Located on the plateau
Jabal al-Sumaq, Albara was a strategically important town to the southeast of
Antioch in the Middle Ages. The crusaders
captured Antioch on 3 June 1098.
Pope Urban II legate,
Adhemar of Le Puy, restored the
Greek Orthodox Patriarch of the town,
John the Oxite, and confirmed the Patriarch's authority over both the Greek and the Latin clergy. The crusaders' two most important leaders,
Bohemond, Prince of Taranto, and
Raymond IV, Count of Toulouse, wanted to secure the rule of Antioch for themselves. Raymond invaded the Jabal al-Smmaq and captured Albara on 25 September 1098. Albara had not been an Orthodox
episcopal see, but Raymond established a
Latin bishopric in the town, which thus became the first Roman Catholic diocese in Syria. After consulting with his chaplains and commanders, Raymond appointed a
Provençal priest,
Peter of Narbonne, as the first bishop of Albara. Raymond's chaplain,
Raymond of Aguilers, recorded that Raymond's troops "gave thanks to God" after Peter's appointment because "they wished to have a Roman bishop in the eastern church to look after their affairs". Historian Bernard Hamilton proposes that Peter was actually appointed for political and social reasons, because late-11th-century European rulers could not administer their realms without the assistance of high-ranking clergymen. Indeed, Raymond granted half of Albara and the nearby region to the Bishop, most probably to enable Peter to rule the whole territory on his behalf. The
Gesta Francoruma reliable contemporaneous primary sourcerecorded that Peter went to Antioch where John the Oxite consecrated him. == Archdiocese of Apamea ==