Balian,
 the Lord of Beirut’s eldest son and heir, was the head of the Ibelin 
family in the fourth generation of the House.  He was a grandson of that
 Balian d’Ibelin who defended Jerusalem against Saladin in 1187, and the
 eldest son and heir of the leader of the baronial opposition to 
Frederick II, the “Old Lord” of Beirut. Yet according to his close 
friend and “compeer” Philip de Novare, he was a man of decidedly 
different temperament and personality from his more famous forefathers. 
Today I conclude my biographical sketch of Balian d’Ibelin II.  
Philip
 de Novare tells us that when making his testament, the “Old Lord” of 
Beirut “gave many fiefs to his children and ordered that they should 
hold them of their eldest brother and be his vassals.”[i] In short, Balian was to the senior and greatest beneficiary of his father’s estate.  Clearly,
 Balian had been fully forgiven of any transgressions against his 
father. He assumed the leadership of the family. Yet we should make no 
mistake that his authority was equal to his father’s. Brothers are 
brothers, and all Balian’s brothers were relatively close to him in age.
 
 
Between
 his father’s death and the start of the Baron’s crusade in 1239, we 
have no indication of where Balian was or what he did, but he was still 
Constable of Cyprus and may have remained in that kingdom after briefly 
regulating his affairs in Beirut. In 1239, however, he resigned that 
position in order to take part in what has become known as the “Baron’s 
Crusade” led by Thibaud of Champagne, King of Navarre, and Richard, Duke
 of Cornwall. Balian was evidently not involved in the ill-advised 
attack on Gaza, however, it was probably at this time that he became 
acquainted for the first time with his cousin Philip de Montfort. 
 
Philip
 was the son of Balian’s aunt Helvis and her second husband Guy de 
Montfort. The latter was a younger brother of the elder Simon de 
Montfort, who is now infamous for his role in the Albigensian crusades. 
Philip had been a child of only four or five when his mother died and so
 had returned with his father to France, where his father had died in 
1228. He had evidently been raised by his Montfort relatives, who 
included a first cousin roughly his own age, Simon, later Earl of 
Leicester and leader of the English parliamentary reform movement of 
1258-1265.
Philip
 came east in the company of his cousin Simon, who had only the year 
before married the sister of the English king, Eleanor Plantagenet. 
Philip de Montfort, on the other hand, was already a widower. He was 
soon persuaded by his Ibelin cousins to take a new wife. His connections
 with the English court enabled Philip to marry very well: Maria of 
Armenia, heiress to the Lordship of Toron. Henceforth he would be not 
only a loyal adherent of the Ibelin cause but a forceful voice in the 
politics of Outremer generally — and an extremely close friend of 
Balian. 
 
Meanwhile,
 however, Emperor Frederick had also married a sister of Henry III, 
Isabella, making cousin Simon de Montfort a relative of the Holy Roman 
Emperor through his wife. It was probably this fact that, in 1241, 
induced the Ibelins to put forward a proposal to the Emperor in which 
they agreed to submit to the Emperor and disband the Commune of Acre 
(which did not recognize the Emperor’s writ) if he would replace the 
hated Riccardo Filangieri with Simon de Montfort and pardon the rebels. 
Although submitted in the name of “the barons, knights and citizens of 
the Kingdom of Jerusalem,” Balian d’Ibelin heads the list of 
signatories. It seems highly probably that Balian was the leading force 
behind this proposal.  Furthermore, Edbury contends that “there is no doubt the proposal was intended to lead to a reconciliation.”[ii]
 One can only speculate on how the history of both the crusader states 
and England might have been different if the proposal had been accepted 
by Frederick II, but it was not. 
 
