谁嫁给了Reinaldo de Sidón?

Reinaldo de Sidón: 婚姻状况时间表

Reinaldo de Sidón

Reinaldo de Sidón

Reinaldo de Sidón o Reinaldo Grenier (aprox. 1130 - 1202; también Reginaldo o Renaud) fue el Conde de Sidón y un importante noble del Reino de Jerusalén a finales del siglo XII. Era hijo de Gerardo Grenier e Inés de Bures.

Reinaldo es conocido por ser uno de los pocos señores francos en hablar con fluidez el árabe. Después de la batalla de Hattin en 1187, ganada por Saladino y donde milagrosamente pudo escapar junto a su futuro suegro Balián de Ibelín, Reinaldo trató de proteger su condado de Sidón. Con la llegada de Saladino, cerca de la fortaleza de Beaufort, Reinaldo le salió al encuentro afirmando tener simpatías musulmanas para poder reforzar las defensas. Sin embargo Saladino finalmente frustró sus planes, torturándolo, y finalmente tomando la fortaleza, así como la misma ciudad de Sidón.

Posteriormente, Saladino se avergonzó del trato reservado a un señor tan estrechamente vinculado con su familia (Reinaldo de Grenier tenía una estrecha amistad con el hermano de Saladino, Al-Adil), que le devolvió la mitad de su feudo.

Reinaldo también fue uno de los consejeros de Ricardo I de Inglaterra cuando este emprendió la Tercera Cruzada y estuvo a cargo de la defensa de la fortaleza de Tiro cuando Conrado de Montferrato llegó y salvó el lugar que Reinaldo estaba preparando para entregarla a Saladino. Su hijo Balián lo sucedió al frente del condado en 1202.

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Helvis of Ibelin

Helvis of Ibelin (after 1178 – before 1 June 1216) was a daughter of Balian of Ibelin and his wife, Maria Komnene, who was the dowager Queen of Jerusalem. Helvis was a member of the House of Ibelin. She was lady of Sidon by marriage.

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Reinaldo de Sidón

Reinaldo de Sidón
 
Wedding Rings

Agnes of Courtenay

Agnes of Courtenay

Agnes of Courtenay (c. 1136c. 1184) was a Frankish noblewoman who held considerable influence in the Kingdom of Jerusalem during the reign of her son, King Baldwin IV. Though she was never queen, she has been described as the most powerful woman in the kingdom's history after Queen Melisende.

Agnes was of high birth but an impoverished young widow when she married Amalric of Jerusalem. They had two children, Sibylla and Baldwin. When Amalric unexpectedly inherited the crown in 1163, the High Court of Jerusalem refused to accept Agnes as queen and insisted that Amalric repudiate her. Agnes contracted two further advantageous marriages, to powerful noblemen Hugh of Ibelin and Reginald of Sidon successively.

Agnes's influence grew rapidly after Amalric died in 1174 and their teenage son, Baldwin IV, became king. Despite having been separated from him since his infancy, she became Baldwin's trusted advisor. Because he suffered from leprosy, he could not marry and was growing weaker. Agnes selected government officials and influenced succession by choosing husbands for both Sibylla and Isabella, Amalric's daughter by his second wife, Maria Comnena. She advised Baldwin to have Sibylla marry Guy of Lusignan, who thus became the king-in-waiting, and when Baldwin decided to disinherit Guy, Agnes convinced him and the nobility to crown Sibylla's son, Baldwin V, instead. The leper king died in early 1185; she died around the same time, possibly somewhat earlier.

Count Raymond III of Tripoli and the brothers Balian (second husband of Maria Comnena) and Baldwin of Ibelin were Agnes's chief contenders for power, and it is from sources close to them that nearly all information about Agnes is derived. She has consequently usually been criticized by historians as self-seeking, unscrupulous, and morally loose.

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