¢tillon agter.
v. Hy gaan toe na Medina en Aqaba.
vi. Daar word hy deur Saladin oorval.

vii. Saladin word vir hom kwaad en toe hy vooroorbuk om water te drink, het genoemde hom onthoof-Ingestuur Ds.MG Müller

Renaud de Ch√¢tillon, Prince d'Antioche, Lord of Oultrejordain is your 25th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn
your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith, Sr.
her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith
his mother ·Üí William M LEE, Will
her father ·Üí Britton Lee
his father ·Üí William Samuel Lee
his father ·Üí Lemuel Samuel Lee
his father ·Üí Edward Lee, Sr.
his father ·Üí Mary Lee
his mother ·Üí William Bryan, I
her father ·Üí John Smith Bryan
his father ·Üí William Bryan
his father ·Üí Sir Francis Bryan, II, Justicar of Ireland
his father ·Üí Sir Francis Bryan I "The Vicar of Hell", Lord Chief Justice of Ireland
his father ·Üí Margaret Bryan, Lady Bryan
his mother ·Üí Humphrey Bourchier, Sir
her father ·Üí John Bourchier, 1st Baron Berners
his father ·Üí Anne of Gloucester, Countess of Stafford
his mother ·Üí Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester
her father ·Üí Edward III of England
his father ·Üí Isabella of France, Queen consort of England
his mother ·Üí Philippe IV le Bel, roi de France
her father ·Üí Isabel de Aragón, Reina Consorte de Francia
his mother ·Üí Violante de Hungría, reina consorte de Aragón
her mother ᆒ ÁRPÁD(házi) II. András - Andrew II, King of Hungary
her father ·Üí Inês - Agn√®s - Anne de Ch√¢tillon, Queen consort of Hungary
his mother ·Üí Renaud de Ch√¢tillon, Prince d'Antioche, Lord of Oultrejordain
her father

https://www.geni.com/people/Renaud-de-Ch√¢tillon-Prince-d-Antioche-Lord-of-Oultrejordain/6000000003051169280

Rénaud de Châtillon Princeps d'Antiochae, Lord d'Oultrejordain
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1125
Ch√¢tillon-sur-Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France
Death:
July 4, 1187 (62)
Hittin,Near Tiberius,Palestine, ~1097
Immediate Family:
Son of Heus(Hugo) de Ch√¢tillon, Compte St. Pol and Yolande de Hainaut (van Henegouwen)
Husband of Jonkvrouwe Raoulsdr. de Coucy; Constance de Hauteville, Princess of Antioch and Étiennette (Estéfénie) de Milly, comtesse de Milly
Father of Rudolph I de Cocq van Ch√¢tillon, Heer van Weerdenburg; Inês - Agn√®s - Anne de Ch√¢tillon, Queen consort of Hungary; Joan (de Chatillon) of Antioch and Alix de Ch√¢tillon

interesting source: http://www.digplanet.com/wiki/Raynald_of_Ch%C3%A2tillon
Reynold de Ch√¢tillon (1)
M, #114112
Last Edited=8 Jun 2003
Child of Reynold de Ch√¢tillon
Agnes de Ch√¢tillon+ (1) d. 1184
Forr√°s / Source:
http://www.thepeerage.com/p11412.htm#i114112

