Bohemond II | |
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Prince of Antioch | |
Reign | 1111 or 1119–1130 |
Predecessor | Bohemond I orRoger |
Successor | Constance |
Regent | Tancred of Hauteville (?) Roger of Salerno (?) Baldwin II of Jerusalem |
Prince of Taranto | |
Reign | 1111–1128 |
Predecessor | Bohemond I |
Regent | Constance of France |
Born | 1107 or 1108 |
Died | February 1130 (aged 22–23) |
Spouse | Alice of Jerusalem |
Issue | Constance of Antioch |
House | Hauteville |
Father | Bohemond I of Antioch |
Mother | Constance of France |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Bohemond II (1107/1108 – February 1130) wasPrince of Taranto from 1111 to 1128 andPrince of Antioch from 1111/1119 to 1130. He was the son ofBohemond I, who in 1108 was forced to submit to the authority of theByzantine Empire in theTreaty of Devol. Three years later, the infant Bohemond inherited the Principality of Taranto under the guardianship of his mother,Constance of France. ThePrincipality of Antioch was administered by his father's nephew,Tancred, until 1111. Tancred's cousin,Roger of Salerno, managed the principality from 1111 to 1119. After Roger died in theBattle of the Field of Blood,Baldwin II of Jerusalem took over the administration of Antioch. However, he did acknowledge Bohemond's right to personally rule the principality upon reaching the age of majority.
Bohemond came to Antioch in autumn 1126. He launched successful military campaigns against the nearby Muslim rulers, but his conflict withJoscelin I of Courtenay enabledImad ad-Din Zengi to secureMosul andAleppo. Meanwhile,Roger II of Sicily occupied the Principality of Taranto in 1128. Bohemond died fighting againstDanishmendEmir Gazi during a military campaign againstCilician Armenia, and Gümüshtigin sent Bohemond'sembalmed head to theAbbasid caliph.
Bohemond II was the son of PrinceBohemond I of Taranto and Antioch andConstance of France.[1] He was born in 1107 or 1108.[2][3] In 1104, Bohemond I returned to Europe to seek military assistance against theByzantine Empire and left his nephewTancred in Syria to administerAntioch.[4] Two charters show that Tancred styled himselfprince of Antioch in 1108.[5] In September of that year, Bohemond I was forced to sign theTreaty of Devol, which authorized the Byzantine Empire to annex Antioch upon his death.[6]
Bohemond I died in Apulia in 1111. Bohemond II was still a minor,[7] so his mother took charge of the government ofTaranto.[8] The Byzantine EmperorAlexios I Komnenos sent envoys to Tancred to demand control of Antioch, but Tancred refused to obey and continued to govern the principality.[9] Tancred died in 1112 and bequeathed Antioch to his nephew,Roger of Salerno.[10][11]
Roger's legal status during his rule in Antioch is uncertain.[12] According toWilliam of Tyre, Tancred made Roger his successor "with the understanding that, at the demand of Bohemond or his heirs, he should not refuse to return it," suggesting that Roger was simply regent for the child Bohemond.[13] Roger adopted the title of prince, which implies that he regarded himself the ruler of Antioch in his own right.[12][14] The contemporaneousFulcher of Chartres accused Roger of depriving of "his inheritance his own lord, the son of Bohemond [I], then living in Apulia with his mother."[15] Charters issued in Bohemond's Italian domains between 1117 and 1119 emphasized that he was the son of the prince of Antioch, but did not style him prince.[16]
After Roger and most Antiochene noblemen perished in theBattle of the Field of Blood on 28 June 1119, KingBaldwin II of Jerusalem hurried to Syria to save Antioch fromIlghazi, theArtuqid ruler ofMardin.[17][18] The notables of Antioch proclaimed Baldwin ruler of Antioch, but they emphasized that Antioch was Bohemond's "rightful inheritance," according toWalter the Chancellor.[15][19] Baldwin promised to cede Antioch to Bohemond if Bohemond came to the principality.[15] Those who were present at the meeting agreed that Bohemond should marry Baldwin's daughter,Alice.[19][20] They also decreed that Bohemond would not be entitled to reclaim grants made during his absence from the principality.[20]