No
 sooner had the crusaders departed, however, than the Imperial baillie 
Riccardo Filangieri decided he could risk a new attack on the baronial 
faction. In Oct. 1241, after Balian had returned to Beirut and his 
brother Baldwin and Guy were on Cyprus, Filangieri won over two 
prominent members of the Acre Commune and the Hospitallers to the 
Imperial cause. Slipping into the city by a postern leading to the 
garden of the Hospital, he set about wringing oaths of allegiance from 
various leading citizens. Philip de Montfort got wind of the planned 
coup, however, and raised the alarm. He exploited the hostility of the 
Venetians and Genoese to the Emperor, and they secured the streets, 
while Montfort (on what authority is unclear) arrested the two leading 
conspirators. He also sent messengers flying to his friend Balian.
| The Hospital in Acre Today | 
Balian
 returned immediately to Acre and took command. Believing Filangieri to 
still be within the Hospital, he laid siege to it. The Master of the 
Hospital was absent at the time but returned in alarm on learning that 
his brothers were under siege. He encamped with a large body of 
Hospitallers outside of Acre. At once mediators set to work reconciling 
Balian with the Hospital. Balian not only ended the siege, he also 
acknowledged his mistake and expressed his “greatest possible regret.” 
The Hospital accepted his apology, but it is hard to believe there were 
no hard-feelings.
 
In
 April of the following year 1242, Conrad Hohenstaufen, the son of 
Emperor Frederick and Yolanda of Jerusalem, announced that he had come 
of age (14) and that he was, therefore, recalling the unpopular Imperial
 baillie Riccardo Filangieri. Unfortunately for Conrad, boys did not 
come of age in the Kingdom of Jerusalem until 15, so Frederick (who was 
obviously behind the letters) was, once again, blissfully but illegally 
applying the customs of the Holy Roman Empire to the Kingdom of 
Jerusalem. Furthermore, while Filangieri was hated, Tommasso of Acerra 
was also known quantity -- a man who had a reputation for brutally 
enforcing imperial policies on the Sicilian nobility. Edbury concludes 
that his appointment “cannot have been intended as a conciliatory 
gesture.”[iii] It was certainly not received as one.
 
It
 was now nearly 14 years since Balian had been tortured by the Emperor’s
 men because his father had stood up to false accusations, extortion, 
and an attempt to disseize him without due process. For the last 10 
years, an uneasy stalemate had held, with the imperial forces in Tyre 
and the baronial forces in Acre. Both sides had claimed to have the law 
on their side; neither side had been seriously willing to compromise, 
but neither side had dared to attack the other either. The threat of a 
Hohenstaufen king (not just regent) and a new Imperial “Baillie” appears
 to have alarmed Balian. When four citizens from Tyre came to Balian 
claiming that the Imperial party was “greatly hated” and offered to 
surrender the city to him, the temptation was too great to resist. 
Balian met with his closet advisors (first and foremost Philip de 
Montfort) and they agreed they should seize the city. Balian does not 
appear to have cared much about the law at this point; this was a pure 
power play.
 
Novare,
 however, came up with stratagem to give the action a veneer of 
legality. He pointed out that when Conrad came of age in accordance with
 the laws of Jerusalem (in April 1243) all of Emperor Frederick’s claims
 to be his regent would be dissolved. At that point, the constitution of
 Jerusalem called for the closest relative of the monarch resident in the kingdom
 to act as regent until the king could come in person. If he didn’t 
come, that candidate would become monarch in his place. The closest 
relative of King Conrad resident in the Kingdom was Alice of Champagne, 
the dowager Queen of Cyprus and the sister of Conrad’s grandmother. 
Alice of Champagne was roughly 45 years old at this time. She was 
recently married to a certain French nobleman, Sir Ralph of Soissons, 
who Philip de Montfort (it is said) had persuaded to marry her in order 
to have a claim to Jerusalem. Alice and Ralph eagerly accepted the 
notion that Alice should be proclaimed queen until Conrad came to the 
Kingdom of Jerusalem to claim his inheritance. 
According
 to John, Count of Jaffa, another contemporary and witness of these 
events, the High Court first dutifully sent Conrad a letter saying he 
was required to come in person to be recognized as their liege, and it 
was only in a second session of the High Court that Alice of Champagne 
was recognized. There is some ambiguity in the sources, but Jaffa and 
Novare both refer to Alice as “queen” and report that the barons did 
homage to her. This would suggest that they were already anticipating 
Conrad’s failure to appear.  The first to take the oath of homage was Balian of Beirut, followed by his cousin Philip de Montfort, Lord of Toron.
 