Wikipedia:
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaud_de_Ch√¢tillon
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raynald_of_Ch√¢tillon
Raynald of Ch√¢tillon
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Raynald of Châtillon tortures Patriarch Aimery of Antioch (From MS of William of Tyre's Historia and Old French Continuation, painted in Acre, 13th century Bibliothèque nationale de France.)
Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynald, Reynold, Renald, or Reginald; French: Renaud de Ch√¢tillon, old French: Reynaud de Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. He ruled as Prince of Antioch from 1153 to 1160 and through his second marriage became Lord of Oultrejordain. He was a controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond.
Contents
[show]
* 1 Background
* 2 Rise to prominence
* 3 Capture and execution
* 4 Personal life
* 5 In Media
* 6 Sources
* 7 References
[edit] Background
Raynald's origins are obscure; Du Cange believed he was from Châtillon-sur-Marne[1], but according to Jean Richard, he was a son of Hervé II of Donzy, and he inherited Châtillon-sur-Loing sometime before joining the Second Crusade in 1147. In the east, he entered the service of Constance of Antioch, whose first husband had died in 1149. She married Raynald in secret in 1153, without consulting her first cousin and liege lord, Baldwin III of Jerusalem. Neither King Baldwin nor Aimery of Limoges, the Latin Patriarch of Antioch, approved of Constance's choice of a husband of such low birth.
In 1156 Raynald claimed that the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus had reneged on his promise to pay Raynald a sum of money, and vowed to attack the island of Cyprus in revenge. When the Latin Patriarch of Antioch refused to finance this expedition, Raynald had the Patriarch seized, stripped naked, covered in honey, and left in the burning sun on top of the citadel. When the Patriarch was released, he collapsed in exhaustion and agreed to finance Raynald's expedition against Cyprus. Raynald's forces attacked Cyprus, ravaging the island and pillaging its inhabitants.
The Emperor Manuel I Comnenus raised an army and began a march into Syria. Faced with a much larger and more powerful force, Raynald was forced to grovel, barefoot and shabby, before the emperor's throne for forgiveness. In 1159 Raynald was forced to pay homage to Manuel as punishment for his attack, promising to accept a Greek Patriarch in Antioch. When Manuel came to Antioch later that year to meet with Baldwin III, King of Jerusalem, Raynald was forced to lead Manuel's horse into the city.
Soon after this, in 1160, Raynald was captured by the Muslims during a plundering raid against the Syrian and Armenian peasants of the neighbourhood of Marash. He was confined at Aleppo for the next seventeen years. As the stepfather of the Empress Maria, he was ransomed by Manuel for the extraordinary sum of 120,000 gold dinars (500 kg of gold-worth roughly US$12,500,000 today) in 1176.
[edit] Rise to prominence
Raynald depicted in captivity as part of a statue of Saladin in Damascus, Syria
Raynald served as Baldwin IV's envoy to Manuel and, because his wife Constance had died in 1163, was rewarded with marriage to another wealthy widow, Stephanie, the widow of both Humphrey III of Toron and Miles of Plancy and the heiress of the lordship of Oultrejordain, including the castles Kerak and Montreal to the southeast of the Dead Sea. These fortresses controlled the trade routes between Egypt and Damascus and gave Raynald access to the Red Sea. He became notorious for his wanton cruelty at Kerak, often having his enemies and hostages flung from its castle walls to be dashed to pieces on the rocks below.
In November 1177, at the head of the army of the kingdom, he helped King Baldwin defeat Saladin at the Battle of Montgisard; Saladin narrowly escaped. In 1181 the temptation of the caravans which passed by Kerak proved too strong and, in spite of a truce between Saladin and the king, Raynald began to plunder. Saladin demanded reparations from Baldwin IV, but Baldwin replied that he was unable to control his unruly vassal. As a result, war broke out between Saladin and the Latin kingdom in 1182. In the course of the hostilities, Raynald launched ships on the Red Sea, partly for piracy, but partly as a threat against Mecca and Medina, challenging Islam in its own holy places. His pirates ravaged villages up and down the Red Sea, before being captured by the army of Al-Adil I only a few miles from Medina. Although Raynald's pirates were taken to Cairo and beheaded, Raynald himself escaped to the Moab. Saladin vowed to behead Raynald himself, and at the end of the year Saladin attacked Kerak, during the marriage of Raynald's stepson Humphrey IV of Toron to Isabella of Jerusalem. The siege was raised by Count Raymond III of Tripoli, and Raynald was quiet until 1186.
That year he allied with Sibylla and Guy of Lusignan against Count Raymond, and his influence contributed to the recognition of Guy as king of Jerusalem, although Raymond and the Ibelins were attempting to advance the claim of his stepson Humphrey's wife Princess Isabella. Humphrey remained loyal to his stepfather and Guy.
Later in 1186 Raynald attacked a caravan travelling between Cairo and Damascus, breaking the truce between Saladin and the Crusaders. Saladin sent troops to protect a later caravan (in March 1187) in which his sister was returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca. Later writers (such as the 13th century Old French Continuation of William of Tyre and the Latin Continuation of William of Tyre) conflated these two incidents, claiming erroneously that Saladin's sister, aunt, or even mother, had been taken prisoner, but this is contradicted by Arabic sources, such as Abu Shama and Ibn al-Athir. King Guy chastised Raynald in an attempt to appease Saladin, but Raynald replied that he was lord of his own lands and that he had made no peace with Saladin. Saladin swore that Raynald would be executed if he was ever taken prisoner.