Baldwin II was captured in 1123,[21] and the burghers of Antioch sent envoys to Bohemond, urging him to come to his principality.[22] Bohemond reached the age of majority at the age of 16.[2] According to William of Tyre, he made an agreement with DukeWilliam II of Apulia, stipulating that the one who first died without issue was to will his principality to the other; however, the reliability of William's report is suspect.[23][24]Alexander of Telese recorded that before leaving for Syria, Bohemond entrusted his Italian domains to the Holy See, butRomuald of Salerno said that he madeAlexander, Count of Conversano, the overseer of those lands.[23][25] Bohemond sailed from Otranto with a fleet of twenty-four ships in September 1126.[26]
Bohemond landed at the port ofSt. Symeon in the Principality of Antioch in October or November.[20][22] He went to Antioch to meet Baldwin II of Jerusalem, who subsequently ceded Antioch to him.[26] Bohemond was officially installed as prince in Baldwin's presence.[27]
Matthew of Edessa portrayed Bohemond as "a forceful character and great power."[27] Badr ad-Daulah capturedKafartab shortly after Bohemond's arrival, but Bohemond quickly recaptured the fortress in early 1127.[26][27] According to historianSteven Runciman, Bohemond's attack against theMunqidhites ofShaizar, which was recorded by Usama ibn Munqidh, also occurred during this period.[26][27]
Bohemond came into conflict withJoscelin I of Edessa in 1127,[28][22] although sources do not reveal the reason behind the enmity of the two Christian rulers.[28] According to Runciman, Joscelin seized former Antiochene territories fromIl-Bursuqi, governor of Mosul. Furthermore, Bohemond refused to cedeAzaz to Joscelin, despite the fact that Roger of Salerno promised it to Joscelin as the dowry of his second wife, Maria of Salerno.[29] Taking advantage of Bohemond's absence due to a campaign, Joscelin invaded Antioch with the assistance of Turkish mercenaries, plundering the villages along the frontier.[29]
Bernard of Valence,Latin Patriarch of Antioch, imposed aninterdict on theCounty of Edessa.[29] Baldwin II of Jerusalem hurried to Syria to mediate between Bohemond and Joscelin in early 1128.[22][29] Joscelin, who had become seriously ill, agreed to restore the property to Bohemond and to do homage to him.[30] However, the conflict between Bohemond and Joscelin enabledImad ad-Din Zengi, Il-Bursuqi's successor as governor of Mosul, to seize Aleppo without resistance on 28 June 1128.[31]
Meanwhile, Bohemond's cousin William II of Apulia had died without issue on 25 July 1127.[24]Pope Honorius II tried to prevent CountRoger II of Sicily (the cousin of both William and Bohemond) from seizing Apulia, but Roger did not obey him.[25] In May 1128, he invaded Bohemond's Italian principality,[25] capturingTaranto,Otranto andBrindisi without resistance.[25] He completed the conquest of the whole principality around 15 June.[25]
Taking advantage of the disputes between theAssassins andTaj al-Muluk Buri, atabeg of Damascus, Baldwin II of Jerusalem invaded Damascene territory and laid siege toBanias in November 1129.[32] Bohemond and Joscelin joined Baldwin, but a heavy rainfall forced the crusaders to abandon the siege.[32][28]
Bohemond decided to recoverAnazarbus and other territories which had been lost to the Cilician Armenia.[33] He invaded Cilicia in February 1130, traveling along theCeyhan River.[34]Leo I of Cilicia sought assistance from the Danishmend Emir Gazi who made a surprise attack on Bohemond's army.[35] Bohemond and his soldiers were massacred in the battle.[36][37] According to Michael the Syrian, the Turks killed Bohemond because they did not recognize him; had they recognized him, they would have saved him so they could demand a ransom from him.[38] Gümüshtigin had Bohemond's head embalmed and sent toAl-Mustarshid, the Abbasid caliph.[35]
Bohemond's wife, Alice, was the second daughter of Baldwin II of Jerusalem and Morphia of Melitene.[39] Their only child,Constance, was two when Bohemond died in 1130.[40] Alice tried to secure the regency for Constance for herself, but the Antiochene noblemen preferred her father, Baldwin II of Jerusalem.[40] After Bohemond's death, Roger II of Sicily laid claim to Antioch, but he could never assert it against Constance.[41]
Genealogy of the Norman rulers of Antioch and southern Italy[42] |
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Bohemond II of Antioch Born: 1107 or 1108 Died: February 1130 | ||
Regnal titles | ||
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Preceded by | Prince of Taranto 1111–1128 | Succeeded by |
Prince of Antioch 1111 or 1119–1130 | Succeeded by |