rdfs:comment
| - En 1102, Raymond de Saint Gilles, comte de Toulouse, décide de se tailler un fief en Orient qui ne devient le comté de Tripoli qu'en 1109, après la prise de la ville. (fr)
- トリポリ伯の一覧(トリポリはくのいちらん)とは、トリポリ伯国の統治者の一覧である。本項では、初代のトゥールーズ伯レーモンから末代のまでの11代のトリポリ伯を書き記す。 (ja)
- In questa voce sono elencati in ordine cronologico i conti della Contea di Tripoli. Il titolo fu effettivo dal 1102 (a seguito della conquista di Tortosa durante la Prima crociata) al 1289 (riconquista di Tripoli da parte dei Mamelucchi), e titolare dal 1289 al 1300. (it)
- Ο Κόμης της Τρίπολης ήταν ο κυβερνήτης στην Κομητεία της Τρίπολης, ένα από τα Σταυροφορικά κράτη που διατηρήθηκε την περίοδο 1102 - 1289. Η Κομητεία της Τρίπολης ήταν το τελευταίο από τα τέσσερα μεγάλα Σταυροφορικά κράτη που δημιουργήθηκαν στην Ανατολή. (el)
- The count of Tripoli was the ruler of the County of Tripoli, a crusader state from 1102 through 1289. Of the four major crusader states in the Levant, Tripoli was created last. The history of the counts of Tripoli began with Raymond IV of Toulouse, who led the Siege of Tripoli. The first count was his son Bertrand, who pushed his claim over that of his cousin William II Jordan of Berga and Cerdenya. After the death of Raymond III shortly after the Battle of Hattin, the title of count of Tripoli was passed to the princes of Antioch until the fall of the city in 1289. (en)
|
has abstract
| - Ο Κόμης της Τρίπολης ήταν ο κυβερνήτης στην Κομητεία της Τρίπολης, ένα από τα Σταυροφορικά κράτη που διατηρήθηκε την περίοδο 1102 - 1289. Η Κομητεία της Τρίπολης ήταν το τελευταίο από τα τέσσερα μεγάλα Σταυροφορικά κράτη που δημιουργήθηκαν στην Ανατολή. Δημιουργός της κομητείας ήταν ο Ραϋμόνδος Δ΄ της Τουλούζης που ηγήθηκε στην πολιορκία της Τρίπολης, ο πρώτος κόμης επίσημα ήταν ο γιος του Βερτράνδος της Τουλούζης που υπερίσχυσαν τα κληρονομικά του δικαιώματα απέναντι στον ξάδελφο του Γουλιέλμο Ιορδάνη. Όταν πέθανε ο Ραϋμόνδος Γ΄ της Τρίπολης αμέσως μετά τη Μάχη του Χαττίν ο τίτλος πέρασε στον Οίκο του Πουατιέ που κυβερνούσε το Πριγκιπάτο της Αντιόχειας. Η κομητεία διαλύθηκε μετά την κατάκτηση της Τρίπολης από τον Μαμελούκο Σουλτάνο της Αιγύπτου (1289). (el)
- The count of Tripoli was the ruler of the County of Tripoli, a crusader state from 1102 through 1289. Of the four major crusader states in the Levant, Tripoli was created last. The history of the counts of Tripoli began with Raymond IV of Toulouse, who led the Siege of Tripoli. The first count was his son Bertrand, who pushed his claim over that of his cousin William II Jordan of Berga and Cerdenya. After the death of Raymond III shortly after the Battle of Hattin, the title of count of Tripoli was passed to the princes of Antioch until the fall of the city in 1289. Count Raymond IV of Toulouse, one of the leaders of the First Crusade, founded the county in 1102 during a lengthy war with the Banu Ammar emirs of Tripoli (theoretically vassals of the Fatimid caliphs in Cairo). The county gradually grew as the crusaders seized much of their territory and besieged Banu Ammar within Tripoli itself. Raymond died in 1105, leaving his infant son Alfonso-Jordan as his heir, with a cousin, William-Jordan of Cerdenya, as regent. William-Jordan continued the siege of Tripoli until 1109, when the elder son of Raymond, Bertrand arrived in the east, leaving Toulouse to Alfonso-Jordan and his mother, who returned to France. Bertrand and William-Jordan, with mediation from King Baldwin I of Jerusalem, came to an agreement whereby each would keep control of their own conquests. Bertrand captured Tripoli later that year. When William-Jordan died a few months later Bertrand became sole ruler. The county of Tripoli continued to exist as a vassal state of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Count Raymond III, who reigned from 1152 to 1187, was an important figure in the history of the Kingdom to the south due to his close relationship to its kings (his mother Hodierna was a daughter of Baldwin II of Jerusalem) and to his own position as Prince of Galilee through his wife. He acted twice as Regent for the kingdom, first for the young Baldwin IV from 1174 to 1177, and then again for Baldwin V from 1185 to 1186. He also acted as the leader of the local nobility in their opposition to Baldwin IV's Courtenay relations with the Knights Templar, Guy of Lusignan, and Reynald of Châtillon. Raymond unsuccessfully argued in favor of peace with Saladin, but, ironically, it was Saladin's siege of Raymond's Countess in Tiberias that led the Crusader army into Galilee before its defeat at Hattin in 1187. Although Raymond survived the battle, he died soon afterward. The county managed to avoid being conquered by Saladin despite the Muslim leader's string of victories. Bohemond IV, second son of Bohemond III of Antioch, succeeded to the Countship upon Raymond's death. After Bohemond III's death in 1201, the county was in personal union with Antioch for all but three years (1216–1219) until Antioch's own fall to the Mamluks in 1268. Tripoli survived for a few more years. The death of the unpopular Count Bohemond VII in 1287 led to a dispute between his heir, his sister Lucia, and the city's commune, which put itself under the protection of the Genoese. Eventually, Lucia came to an agreement with the Genoese and the Commune, which displeased the Venetians and the ambitious Bartholomew Embriaco, the Genoese mayor of the city, who called in the Mameluke Sultan Qalawun to their aid. Qalawun razed the city after a siege in 1289, bringing the history of the county to an end. (en)
- En 1102, Raymond de Saint Gilles, comte de Toulouse, décide de se tailler un fief en Orient qui ne devient le comté de Tripoli qu'en 1109, après la prise de la ville. (fr)
- トリポリ伯の一覧(トリポリはくのいちらん)とは、トリポリ伯国の統治者の一覧である。本項では、初代のトゥールーズ伯レーモンから末代のまでの11代のトリポリ伯を書き記す。 (ja)
- In questa voce sono elencati in ordine cronologico i conti della Contea di Tripoli. Il titolo fu effettivo dal 1102 (a seguito della conquista di Tortosa durante la Prima crociata) al 1289 (riconquista di Tripoli da parte dei Mamelucchi), e titolare dal 1289 al 1300. (it)
|