[edit] Capture and execution
Raynald of Ch√¢tillon's death
Guillaume de Tyr, Historia (BNF, Mss.Fr.68, folio 399)
In 1187 Saladin invaded the kingdom, defeating the Crusaders at the Battle of Hattin. The battle left Saladin with many prisoners. Most prominent among these prisoners were Raynald and King Guy, both of whom Saladin ordered brought to his tent. The chronicler Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani, who was present at the scene, relates:
·Äú Saladin invited the king [Guy] to sit beside him, and when Arnat [Raynald] entered in his turn, he seated him next to his king and reminded him of his misdeeds. "How many times have you sworn an oath and violated it? How many times have you signed agreements you have never respected?" Raynald answered through a translator: "Kings have always acted thus. I did nothing more." During this time King Guy was gasping with thirst, his head dangling as though drunk, his face betraying great fright. Saladin spoke reassuring words to him, had cold water brought, and offered it to him. The king drank, then handed what remained to Raynald, who slaked his thirst in turn. The sultan then said to Guy: "You did not ask permission before giving him water. I am therefore not obliged to grant him mercy." After pronouncing these words, the sultan smiled, mounted his horse, and rode off, leaving the captives in terror. He supervised the return of the troops, and then came back to his tent. He ordered Raynald brought there, then advanced before him, sword in hand, and struck him between the neck and the shoulder-blade. When Raynald fell, he cut off his head and dragged the body by its feet to the king, who began to tremble. Seeing him thus upset, Saladin said to him in a reassuring tone: "This man was killed only because of his maleficence and perfidy". ·Äù
King Guy was spared and was taken to Damascus for a time, then allowed to go free.
To a few Christians of his time, Raynald was considered a martyr killed at the hands of the Muslims. However, documentary evidence tends to refute this idealized picture, giving the impression of Raynald as a freebooter and pirate who had little concern for the welfare of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. It could be argued that the successes of the Kingdom were undone in large measure by Raynald's recklessness, which had the effect of provoking needlessly the Muslim states surrounding Outremer.
Saladin's actions ultimately proved to be beneficial to his own interests. By killing Raynald while sparing Guy, the faction struggle in Jerusalem continued. This struggle would later greatly diminish the potency of the Third Crusade.
[edit] Personal life
* Raynald and Constance had two daughters: Agnes de Châtillon, who married King Béla III of Hungary and Jeanne de Châtillon, probably the second wife of Marquis Boniface I of Montferrat.
* From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly, he had two children: a son, Raynald of Ch√¢tillon, who died young, and a daughter, Alix (Alice) de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo VI d'Este.
[edit] In Media
* The Passio Raginaldi principis Antiochae, an account of Raynald's death, was written by Peter of Blois c. 1200.
* Raynald is portrayed in the 1963 Egyptian movie Al Nasser Salah Ad-Din (film).
* A largely fictionalized version of Raynald is played by Brendan Gleeson in the 2005 movie Kingdom of Heaven.
* Raynald is featured as an NPC in the game Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings as one of Saladin's nemeses
* In the novel The Knights of Dark Renown (1969), by author, Graham Shelby, Raynald is depicted as the malevolent 'Red Wolf of Kerak'.
* Appears as a NPC in the computer game "Baldur's Gate 2", in the Bridge District of the city of Amn.
* In the historical Knights Templar Trilogy by the Swedish author Jan Guillou, Raynald is depicted as a scheming, incompetent and selfish villain accelerating the loss of the Holy Land to Saladin.
[edit] Sources
* Hamilton, Bernard, "The Elephant of Christ: Reynald of Ch√¢tillon", Studies in Church History 15 (Oxford, 1978), pp. 97·Äì108.
* Hamilton, Bernard, The Leper King and His Heirs, 2000.
* Hillenbrand, Carole, "Some reflections on the imprisonment of Reynald of Ch√¢tillon", in Texts, Documents and Artefacts: Islamic Studies in Honour of D.S. Richards, ed. C.F. Robinson, Leiden, 2003.
* Maalouf, Amin, Crusades Through Arab Eyes, 1985.
* Peter of Blois Petri Blesensis tractatus duo: Passio Raginaldi principis Antiochie, Conquestio de dilatione vie Ierosolimitane, ed. R.B.C Huygens, in Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaevalis vol. CXCIV, 2002.
* Richard, Jean, "Aux origines d'un grand lignage: des palladii Renaud de Ch√¢tillon", in Media in Francia: Recueil de m√©langes offert à Karl Ferdinand Werner, 1989.
* Runciman, Steven, A History of the Crusades: Volume 2, The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East (1952)
[edit] References
1. ^ Du Cange, Les Familles d'Outremer, ed. E. G. Rey (1869), p. 191
* This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
Preceded by
Raymond and Constance Prince of Antioch
1153·Äì1160 Succeeded by
Constance
[hide]
v ·Ä¢ d ·Ä¢ e
Princes of the Principality of Antioch
Reigning Princes
(1098·Äì1268)

