's manuscripts In 1183, King Baldwin IV summoned a council to discuss who could succeed him as king instead of his brother-in-law, Guy. The supporters of the King's sister, Sibylla, were not present, while his younger half-sister,
Isabella, and Isabella's husband,
Humphrey IV of Toron, were not viable candidates as they were
besieged in Kerak by the Egyptian ruler
Saladin.
Agnes of Courtenay, mother of Sibylla and Baldwin IV, suggested that the young Baldwin, son of Sibylla, should be made
co-king with Baldwin IV. Agnes may have acted to foil the ambitions of Raymond of Tripoli, who also had a claim to the throne. As the boy had the next best claim after his mother, his grandmother's proposal was widely accepted. Baldwin V was
acclaimed,
crowned and
anointed in the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre on 20 November 1183, and he received
homage from all the barons except his stepfather, Guy.
Roger de Moulins and
Arnold of Torroja,
grand masters of the
Knights Hospitaller and
Knights Templar respectively, and the
Latin patriarch of Jerusalem,
Heraclius, travelled to Western Europe in mid-1184 to seek military aid in defense of the kingdom against potential Muslim attacks. It became apparent in late 1184 or early 1185 that Baldwin IV was dying. He summoned the
High Court to select a
regent for his nephew. Both the king and the barons wanted to prevent Guy from ruling in the boy's name. They appointed Raymond, but made
Joscelin of Courtenay the child's guardian. Baldwin V suffered from ill health, and the contemporary chronicler
Ernoul states that Raymond insisted on not having custody of the king so that he would not be blamed if the child died; the historian Bernard Hamilton doubts that the custody arrangement was Raymond's idea. Joscelin was Baldwin V's granduncle with no claim to the throne and had a vested interest in keeping the boy alive. On the other hand, the High Court suspected that Raymond might seek to make himself king and imposed limits on his power to ensure that he could not usurp the royal dignity. After the question of regency was settled, Baldwin V and Raymond received homage as king and regent, respectively. The young king then took part in a solemn crown-wearing ceremony in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre at his uncle's command. From there the boy was carried to banquet on the shoulders of
Balian of Ibelin "because he was the tallest of the great lords present"; in reality, Balian was chosen to carry the young king because he was a staunch opponent of Guy and the stepfather of Baldwin IV and Sibylla's half-sister, Isabella, the only other possible contender for the throne. Balian's gesture thus signified Isabella's family's support of the boy king. Baldwin IV had died by 16 May 1185, leaving Baldwin V as the sole monarch. The kingdom faced no external threats during Baldwin V's reign, as Raymond succeeded in procuring a truce from Saladin. Western princes refused to come to aid, likely because they could not be offered the crown but, at most, the prospect of a temporary rule on behalf of a minor. Only Baldwin's paternal grandfather, experienced
crusader Marquess
William V of Montferrat, moved to the East, ensuring that the child's rights would be upheld. Though the failure of the mission to Europe secured his regency, Raymond could not exercise much power; key government posts were occupied by the supporters of Guy, who continued to resent not being regent for his stepson. ==Death and aftermath==