Maria Komnene or
Comnena (
Greek: Μαρία Κομνηνή,
Maria Komnēnē), (c. 1154 – 1208/1217), was the second wife of King
Amalric I of Jerusalem and mother of Queen
Isabella of Jerusalem. She was the daughter of John Komnenos, sometime Byzantine
dux in
Cyprus, and Maria Taronitissa, a descendant of the ancient Armenian kings. Her sister
Theodora married Prince
Bohemund III of Antioch, and her brother Alexios was briefly, in 1185, a pretender to the throne of the
Byzantine Empire.
After the annulment of his first marriage to
Agnes of Courtenay, Amalric was anxious to forge an alliance with
Byzantium and asked the emperor
Manuel I Komnenos for a bride from the imperial family. Maria was the emperor's grandniece and he bestowed upon her a rich
dowry. The marriage of Amalric and Maria was celebrated with much fanfare at
Tyre, on 29 August 1167.
Maria bore him a daughter, Isabella, in 1172, and a stillborn child in 1173. On his deathbed, in 1174, Amalric left
Nablus to Maria, who became
dowager queen upon his death, and Isabella.
In 1177, Maria married
Balian of Ibelin, who commanded the defense of
Jerusalem against
Saladin in 1187. She bore him at least four children:
- Philip of Ibelin, bailli (regent) of Cyprus, who married Alice of Montbéliard.
Maria and Balian supported
Conrad of Montferrat (uncle of the late King
Baldwin V) in his struggle for the crown against
Guy of Lusignan. They arranged for Maria's daughter by Amalric, Isabella, to have her first marriage annulled so that she could marry Conrad, giving him a stronger claim to the throne. In this, Maria and Balian gained the enmity of
Richard I of England and his chroniclers. The anonymous author of the
Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi wrote of them:
Steeped in Greek filth from the cradle, she had a husband whose morals matched her own: he was cruel, she was godless; he was fickle, she was pliable; he was faithless, she was fraudulent.
As the grandmother of
Alice of Champagne (Isabella's daughter by her third husband,
Henry II of Champagne), Maria conducted the marriage negotiations with Cyprus in 1208 – Alice was to marry
Hugh I of Cyprus.
Blanche of Navarre, Regent and Countess of Champagne, widow of Alice's paternal uncle, provided the dowry for Alice. This is the last time Maria is mentioned, and she was certainly dead by 1217.
Sources
- Chronique d'Ernoul et de Bernard le Trésorier, edited by M. L. de Mas Latrie. La Société de l'Histoire de France, 1871.
- Ambroise, The History of the Holy War, translated by Marianne Ailes. Boydell Press, 2003.
- Chronicle of the Third Crusade, a Translation of Itinerarium Peregrinorum et Gesta Regis Ricardi, translated by Helen J. Nicholson. Ashgate, 1997.
- Peter W. Edbury, The Conquest of Jerusalem and the Third Crusade: Sources in Translation. Ashgate, 1996.
- Edbury, Peter W. John of Ibelin and the Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1997
- Payne, Robert. The Dream and the Tomb, 1984
Category:1150s birthsCategory:13th-century deathsCategory:Comnenid dynastyCategory:Christians of the CrusadesCategory:Queens consort of JerusalemCategory:Byzantine queens consortbg:Мария Комнина (Йерусалим)de:Maria Komnena (Jerusalem)fr:Marie Comnène (1154-1217)it:Maria Comnena (Regina di Gerusalemme)nl:Maria Comnenapl:Maria Komnena (królowa jerozolimska)