Bohemond I ¬âˆ‘ Tancred (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond II ¬âˆ‘ Roger (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Baldwin (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Constance ¬âˆ‘ Fulk (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Raymond I (by marriage) ¬âˆ‘ Raynald (by marriage) ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond III ¬âˆ‘ Raymond II (regent) ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond IV ¬âˆ‘ Raymond-Roupen ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond IV (restored) ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond V ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond VI

Armoiries Bohémond VI d'Antioche.svg
Titular Princes
(1268·Äì1457)

Bohemond VI ¬âˆ‘ Bohemond VII ¬âˆ‘ Lucia ¬âˆ‘ Philip ¬âˆ‘ Marguerite ¬âˆ‘ John I ¬âˆ‘ John II ¬âˆ‘ John III
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raynald_of_Ch%C3%A2tillon"
Categories: Princes of Antioch | Christians of the Second Crusade | French knights | 1120s births | 1187 deaths | People executed by decapitation | French people executed abroad
Hidden categories: Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
* This page was last modified on 10 May 2010 at 14:46.

Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynaud, Renaud, Reynald, Reynold, Renald or Reginald of Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. He ruled as Prince of Antioch from 1153 to 1160 and through his second marriage became Lord of Oultrejordain. He was a controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond.
Raynald and Constance had one daughter: Agnes de Châtillon, who married king Béla III of Hungary
From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly, he had two children: a son, Raynald of Ch√¢tillon, who died young, and a daughter, Alix (Alice) de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo VI d'Este.

