Lordship of Sidon (original) (raw)

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Fiefdom in the Kingdom of Jerusalem

Lordship (County) of Sidon
1110–1268
Coat of arms of the House of Grenier of Sidon Coat of arms of the House of Grenier
Status Vassal of Kingdom of Jerusalem
Capital Sidon
Common languages Latin, Old French, Italian (also Arabic and Greek)
Religion Roman Catholicism, Greek Orthodoxy, Syriac Orthodoxy, Islam, Judaism
Government Feudal monarchy
Lord/Count
• 1110–1123 Eustace I Grenier
• 1239–1260 Julian Grenier
Historical era High Middle Ages
• First Crusade 1110
• Conquered by Baibars 1268
Preceded by Succeeded by Fatimid Caliphate Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)

The Lordship of Sidon (French: Saete/Sagette), later County of Sidon, was one of the four major fiefdoms of the Kingdom of Jerusalem,[1] one of the Crusader States. However, in reality, it appears to have been much smaller than the others and had the same level of significance as several neighbors, such as Toron and Beirut, which were sub-vassals.

Sidon was captured in December, 1110 during the Norwegian Crusade and given to Eustace I Grenier. The lordship was a coastal strip on the Mediterranean Sea between Tyre and Beirut. It was conquered by Saladin in 1187 and remained in Muslim hands until it was restored to Christian control by German Crusaders in the Crusade of 1197. Julien Grenier sold it to the Knights Templar after it was destroyed by the Mongols in 1260 before the Battle of Ain Jalut. One of the vassals of the lordship was the Lordship of the Shuf.

Lordship of the Schuf

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The Schuf was created out of the Lordship of Sidon as a vassal around 1170. It was centred on the Cave of Tyron. Julian of Sidon sold it to the Teutonic Knights in 1256.

  1. ^ According to the 13th-century writer John of Ibelin