'Thoros' (or 'Theodoros', died
March 9,
1098) was the ruler of
Edessa at the time of the
First Crusade and was part of the
Hetoumid-family.
The son of Hethum, he was a former officer (''curopalates'') in the
Byzantine Empire and a lieutenant of
Philaretos Brachamios. He was
Armenian but practised the
Greek Orthodox faith. Around
1094, the
Seljuk emir of
Damascus,
Tutush I, captured Edessa and established Thoros as governor. Thoros immediately tried to take control of the city for himself; when
Yaghi-Siyan, emir of
Antioch, and
Ridwan, emir of Aleppo, took refuge in Edessa after being defeated by
Malik Shah I, Thoros tried to take them captive and ransom them. The other Edessan nobles did not agree with this and they were freed. Thoros then fortified Edessa and cut off the citadel, garrisoned by Turkish and Armenian troops. The Turks and
Ortoqids besieged the city for two months, but were unable to capture it even after breaking through the walls. The Turks withdrew and Thoros was recognized as lord of the city.
As a Greek Orthodox Christian, he was not well-loved by his
Armenian subjects in Edessa. He resisted attacks from the Seljuks, but in
1098 had to ask for help from the
crusaders, who were occupied at the
siege of Antioch.
Baldwin of Boulogne had come to Edessa rather than participate in the siege, probably looking to carve out some territory for himself, and had captured
Turbessel. Thoros invited him to Edessa and made an alliance with him. Baldwin gradually convinced Thoros to adopt him as his son and heir, but having done this, Baldwin attacked Thoros' officers and besieged him in the citadel. Thoros agreed to let him have the city and made plans to flee with his family to
Melitene, but shortly afterwards, on March 9, Thoros was
assassinated by the Armenian inhabitants of the city, possibly at Baldwin's command, and Baldwin became the first
count of Edessa.
Sources
★
Steven Runciman, ''A History of the Crusades, vol. I: The First Crusade and the Foundation of the Kingdom of Jerusalem''.
Cambridge University Press, 1951.
★ ''Armenia and the Crusades, Tenth to Twelfth Centuries: The Chronicle of
Matthew of Edessa''. Translated by Ara Edmond Dostourian. National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, 1993.
★
Fulcher of Chartres, ''A History of the Expedition to Jerusalem, 1095-1127'', trans. Frances Rita Ryan. University of Tennessee Press, 1969.