Baldwin is able to assemble an army …
Years: 1102 - 1102
May
Baldwin is able to assemble an army of eight thousand men with the arrival of a fleet of French and German crusaders.
In the subsequent Battle of Jaffa, he leads a cavalry charge that once again breaks the Egyptian lines and forces the Fatimid forces to flee to Ascalon.
Despite the loss of numerous knights, and the capture of Conrad, Constable of Jerusalem, and death of Stephen of Blois in the final charge from the doomed tower of Ramla, Baldwin is able to profit off the plunder left behind by the fleeing Egyptians.
Odo Arpin of Bourges had inherited the lordship of Dun and become viscount of Bourges between 1092 and 1095 after marrying Matilda of Sully, whose sister Alice is the daughter-in-law of Stephen, Count of Blois.
He may have shared the viscountcy with Matilda's father Gilo.
Odo at some point between 1097 and 1101 had sold his possessions in Bourges and Dun to King Philip I of France for sixty thousand shillings.
This may or may not have been done to finance his crusade.
He had participated in the Crusade of 1101, probably with Stephen of Blois, and had traveled through Constantinople, where he swore a loyalty oath to emperor Alexios I Komnenos.
Odo had been in Jaffa in 1101 and Jerusalem in 1102, and fights in the Second Battle of Ramla, where he is captured.
He is not executed because of his connection to Emperor Alexios, but is instead imprisoned in Ascalon and later Cairo; Alexios arranges for him to be released.
Locations
People
- Al-Afdal Shahanshah
- Alexios I Komnenos
- Baldwin I of Jerusalem
- Bohemond I of Antioch
- Edgar (the) Ætheling
- Eustace III
- Fakhr al-Mulk Radwan
- Gaston IV
- Iftikhar al-Dawla
- Kerbogha
- Kilij Arslan I
- Manuel Boutoumites
- Odo Arpin of Bourges
- Raymond IV
- Robert Curthose
- Robert II, Count of Flanders
- Tancred
- William the Carpenter
Groups
- Egyptians
- Arab people
- Persian people
- Armenian people
- Jews
- Kurdish people
- Lombards (West Germanic tribe)
- Germans
- Christians, Armenian Apostolic Orthodox
- Christians, Maronite
- Christians, Miaphysite (Oriental Orthodox)
- Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria
- Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
- Islam
- Egypt in the Middle Ages
- Muslims, Sunni
- Muslims, Shi'a
- Syrian people
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- Toulouse, County of
- Flanders, County of
- Abbasid Caliphate (Baghdad)
- Normandy, Duchy of
- Normans
- German, or Ottonian (Roman) Empire
- Turkmen people
- Cyprus, East Roman (Byzantine)
- Fatimid Caliphate
- French people (Latins)
- France, (Capetian) Kingdom of
- Hungary, Kingdom of
- Druze, or Druse, the
- Genoa, (Most Serene) Republic of
- Bulgaria, Theme of
- Lorraine (Lothier), Lower, (second) Duchy of
- Seljuq Empire (Isfahan)
- Christians, Eastern Orthodox
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- England, (Norman) Kingdom of
- Danishmends
- Apulia, Norman Duchy of
- Rum, Sultanate of
- Armenia, Baronry of Little, or Lesser
- Aleppo, Seljuq Emirate of
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Komnenos dynasty, restored
- Antioch, Principality of
- Edessa, County of
- Jerusalem, Latin Kingdom of
- Palestine, Frankish (Outremer)
- Tripoli, County of