Raynald of Chatillon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynaud, Renaud, Reynald, Reynold, Renald or Reginald of Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. He ruled as Prince of Antioch from 1153 to 1160 and through his second marriage became Lord of Oultrejordain. He was a controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond.
Background
Raynald's origins are obscure; Du Cange believed he was from Châtillon-sur-Marne, but according to Jean Richard, he was a son of Hervé II of Donzy, and he inherited Châtillon-sur-Loing sometime before joining the Second Crusade in 1147. Other sources, however, say he was a second son of Henri I de Châtillon, Lord of Châtillon-sur-Loing, and wife Ermengarde de Montjay, dame and heiress of Montjay[1]. In the east, he entered the service of Constance of Antioch, whose first husband had died in 1149. She married Raynald in secret in 1153, without consulting her first cousin and liege lord, Baldwin III of Jerusalem. Neither King Baldwin nor Aimery of Limoges, the Latin Patriarch of Antioch, approved of Constance's choice of a husband of such low birth.
In 1156 Raynald claimed that the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus had reneged on his promise to pay Raynald a sum of money, and vowed to attack the island of Cyprus in revenge. When the Latin Patriarch of Antioch refused to finance this expedition, Raynald had the Patriarch seized, stripped naked, covered in honey, and left in the burning sun on top of the citadel. When the Patriarch was released, he collapsed in exhaustion and agreed to finance Raynald's expedition against Cyprus. Raynald's forces attacked Cyprus, ravaging the island and pillaging its inhabitants.
The Emperor Manuel I Comnenus raised an army and began a march into Syria. Faced with a much larger and more powerful force, Raynald was forced to grovel, barefoot and shabby, before the emperor's throne for forgiveness. In 1159 Raynald was forced to pay homage to Manuel as punishment for his attack, promising to accept a Greek Patriarch in Antioch. When Manuel came to Antioch later that year to meet with Baldwin III, King of Jerusalem, Raynald was forced to lead Manuel's horse into the city.
Soon after this, in 1160, Raynald was captured by the Muslims during a plundering raid against the Syrian and Armenian peasants of the neighbourhood of Marash. He was confined at Aleppo for the next seventeen years. As the stepfather of the Empress Maria, he was ransomed by Manuel for the extraordinary sum of 120,000 gold dinars (500 kg of gold-worth of 12 500 000 US $ today) in 1176.
[edit]Rise to prominence
Raynald served as Baldwin IV's envoy to Manuel and, because his wife Constance had died in 1163, was rewarded with marriage to another wealthy widow, Stephanie, the widow of both Humphrey III of Toron and Miles of Plancy and the heiress of the lordship of Oultrejordain, including the castles Kerak and Montreal to the southeast of the Dead Sea. These fortresses controlled the trade routes between Egypt and Damascus and gave Raynald access to the Red Sea. He became notorious for his wanton cruelty at Kerak, often having his enemies and hostages flung from its castle walls to be dashed to pieces on the rocks below.
In November 1177, at the head of the army of the kingdom, he helped King Baldwin defeat Saladin at the Battle of Montgisard; Saladin narrowly escaped. In 1181 the temptation of the caravans which passed by Kerak proved too strong and, in spite of a truce between Saladin and the king, Raynald began to plunder. Saladin demanded reparations from Baldwin IV, but Baldwin replied that he was unable to control his unruly vassal. As a result, war broke out between Saladin and the Latin kingdom in 1182. In the course of the hostilities, Raynald launched ships on the Red Sea, partly for piracy, but partly as a threat against Mecca and Medina, challenging Islam in its own holy places. His pirates ravaged villages up and down the Red Sea, before being captured by the army of Al-Adil I only a few miles from Medina. Although Raynald's pirates were taken to Cairo and beheaded, Raynald himself escaped to the Moab. Saladin vowed to behead Raynald himself, and at the end of the year Saladin attacked Kerak, during the marriage of Raynald's stepson Humphrey IV of Toron to Isabella of Jerusalem. The siege was raised by Count Raymond III of Tripoli, and Raynald was quiet until 1186.
That year he allied with Sibylla and Guy of Lusignan against Count Raymond, and his influence contributed to the recognition of Guy as king of Jerusalem, although Raymond and the Ibelins were attempting to advance the claim of his stepson Humphrey's wife Princess Isabella. Humphrey remained loyal to his stepfather and Guy.
Later in 1186 Raynald attacked a caravan travelling between Cairo and Damascus, breaking the truce between Saladin and the Crusaders. Saladin sent troops to protect a later caravan (in March 1187) in which his sister was returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca. Later writers (such as the 13th century Old French Continuation of William of Tyre and the Latin Contination of William of Tyre) conflated these two incidents, claiming erroneously that Saladin's sister, aunt, or even mother, had been taken prisoner, but this is contradicted by Arabic sources, such as Abu Shama and Ibn al-Athir. King Guy chastised Raynald in an attempt to appease Saladin, but Raynald replied that he was lord of his own lands and that he had made no peace with Saladin. Saladin swore that Raynald would be executed if he was ever taken prisoner.
[edit]Raynald's death
In 1187 Saladin invaded the kingdom, defeating the Crusaders at the Battle of Hattin. The battle left Saladin with many prisoners. Most prominent among these prisoners were Raynald and King Guy, both of whom Saladin ordered brought to his tent. The chronicler Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani, who was present at the scene, relates:
·Äú Saladin invited the king [Guy] to sit beside him, and when Arnat [Raynald] entered in his turn, he seated him next to his king and reminded him of his misdeeds. "How many times have you sworn an oath and violated it? How many times have you signed agreements you have never respected?" Raynald answered through a translator: "Kings have always acted thus. I did nothing more." During this time King Guy was gasping with thirst, his head dangling as though drunk, his face betraying great fright. Saladin spoke reassuring words to him, had cold water brought, and offered it to him. The king drank, then handed what remained to Raynald, who slaked his thirst in turn. The sultan then said to Guy: "You did not ask permission before giving him water. I am therefore not obliged to grant him mercy." After pronouncing these words, the sultan smiled, mounted his horse, and rode off, leaving the captives in terror. He supervised the return of the troops, and then came back to his tent. He ordered Raynald brought there, then advanced before him, sword in hand, and struck him between the neck and the shoulder-blade. When Raynald fell, he cut off his head and dragged the body by its feet to the king, who began to tremble. Seeing him thus upset, Saladin said to him in a reassuring tone: "This man was killed only because of his maleficence and perfidy". ·Äù
King Guy was spared and was taken to Damascus for a time, then allowed to go free.
To a few Christians of his time, Raynald was considered a martyr killed at the hands of the Muslims. However, documentary evidence tends to refute this idealized picture, giving the impression of Reynald as a freebooter and pirate who had little concern for the welfare of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. It could be argued that the successes of the Kingdom were undone in large measure by Raynald's recklessness, which had the effect of provoking needlessly the Muslim states surrounding Outremer.
Saladin, however, acted well in accordance with his own interests. He killed Raynald, his bitter enemy, and spared the life of Guy knowing that to kill him was to end the faction struggle in the remnants of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. He kept him in Damascus until he was sure that he would not be able to destroy all of the Kingdom outright. The factional struggle later greatly diminished the potency of the Third Crusade.
[edit]Personal life
Raynald and Constance had one daughter: Agnes de Châtillon, who married king Béla III of Hungary
From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly, he had another daughter: Alix de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo V d'Este. (Perhaps she was a daughter by Constance[2].)
[edit]In Literature and Film
The Passio Raginaldi principis Antiochae, an account of Raynald's death, was written by Peter of Blois c. 1200.
Raynald is portrayed in the 1963 Egyptian movie Al Nasser Salah Ad-Din.
A largely fictionalized version of Raynald is played by Brendan Gleeson in the 2005 movie Kingdom of Heaven.
Raynald is featured as an NPC in the game Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings as one of Saladin's nemeses
In the novel The Knights of Dark Renown (1969), by author, Graham Shelby, Raynald is depicted as the malevolent 'Red Wolf of Kerak'.
Appears as a NPC in the computer game "Baldur's Gate 2", in the Bridge District of the city of Amn.
In the historical Knights Templar Trilogy by the Swedish author Jan Guillou, Raynald is depicted as a scheming, incompetent and selfish villain accelerating the loss of the Holy Land to Saladin.
[edit]Sources
Hamilton, Bernard, "The Elephant of Christ: Reynald of Ch√¢tillon", Studies in Church History 15 (Oxford, 1978), pp. 97-108.
Hamilton, Bernard, The Leper King and His Heirs, 2000.
Maalouf, Amin, Crusades Through Arab Eyes, 1985.
Peter of Blois Petri Blesensis tractatus duo: Passio Raginaldi principis Antiochie, Conquestio de dilatione vie Ierosolimitane, ed. R.B.C Huygens, in Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaevalis vol. CXCIV, 2002.
Richard, Jean, "Aux origines d'un grand lignage: des palladii Renaud de Châtillon", in Media in Francia: Recueil de mélanges offert à Karl Ferdinand Werner, 1989.
Runciman, Steven, A History of the Crusades: Volume 2, The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East (1952)
References
^ web.genealogie
^ web.genealogie
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

