'Baldwin I' (July
1172 –
1205,
Bulgaria), the first emperor of the
Latin Empire of
Constantinople, as 'Baldwin IX'
Count of Flanders and as 'Baldwin VI'
Count of Hainaut, was one of the most prominent leaders of the
Fourth Crusade, which resulted in the capture of Constantinople, the conquest of the greater part of the
Byzantine Empire, and the foundation of the Latin Empire, also known as ''Romania'' (not to be confused with modern
Romania).
History
Early life
Baldwin was the son of
Baldwin V of Hainaut, and
Margaret I, sister of
Philip of Alsace and
Countess of Flanders. When Philip died childless in 1191, he was succeeded in
Flanders by Baldwin V, who ruled as Baldwin VIII of Flanders by right of marriage.
In 1186, the younger Baldwin married Marie of Champagne, daughter of count
Henry I of Champagne. The chronicler
Gislebert describes Baldwin as being infatuated with his young bride, who nevertheless preferred prayer to the marital bed. Gislebert claims Baldwin was "''tied only to one woman''", his wife.
Through Marie, Baldwin had additional connections and obligations to the defenders of the Holy Land: Her brother
Henry II of Champagne had been
King of Jerusalem in the 1190s (leaving a widow and two daughters who needed help to keep and regain their territories in Palestine). Marie's uncles
Richard I of England and
Philip II of France had just been on the
Third Crusade.
Baldwin's own family had also been involved in defence of Jerusalem: his uncle Philip had died on Crusade. Baldwin's mother's mother was great-aunt of
Isabella, Queen of Jerusalem and the Counts of Flanders had tried to help Jerusalem relatives in their struggle. Baldwin wanted to continue the tradition.
Margaret died in 1194, and the younger Baldwin became Count of Flanders. His father died the next year, and he succeeded to
Hainaut.
Count of Flanders and Hainaut
Baldwin took possession of a much-reduced
Flanders, for his uncle had given a large chunk, including
Artois, as dowry to Baldwin's sister
Isabelle of Hainaut on her marriage to King
Philip II of France, and another significant piece to his own wife. Isabelle had died in 1190, but King Philip still retained her dowry, on behalf of Isabella's son, the future
Louis VIII of France. The eight years of Baldwin's rule in Flanders were dominated by his attempts to recover some of this land, culminating in January 1200 in the
Treaty of Péronne, in which Philip returned most of Artois.
In this fight against the
French king, Baldwin allied with others who had quarrels with Philip, including kings
Richard I and
John of
England, and the
German King Otto IV.
A month after the treaty, on
February 23,
1200, Baldwin took the cross -- that is, he committed to embark on a
crusade. He spent the next two years preparing, finally leaving on
April 14,
1202.
As part of his effort to leave his domains in good order, Baldwin issued two notable charters for
Hainaut. One detailed an extensive criminal code, and appears to be based on a now-lost charter of his father. The other laid down specific rules for inheritance. These are an important part of the legal tradition in Belgium.
Baldwin left behind his two-year-old daughter and his pregnant wife, Countess Marie. By early 1204, she had left both her children behind to join him in the East. They expected to return in a couple of years, but in the end neither would see their children or their homeland again.
Marie was regent for Baldwin for the two years she remained in Flanders and Hainaut. Afterward, Baldwin's younger brother Philip of Namur was regent and also had custody of the daughters. Baldwin's uncle William of Thy (an illegitimate son of
Baldwin IV of Hainaut) was regent for Hainaut.
Meanwhile, the crusade had been diverted to Constantinople, where the crusaders had captured and sacked the city, and decided to set up a Latin empire in place of the fallen Greek one.
Latin Emperor
The imperial crown was offered to, and refused by,
Enrico Dandolo,
Doge of Venice. The choice then lay between Baldwin and
Boniface of Montferrat. Baldwin was young, gallant, pious, and virtuous, one of the few who interpreted and observed his crusading vows strictly; the most popular leader in the host. He was elected on
May 9,
1204, and crowned on
May 16 in the
Hagia Sophia at a ceremony which closely followed Byzantine practices.
