(Redirected from Alphonse I of Toulouse)'Alfonso Jordan' (
French: ''Alphonse Jourdain'';
1103 –
1148) was the
Count of Tripoli from 1105 until 1109 and thereafter
Count of Toulouse (as Alfonso I) until his death. He was the son of
Raymond IV of Toulouse by his third wife,
Elvira of Castile, was born in the castle of
Mont-Pelerin,
Tripoli, in today's
Lebanon. He was born while his father was on crusade, attempting to create the
County of Tripoli on the Palestinian coast. He was surnamed ''Jordan'' after being
baptised in the
Jordan River.
His father died when he was two years old and he remained under the guardianship of his cousin,
Guillaume Jourdain, count of
Cerdagne (d.
1109), until he was five. He was then taken to
Europe and his brother
Bertrand gave him the county of
Rouergue. In his tenth year, upon Bertrand's death (
1112), he succeeded to the county of Toulouse and marquisate of
Provence, but Toulouse was taken from him by
William IX,
count of Poitiers, in
1114, who claimed it by right of his wife Philippa of Toulouse, daughter of
William IV of Toulouse. He recovered a part in
1119, but continued to fight for his possessions until about
1123. When at last successful, he was
excommunicated by
Pope Callixtus II for having expelled the monks of
Saint-Gilles, who had aided his enemies.
He next fought for the sovereignty of Provence against
Raymond Berenger III, and not till September
1125 did the war end in an amicable agreement. Under it Jourdain became absolute master of the regions lying between the
Pyrenees and the
Alps,
Auvergne and the sea. His ascendancy was an unmixed good to the country, for during a period of fourteen years art and industry flourished. About
1134 he seized the
viscounty of Narbonne, only restoring it to the Viscountess
Ermengarde (d.
1197) in
1143. The claim of the now deceased Philippa of Toulouse was pressed again when
Louis VII besieged Toulouse in
1141, in right of his wife
Eleanor of Aquitaine, the granddaughter of Philippa, but without result.
Next year Jourdain again incurred the displeasure of the church by siding with the rebels of
Montpellier against their lord. A second time he was excommunicated; but in
1146 he took the cross at the meeting of
Vezelay called by Louis VII, and in August,
1147 embarked for the East in the
Second Crusade. He lingered on the way in
Italy and probably in
Constantinople. Alphonse might have met
Eastern Roman Emperor Manuel I Comnenus during his visit there.
But in
1148 Alphonse had finally arrived at
Acre. Among his companions he had made enemies and he was destined to take no share in the crusade he had joined. He was poisoned at
Caesarea, either by
Eleanor of Aquitaine, the wife of Louis, or
Melisende, the mother of
Baldwin III,
king of Jerusalem suggesting the draught.
References
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