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  1. Pons ( c. 1098 – 25 March 1137) was count of Tripoli from 1112 to 1137. He was a minor when his father, Bertrand, died in 1112. He swore fealty to the Byzantine Emperor Alexios I Komnenos in the presence of a Byzantine embassy. His advisors sent him to Antioch to be educated in the court of Tancred of Antioch, ending the hostilities between ...

  2. Roman Catholic. Raymond of Saint-Gilles ( c. 1041 – 28 February 1105), also called Raymond IV of Toulouse or Raymond I of Tripoli, was the count of Toulouse, duke of Narbonne, and margrave of Provence from 1094, and one of the leaders of the First Crusade from 1096 to 1099. He spent the last five years of his life establishing the County of ...

  3. Pons of Balazun (died 1099) was an Occitan nobleman who participated in the First Crusade and in the creation of one of its earliest histories, the Book of the Franks Who Captured Jerusalem. [1] [2] Pons was in the army of Count Raymond IV of Toulouse , and accompanied the count into the church of Saint Peter in Antioch at the discovery of the Holy Lance on the evening of 14 June 1098.

  4. County of Toulouse. The County of Toulouse ( Occitan: Comtat de Tolosa) was a territory in southern France consisting of the city of Toulouse and its environs, ruled by the Count of Toulouse from the late 9th century until the late 13th century. [2] The territory is the center of a region known as Occitania .

  5. Raymond V, Count of Toulouse. Raymond V ( Occitan: Ramon; c. 1134 – c. 1194) was Count of Toulouse from 1148 until his death in 1194. Silver obol of Raymond V count of Toulouse. He was the son of Alphonse I of Toulouse and Faydida of Provence. [1] Alphonse took his son with him on the Second Crusade in 1147. [2]

  6. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Pons, Count of Toulouse. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from Pons of Toulouse) Pons (II) William[1] (abt 1020 – 1060) was the Count of Toulouse from 1037. He was the eldest son and successor of William III Taillefer and Emma of Provence. He thus inherited the title marchio Provincæ.

  7. The House of Toulouse, sometimes called House of Saint-Gilles or Raimondines, is a family of Frankish origin established in Languedoc having owned the County of Toulouse. Its first representative was Fulcoald of Rouergue , who died after 837, whose sons Fredelo and Raymond I were the first hereditary counts of Toulouse from 849 to 863; the last holder of the county in the agnatic line was ...