The exact date of these events is uncertain.  The
 entire process with letters being sent at probably two sessions of the 
High Court probably dragged out over the latter part of 1242 and the 
spring of 1243. It was also probably in the early spring of 1243 that 
Filangieri, the Emperor’s face for the last fourteen years, obeyed the 
Emperor’s recall. He sailed from Tyre with his most of family, leaving 
only his brother Lothar to hold the city until Accera could arrive. 
 
Alice
 de Champagne promptly played her role by demanding the surrender of 
Tyre to her person. Lotario Filangieri predictably refused. Balian 
d’Ibelin and Philip de Montfort proceeded immediately with military 
plans that had obviously been drawn up well in advance, presumably while
 the legal pretext was being given a chance to unfold. 
Tyre
 was a nearly invincible city that had held out against Saladin twice. 
It was virtually unassailable by land and Balian’s strategy entailed 
using a postern that opened onto the sea, which Ibelin sympathizers had 
promised to leave unlocked. Balian led a mounted force along the base of
 the city on the seaward side, a very dangerous operation because, as 
Novare reports, “the sea was high and the horses fell on the stones and 
many people were in danger of death.”[iv]
 The postern was indeed opened from the inside, but the attackers were 
nearly overwhelmed before their supporting galleys could pass over the 
chain (also lowered by sympathizers inside Tyre). However, they were 
able to win the upper hand, assisted by many residents of the city who 
took the opportunity to attack the Imperial partisans. 
 
However,
 just as at Beirut thirteen years earlier, only the city had been 
captured in this daring attack; the citadel held firm. Lotario 
Filangieri and the bulk of the Imperial mercenaries had taken refuge 
there and knew that Imperial reinforcements under Tommaso de Accera were
 underway. They were prepared to withstand a long siege.
 
But
 then the Ibelins had a stroke of luck: Riccardo Filangieri, their old 
enemy, had encountered terrible storms on his way back to Sicily. His 
vessel had foundered, and he had barely managed to transfer to a smaller
 vessel before it sank. This second ship, however, was too small to risk
 crossing the open sea. Filangiere and his party had, therefore, 
followed the coast back to Tyre, ignorant of the fact that the city had 
meanwhile fallen to the Ibelins. They sailed blissfully into Tyre harbor
 — and were immediately seized.  
![]()  | 
| Medieval Shipping by Charles Hamilton Smith | 
The
 prisoners were initially taken into custody by Sir Ralph de Soissons as
 the King Consort, but Balian “requested” (one imagines forcefully) that
 he be given custody of Filangieri because of the great injuries 
Filangieri had done to his castle at Beirut. Soissons resisted. Novare 
takes credit for convincing him that Filangieri’s fear of Balian would 
be greater and this could be used to their advantage. Significantly, 
according to Novare: “[Balian of] Beirut made such chains of iron as the
 emperor had made for him when he held him prisoner and hostage at 
Limassol.” 
 
Filangieri
 was also persuaded to send a message to his brother in the citadel, 
informing him of his capture and requesting the surrender of the castle.
 His brother steadfastly refused. (Perhaps he was remembering the 
precedent set by Conrad de Montferrat when Saladin had paraded his 
captive father before the gates of Tyre and demanded surrender.) 
Unfortunately for Lotario, his opponents (unlike Saladin in 1187) had a 
personal grudge against his brother. Balian did not hesitate to have 
Riccardo Filangieri, another of his brothers and a nephew led to a 
prominent point with nooses around their necks. Lotario caved in and 
called out for them to send someone to negotiate. Novare was sent and 
successfully negotiated the surrender.
 
