Baldwin IV | Crusader, Leper, Regent | Britannica (original) (raw)
Quick Facts
Byname:
Baldwin the Leper
French:
Baudouin le Lépreux
Also Known As:
Baudouin le Lépreux
Baldwin the Leper
Baldwin IV (born 1161—died March 1185, Jerusalem) was the king of Jerusalem (1174–85), called the “leper king” for the disease that afflicted him for most of his short life. His reign saw the growth of factionalism among the Latin nobility that weakened the kingdom during the years when its greatest adversary, the Muslim leader Saladin, extended his influence from Egypt to Syria.
Educated by William, archdeacon of Tyre, Baldwin was crowned four days after his father died. Too young at age 13 to rule the kingdom, he was assisted by his kinsman Raymond III, count of Tripoli, who acted as his regent until 1176. Baldwin’s health steadily deteriorated, requiring periodic appointment of other regents and contributing to power struggles among the nobility.
In November 1177 Saladin marched from Egypt to attack Ascalon, and Baldwin rushed to the aid of the city. Trapped within its fortifications, he broke out and defeated Saladin near Mont Gisard. A two-year truce was arranged in 1180, but, soon after it expired, Saladin captured Aleppo (June 1183), thus completing the encirclement of Jerusalem.
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In an attempt to keep the succession to the throne in his family, the childless Baldwin crowned his nephew King Baldwin V in November 1183, naming Raymond of Tripoli and Jocelin III of Courtenay the boy’s guardians.
This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.