Raymond, Prince of Antioch
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raymond of Poitiers (c. 1115 ·Äì June 29, 1149) was Prince of Antioch 1136·Äì1149. He was the younger son of William IX, Duke of Aquitaine and his wife Philippa, Countess of Toulouse, born in the very year that his father the Duke began his infamous liaison with Dangereuse de Chatelherault.
Assumes control
Following the regencies of Baldwin II of Jerusalem (1130-1131) and Fulk of Jerusalem (1131-1136), Raymond assumed control of the principality of Antioch by his marriage in 1136 to the heiress of Bohemund II of Antioch, Constance, a child of ten years of age. The marriage had the blessing of the Patriarch of Antioch, but not of Alice of Antioch, the mother of the bride, who believed that Raymond was intended to be her husband.
The first years of Raymond and Constance's joint rule were spent in conflicts with the Byzantine Emperor John II Comnenus, who had come south partly to recover Cilicia from Leo of Armenia, and to reassert his rights over Antioch. Raymond was forced to pay homage, and even to promise to cede his principality as soon as he was recompensed by a new fief, which John promised to carve out for him in the Muslim territory to the east of Antioch. The expedition of 1138, in which Raymond joined with John, and which was to conquer this territory, naturally proved a failure. Raymond was not anxious to help the emperor to acquire new territories, when their acquisition only meant for him the loss of Antioch. John Comnenus returned unsuccessful to Constantinople, after demanding from Raymond, without response, the surrender of the citadel of Antioch.
[edit]Struggles
There followed a struggle between Raymond and the patriarch. Raymond was annoyed by the homage which he had been forced to pay to the patriarch in 1135 and the dubious validity of the patriarch's election offered a handle for opposition. Eventually Raymond triumphed, and the patriarch was deposed (1139). In 1142 John Comnenus returned to the attack, but Raymond refused to recognize or renew his previous submission, and John, though he ravaged the neighborhood of Antioch, was unable to effect anything against him. When, however Raymond demanded from Manuel, who had succeeded John in 1143, the cession of some of the Cilician towns, he found that he had met his match. Manuel forced him to a humiliating visit to Constantinople, during which he renewed his oath of homage and promised to acknowledge a Greek patriarch.
In the last year of Raymond's life Louis VII and his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine (Raymond's niece) visited Antioch. Raymond sought to prevent Louis from going south to Jerusalem and to induce him to stay in Antioch and help in the conquest of Aleppo and Caesarea. Raymond was also suspected of having an incestuous affair with his beautiful niece Eleanor. According to John of Salisbury, Louis became suspicious of the attention Raymond lavished on Eleanor, and the long conversations they enjoyed. William of Tyre claims that Raymond seduced Eleanor to get revenge on her husband, who refused to aid him in his wars against the Saracens, and that "contrary to [Eleanor's] royal dignity, she disregarded her marriage vows and was unfaithful to her husband." Most modern historians dismiss such rumours, however, pointing out the closeness of Raymond and his niece during her early childhood, and the effulgent Aquitainian manner of behaviour.
Louis hastily left Antioch and Raymond was balked in his plans. In 1149 he was killed in the Battle of Inab during an expedition against Nur ad-Din. He was beheaded by Shirkuh, the uncle of Saladin, and his head was placed in a silver box and sent to the Caliph of Baghdad as a gift.
[edit]Personality and family
Raymond is described by William of Tyre (the main authority for his career) as "a lord of noble descent, of tall and elegant figure, the handsomest of the princes of the earth, a man of charming affability and conversation, open-handed and magnificent beyond measure"; pre-eminent in the use of arms and military experience; litteratorum, licet ipse illiteratus esset, cultor ("although he was himself illiterate, he was a cultivator of literature" - he caused the Chanson des chétifs to be composed); a regular churchman and faithful husband; but headstrong, irascible and unreasonable, with too great a passion for gambling (bk. xiv. c. xxi.). For his career see Rey, in the Revue de l'orient latin, vol. iv.
With Constance, Raymond had three children, a son and heir Bohemund III of Antioch and daughters Maria of Antioch and Philippa of Antioch.
[edit]Sources
Maalouf, Amin. The Crusades Through Arab Eyes, 1984
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynaud, Renaud, Reynald, Reynold, Renald or Reginald of Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. He ruled as Prince of Antioch from 1153 to 1160 and through his second marriage became Lord of Oultrejordain. He was a controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond.
Raynald and Constance had one daughter: Agnes de Châtillon, who married king Béla III of Hungary
From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly, he had two children: a son, Raynald of Ch√¢tillon, who died young, and a daughter, Alix (Alice) de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo VI d'Este.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raynald_of_Ch%C3%A2tillon

Raynald of Ch√¢tillon (also Reynald, Reynold, Renald, or Reginald; French: Renaud de Ch√¢tillon, old French: Reynaud de Chastillon) (c. 1125 ·Äì July 4, 1187) was a knight who served in the Second Crusade and remained in the Holy Land after its defeat. Raynald was an enormously controversial character in his own lifetime and beyond; Muslim writers often took him to be the chief enemy of Islam.[1]