Baldwin's wife Marie, unaware of these events, had sailed to
Acre. There she learned of her husband's election as emperor, but died of the plague in August 1204 before she could join him.
The Latin Empire was organized on
feudal principles; the emperor was feudal superior of the princes who received portions of the conquered territory. His own special portion consisted of the city of Constantinople, the adjacent regions both on the
European and the
Asiatic side, along with some outlying districts, and several islands including
Lemnos,
Lesbos,
Chios and
Tenos. The territories still had to be conquered; and first of all it was necessary to break the resistance of the Greeks in
Thrace and secure
Thessalonica. In this enterprise in the summer of 1204, Baldwin came into collision with Boniface of Montferrat, the rival candidate for the empire, who was to receive a large territory in
Macedonia with the title of
King of Salonica.
He hoped to make himself quite independent of the empire, to do no homage for his kingdom, and he opposed Baldwin's proposal to march to
Thessalonica. The antagonism between Flemings and
Lombards aggravated the quarrel. Baldwin insisted on going to Thessalonica; Boniface laid siege to
Adrianople, where Baldwin had established a governor; civil war seemed inevitable. An agreement was effected by the efforts of Dandolo and the
count of Blois. Boniface received Thessalonica as a
fief from the emperor, and was appointed commander of the forces which were to march to the conquest of
Greece.
During the following winter (1204–1205) the Franks prosecuted conquests in
Bithynia, in which
Henry, Baldwin's brother, took part. But in February the
Greeks revolted in
Thrace, relying on the assistance of
John (Kaloyan), tsar of
Bulgaria, whose overtures of alliance had been rejected by the emperor. The garrison of Adrianople was expelled. Baldwin along with Dandolo, the count of Blois, and
Marshal Villehardouin, the
historian, marched to besiege that city. The Frankish knights were defeated (
April 14,
1205); the count of Blois was slain, and the emperor captured by the Bulgarians (see
Battle of Adrianople).
For some time his fate was uncertain, and in the meanwhile Henry, his brother, assumed the regency. Not till the middle of July was it definitely ascertained that he was dead. The circumstances of Baldwin's death are not exactly known. It seems that he was at first treated well as a valuable hostage, but was sacrificed by the Bulgarian monarch in a sudden outburst of rage, perhaps in consequence of the revolt of
Philippopolis, which passed into the hands of the Franks. According to a Bulgarian legend, Baldwin had caused his own downfall by trying to seduce Kaloyan's wife. The historian
George Acropolites reports that the Tsar had Baldwin's skull made into a drinking cup, just as had happened to
Nicephorus I almost four hundred years before.
At any rate,
Tsar Kaloyan wrote to
Pope Innocent III, reporting that Baldwin had died in prison. A tower of the
Tsarevets fortress of the medieval Bulgarian capital,
Veliko Tarnovo, is still called "Baldwin's Tower".
Family
It was not until July 1206 that the Latins in Constantinople had reliable information that Baldwin was dead. His brother
Henry was crowned emperor in August.
Back in Flanders, however, there seemed to be doubt whether Baldwin was truly dead. In any case, Baldwin's other brother Philip of Namur remained as regent, and eventually both of Baldwin's daughters
Jeanne and
Margaret were to rule as countesses of Flanders.
The false Baldwin
Twenty years later, in 1225, a man appeared in Flanders claiming to be the presumed dead Baldwin. His claim soon became entangled in a series of rebellions and revolts in Flanders against the rule of Baldwin's daughter Jeanne. A number of people who had known Baldwin before the
crusade met the supposed count and emperor and rejected his claim. In the end he was executed in 1226.
References
★ John C. Moore, 'Baldwin IX of Flanders, Philip Augustus and the Papal Power', ''Speculum'', volume 37, issue 1 (January 1962), 79-89
★ Robert Lee Wolff, 'Baldwin of Flanders and Hainault, First Latin Emperor of Constantinople: His Life, Death, and Resurrection, 1172-1255', ''Speculum'', volume 27, issue 3 (July, 1952), 281-322