Philip II of Courtenay partakes in the …

Years: 1226 - 1226

Philip II of Courtenay partakes in the Albigensian Crusade of Louis VIII of France and the siege of Avignon in 1226.

The city falls, but epidemics have ravaged the army.

Philip dies near Saint-Flour in the Auvergne.

As he is unmarried, the margraviate goes to his brother Henry.

The eldest son of the Peter II of Courtenay and Yolanda of Flanders, Philip had inherited Namur as the designated heir on the death of his maternal uncle Philip the Noble, in 1212.

He had had to fight the descendants of Henry IV of Luxembourg, who have not given up their claim to Namur.

When Cunigunda, a daughter of Frederick I, Duke of Lorraine and the wife of Waleran III, Duke of Limburg, died in 1214, Waleran had soon wed Ermesinda of Luxembourg, and became count jure uxoris there.

Ermesinda claimed Namur and Waleran had added a crown to his coat of arms to symbolize this claim.

In 1223, Waleran had again tried to take Namur from Philip II, but had failed and signed a peace treaty on February 13 in Dinant.

When Philip's father died in 1217, Philip had refused the crown of the Latin Empire of Constantinople and it had fallen to his brother Robert.

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