Through marriage he ruled as Prince of Antioch (through his marriage to Princess Constance, granddaughter of Prince Bohemond of Antioch) from 1153 to 1160. During this time he was in conflict with the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus and attacked Cyprus but later was forced to submit to the emperor. Captured by the Muslims in 1161, he was imprisoned in Aleppo for fifteen years. Through his second marriage he became Lord of Oultrejordain in 1177. In the same year, he led the Crusader army that defeated Saladin at the Battle of Montgisard. Later he broke a truce with Saladin, attacking several Muslim caravans and sending pirate ships into the Red Sea towards Mekka and Medina. Captured at the Battle of Hattin, where the Crusaders where decisively defeated, he was executed by Saladin himself. Raynald's origins are obscure; Du Cange believed he was from Châtillon-sur-Loire,[2] but according to Jean Richard, he was a son of Hervé II of Donzy, and he inherited Châtillon-sur-Loing sometime before joining the Second Crusade in 1147. In the east, he entered the service of Constance of Antioch, whose first husband Raymond of Poitiers had died in 1149. She married Raynald in secret in 1153, without consulting her first cousin and liege lord, King Baldwin III of Jerusalem. Neither King Baldwin nor Aimery of Limoges, the Latin Patriarch of Antioch, approved of Constance's choice of a husband of such low birth. With Constance he had a daughter, Agnes of Châtillon, in 1154.
In 1156 Raynald claimed that the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus had reneged on his promise to pay Raynald a sum of money, and vowed to attack the island of Cyprus in revenge. When Patriarch Aimery of Limoges refused to finance this expedition, Raynald had the Patriarch seized, stripped naked, beaten, covered in honey, and left in the burning sun on top of the citadel. When the Patriarch was released, he collapsed in exhaustion and agreed to finance Raynald's expedition against Cyprus. Raynald's forces attacked Cyprus, ravaging the island and pillaging its Christian inhabitants.
The Emperor Manuel I Comnenus raised an army and began a march into Syria. Faced with a much larger and more powerful force, Raynald was forced to grovel, barefoot and shabby, before the emperor's throne for forgiveness. In 1159 Raynald was forced to pay homage to Manuel as punishment for his attack, promising to accept a Greek Patriarch in Antioch. When Manuel came to Antioch later that year to meet with Baldwin III, King of Jerusalem, Raynald was forced to lead Manuel's horse into the city.
Soon after this, in 1161, Raynald was captured by the Muslims while he was engaged in a plundering raid against the Syrian and Armenian peasants of the neighbourhood of Marash. He was confined at Aleppo for the next fifteen years. He was ransomed by his supporters in Jerusalem for the extraordinary sum of 120,000 gold dinars (500 kg of gold) in 1176. By that time, his stepdaughter Maria had become Empress, having married Emperor Manuel I in 1161. His wife Constance had died in 1163, and their daughter Agnes had become queen of Hungary by marriage. In 1174, the thirteen-year-old leper Baldwin IV had become King of Jerusalem. Raynald rose to a powerful position in the kingdom.[1] He served as the king's envoy to Emperor Manuel and was rewarded with marriage to Stephanie, the wealthy widow of both Humphrey III of Toron and Miles of Plancy and the heiress of the lordship of Oultrejordain, including the castles Kerak and Montreal to the southeast of the Dead Sea. These fortresses controlled the trade routes between Egypt and Damascus and gave Raynald access to the Red Sea. He became notorious for his wanton cruelty at Kerak, often having his enemies and hostages flung from its castle walls to be dashed to pieces on the rocks below.
In November 1177, heading the army of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, he helped King Baldwin defeat Saladin at the Battle of Montgisard; Saladin narrowly escaped. In spite of a truce between Saladin and the king negotiated in 1180, Raynald plundered a Muslim pilgrim caravan in 1182.[1] Saladin demanded reparations from Baldwin IV, who replied that he was unable to control his unruly vassal. As a result, war broke out between Saladin and the Latin kingdom in 1182. In the course of the hostilities, Raynald launched ships on the Red Sea, partly for piracy, but partly as a threat against Mecca and Medina, challenging Islam in its own holy places. His pirates ravaged villages up and down the Red Sea, before being captured by the army of Al-Adil I only a few miles from Medina. Although Raynald's pirates were taken to Cairo and beheaded, Raynald himself escaped to the Moab. Saladin vowed to behead Raynald himself, and at the end of the year Saladin attacked Kerak, during the marriage of Raynald's stepson Humphrey IV of Toron to Isabella of Jerusalem, half-sister of King Baldwin IV. The siege was raised by Count Raymond III of Tripoli, and Raynald was quiet until 1186.
That year he allied with Sibylla and Guy of Lusignan against Count Raymond, and his influence contributed to the recognition of Guy as king of Jerusalem, although Raymond and the Ibelins were attempting to advance the claim of his stepson Humphrey's wife Princess Isabella. Humphrey remained loyal to his stepfather and Guy.
