Bohemond is the son of Bohemond I …
Years: 1126 - 1126
Bohemond is the son of Bohemond I of Tripoli and Constance of France.
When his father died, absent from Antioch, Bohemond II was a child living in Apulia.
His cousin Tancred had taken over the regency of Antioch until he died in 1112; it had then passed to Roger of Salerno, with the understanding that he would relinquish it to Bohemond whenever the latter arrived.
Roger, however, had been killed at the Battle of Ager Sanguinis in 1119, and the nobles of Antioch had invited King Baldwin II of Jerusalem to govern the Principality.
Bohemond had reached his majority in 1124, at the age of sixteen, and has spent the past two years attending to affairs of state in the Mezzogiorno.
After his eighteenth birthday in October 1126, he finally leaves Apulia for Antioch.
According to William of Tyre, he had reached an agreement beforehand with his cousin William II, Duke of Apulia, that whichever of them died first, would leave his lands in Italy to the other.
This is flatly contradicted by Alexander of Telese, who states that Bohemond left his lands under the governance of the Pope, and by Romuald of Salerno, who states that the regency of Taranto went to a relative of Bohemond's, Alexander, Count of Conversano.
To whomever the principality of Taranto was left or promised, as part of his agreement to come to Antioch, Bohemond also marries Baldwin II's daughter Alice.
According to Matthew of Edessa, Baldwin supposedly also promised him the crown of Jerusalem, but Matthew might be confusing Alice with her elder sister Melisende of Jerusalem, who also married a westerner, Fulk V of Anjou, around the same time.
Locations
People
Groups
- Abbasid Caliphate (Baghdad)
- Danishmends
- Apulia, Norman Duchy of
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Komnenos dynasty, restored
- Taranto, Principality of
- Antioch, Principality of
- Jerusalem, Latin Kingdom of