Interestingly, the terms allowed for the Filangieris to go in peace with all their belongings. Yet
 on his arrival in Sicily, Riccardo was imprisoned by the 
ever-vindictive Emperor for his "failure." Apparently, it never occurred
 to Frederick that it was his own policies and intransigence that had 
lead to the utter defeat of his cause in both Cyprus and Syria. 
 
Yet
 while Balian kept his word to the Filangieris, he acted far less 
honorably towards his “queen.” Once the Imperial forces were gone, Ralph
 de Soissons, as the consort of the queen, demanded that Balian 
surrender Tyre to him.  Balian
 flatly refused, using a flimsy excuse. Soissons “saw then that he had 
no power nor command and that he was but a shade. As a result of the 
disgust and the chagrin which he had over this, he abandoned all, left 
the queen his wife, and went to his own country.”[v]  (Soisson's
 actions confirm that his interest in Alice of Champagne was exclusively
 in her claims to the crown of Jerusalem.) According to Edbury, the 
Venetians were also shortchanged (by their own account), although given 
Venice’s near-insatiable greed in this period it is hard to know if 
their expectations for reward were justified or excessive in the first 
place. 
Yet,
 niceties aside, Balian had succeeded where his honorable father had 
failed. He had reduced the last stronghold of the imperialists, expelled
 the last imperial “Baillie” and ensured that his replacement did not 
dare set foot in the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Tommaso di Acerra landed in 
Tripoli and remained there, with no influence in Outremer whatsoever.
Balian was rewarded by being named Baillie of Jerusalem by King Henry I of Cyprus when the latter succeeded his mother as the closest relative of the absent Conrad Hohenstaufen. Thus, for the last year of his life Balian d’Ibelin, Lord of Beirut, was not only the ruler of Jerusalem in fact but also in name.
 Balian was rewarded by being named Baillie of Jerusalem by King Henry I of Cyprus when the latter succeeded his mother as the closest relative of the absent Conrad Hohenstaufen. Thus, for the last year of his life Balian d’Ibelin, Lord of Beirut, was not only the ruler of Jerusalem in fact but also in name.
He
 died on September 4, 1247, of unknown causes. He would have been 
roughly 40 years of age. He left behind at least one son, John, who 
succeeded to the title of Lord of Beirut. 
![]()  | 
| Tomb of William of Salisbury | 
Clearly,
 Balian was a very different — and less admirable — man than his father.
 Balian was not prepared to risk arrest and death for the sake of an 
honorable reputation. He was not prepared to trust promises, certainly 
not from the Emperor. Novare never describes him, as he does his father,
 prostrating himself on the earth face-down in prayer, nor does he 
publicly declare his faith in God. Balian d’Ibelin does not, like his 
father, get named in the same breath as St. Louis. 
 
Nearly alone among his generation of peers he was not
 famous as a legal scholar, a historian, a philosopher, or a troubadour.
 There may be a reason. Tellingly, Balian insisted on custody of 
Filangieri because of what Filangieri had done to Beirut ten years earlier. Likewise, he insisted on the same kind
 of pillory for Filangieri as the Emperor had made for him. This 
suggests to me that Balian was traumatized by the experience of being 
tortured in the Emperor’s custody. The 21-year-old nobleman had not 
expected the treatment he received, and he never fully recovered from it
 psychologically. 
 
Balian
 appears to shine only as a soldier, a leader of men — and as a husband.
 He did not give up his Eschiva, he forced first his stubborn, 
principled and pious father and then pope himself to recognize the 
marriage instead. He did not do that for lands — he had more than enough
 and there were plenty of other heiresses including ones with royal 
blood he could have had. He did it for love.
Balian
 II strikes me, a novelist, as a wonderfully flawed hero, a man of 
passion more than principle, and a man of courage, iron will and 
determination. He is the hero of my current series of novels starting 
with:




