In 1185 the Crusaders and Saladin signed another truce for 4 years. In 1186 Raynald attacked a large Muslim caravan travelling between Cairo and Damascus. He took all the merchants and their families prisoner, made a large amount of booty and refused to receive envoys from Saladin demanding compensation. This led directly to the end of the truce.[3] Saladin sent troops to protect a later caravan (in March 1187) in which his sister was returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca. Later writers (such as the 13th century Old French Continuation of William of Tyre and the Latin Continuation of William of Tyre) conflated these two incidents, claiming erroneously that Saladin's sister, aunt, or even mother, had been taken prisoner, but this is contradicted by Arabic sources, such as Abu Shrama and Ibn al-Athir. King Guy chastised Raynald in an attempt to appease Saladin, but Raynald replied that he was lord of his own lands and that he had made no peace with Saladin. Saladin swore that Raynald would be executed if he was ever taken prisoner. In 1187 Saladin invaded the kingdom and decisively defeated the Crusaders at the Battle of Hattin. The battle left Saladin with many prisoners. Most prominent among them were Raynald and King Guy, both of whom Saladin ordered brought to his tent. The chronicler Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani, who was present at the scene, relates:
Saladin invited the king [Guy] to sit beside him, and when Arnat [Raynald] entered in his turn, he seated him next to his king and reminded him of his misdeeds. "How many times have you sworn an oath and violated it? How many times have you signed agreements you have never respected?" Raynald answered through a translator: "Kings have always acted thus. I did nothing more." During this time King Guy was gasping with thirst, his head dangling as though drunk, his face betraying great fright. Saladin spoke reassuring words to him, had cold water brought, and offered it to him. The king drank, then handed what remained to Raynald, who slaked his thirst in turn. The sultan then said to Guy: "You did not ask permission before giving him water. I am therefore not obliged to grant him mercy." After pronouncing these words, the sultan smiled, mounted his horse, and rode off, leaving the captives in terror. He supervised the return of the troops, and then came back to his tent. He ordered Raynald brought there, then advanced before him, sword in hand, and struck him between the neck and the shoulder-blade. When Raynald fell, he cut off his head and dragged the body by its feet to the king, who began to tremble. Seeing him thus upset, Saladin said to him in a reassuring tone: "This man was killed only because of his maleficence and perfidy".
Seeing the execution of Raynald, Guy of Lusignan feared he would be next. But his life was spared by Saladin, who said of the execution:
It is not the wont of kings, to kill kings; but that man had transgressed all bounds, and therefore did I treat him thus.
According to other sources, Saladin offered Raynald the choice between apostasy and death, and Raynold chose the latter.
Raynald and Constance had two daughters: Agnes de Châtillon, who married the Hungarian Prince Béla who was living at the court of the Emperor in Constantinople and eventually became King Béla III of Hungary, and Jeanne de Châtillon, probably the second wife of Marquis Boniface I of Montferrat.
From his second marriage with Stephanie de Milly he had two children: a son, Raynald of Ch√¢tillon, who died young, and a daughter, Alix (Alice) de Ch√¢tillon, who married Azzo VI d'Este.
Gebeurtenisse;
1. Lewensskets van sy vader Renaud, "Le Loup"de Chatillon se lewe:-
Gebeurtenisse:
i. Was vir 16 jaar gevangen in Aleppo.
ii. Trou 1176 met Stephanie van Transjordanië
iii. Renaud de Ch√¢tillon het die 2e Kruistocht hoofsaaklik meegemaak om hom te verryk.
iv. Na ·Äòn vredesverdrag met die Moeslims bly Renaud de Ch√¢tillon agter.
v. Hy gaan toe na Medina en Aqaba.
vi. Daar word hy deur Saladin oorval.

vii. Saladin word vir hom kwaad en toe hy vooroorbuk om water te drink, het genoemde hom onthoof-Ingestuur Ds.MG Müller

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Renaud de Ch√¢tillon


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Même jour de naissance/décès

Source: Wikipedia

  • 1623 » William Byrd, musicien anglais (° vers 1539/1540).
  • 1648 » Antoine Daniel, prêtre missionnaire jésuite français, un des huit martyrs canadiens (° 27 mai 1601).
  • 1733 » Jean-Baptiste Girard, religieux français (° 1680).
  • 1826 » John Adams, second président des États-Unis, ayant exercé de 1797 à 1801 (° 30 octobre 1735).
  • 1831 » James Monroe, cinquième président des États-Unis, ayant exercé de 1817 à 1825 (° 28 avril 1743).
  • 895 » Aurélien, prélat franc (° non précisée).

Sur le nom de famille De Ch√¢tillon


La publication Family Tree Welborn a été préparée par .contacter l'auteur
Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I23838.php : consultée 18 juin 2024), "Renaud de Ch√¢tillon lord of Hebron & Montr√©al (1125-1187)".