Childhood around 1135 , in the
Battle of Inab (illustration from the ''
Passages d'outremer''). ,
Latin Patriarch of Antioch, by Constance's second husband,
Raynald of Châtillon The Antiochene noblemen acknowledged Baldwin II as regent, swearing fealty to him and Constance. He made Count
Joscelin I of Edessa her guardian to rule the principality until her marriage. BaldwinII died on August21, 1131, and JoscelinI died a week later. Alice again laid claim to the regency. However, most Antiochene lords remained hostile to the idea of a female ruler and sent envoys to her brother-in-law
Fulk of Anjou, the new king of Jerusalem. Alice made an alliance with Counts
Joscelin II of Edessa and
Pons of Tripoli in early 1132. Fulk had to travel to Antioch by sea because Pons did not allow him to march through the
County of Tripoli. Fulk landed at
St. Symeon where the Antiochene barons acknowledged him as regent. He appointed
Rainald I Masoir,
constable of Antioch, to administer the principality. Fulk returned to Antioch when Zengi dispatched Sawar, governor of Aleppo, to invade the principality in 1132 or 1133. After defeating the invaders, Fulk entered Antioch. Since the principality needed a firm government, the Antiochene noblemen approached Fulk to select a husband for Constance. He chose
Raymond of Poitiers, the younger son of Duke
William IX of Aquitaine. He did not announce his decision in public because he wanted to prevent Alice and RogerII of Sicily from intervening.
Queen Melisende, Alice’s sister and Fulk's wife, persuaded Fulk to allow Alice to return to Antioch in 1135. Alice wanted to tighten the relationship of the principality and the
Byzantine Empire; therefore, she offered Constance's hand to
Manuel, a son of Emperor
John II Komnenos. To prevent the Byzantine marriage, Fulk sent his envoy to France to Raymond of Poitiers to urge him to come to Antioch, which he did, traveling in disguise, because RogerII of Sicily wanted to capture him in southern Italy.
First marriage Raymond of Poitiers arrived at Antioch in April 1136.
Ralph of Domfront,
Latin Patriarch of Antioch, made Alice believe that Raymond came to Antioch to marry her instead of her eight-year-old daughter. However, Constance was kidnapped from the palace, and Ralph of Domfront blessed her marriage to Raymond in the
cathedral. With the marriage, Raymond became the ruler of the principality, and Alice retired to
Lattakieh. In early 1147 Roger II of Sicily extended an offer to
Louis VII of France to transport the French crusaders to the Holy Land during the
Second Crusade. Fearing that Roger only wanted to assert his claim to Antioch, LouisVII and his wife
Eleanor of Aquitaine (niece of Raymond of Poitiers) declined. Louis and his crusaders came to the principality in March 1148. Before long, rumors spread among the crusaders about a love affair between Raymond and Eleanor. The crusaders tried to convince her husband to launch a campaign against
Aleppo, the capital of
Nur ad-Din, but LouisVII decided to leave Antioch to Jerusalem, forcing Eleanor to accompany him.
Widowhood Raymond was killed in the
Battle of Inab during an expedition against
Nur ad-Din Zangi on June29, 1149. Since Raymond and Constance's four children were still underage, there was no one to "perform the duties of a prince and raise the people from despair", according to William of Tyre. Nur ad-Din invaded the principality and seized all Antiochene territories to the east of the
Orontes River.
Aimery of Limoges, Latin Patriarch of Antioch, directed the defense, but most noblemen preferred a secular ruler. After learning of Raymond's fate, Constance's cousin,
Baldwin III of Jerusalem, hurried to Antioch and assumed the regency. He also concluded a truce with Nur ad-Din. Baldwin III returned to Antioch in summer 1150. He wanted to persuade Constance to remarry, proposing three candidates (
Yves of Soissons,
Walter of Saint Omer, and
Ralph of Merle), but she declined. Urged by BaldwinIII, Constance went to Tripoli in early 1152 to meet him and her two aunts, Melisende and
Hodierna. Constance's aunts tried to persuade her to choose among the three candidates, but she returned to Antioch without making a promise to remarry. According to William of Tyre, Patriarch Aimery convinced Constance to resist, because he wanted to control the government of the principality. The Byzantine Emperor ManuelI Komnenos sent his widowed brother-in-law, the middle-aged
John Rogerios Dalassenos, to Antioch to marry Constance. However, because of his age, she "regarded him with displeasure", according to the contemporaneous
John Kinnamos, and refused to marry him. Historian Steven Runciman says that Constance may have refused the candidates proposed by BaldwinIII and ManuelI because she had met
Raynald of Châtillon, a knight from France. Even though William of Tyre described Raynald as a "knight of common sort", Constance decided to marry Raynald. Their betrothal was kept secret because Constance wanted to obtain BaldwinIII's permission for the marriage.
Second marriage After Baldwin sanctioned the marriage, Constance and Raynald married in early 1153. Raynald took charge of the administration of the principality. However, he was unpopular because his subjects regarded him as an upstart. His frequent attempts to raise funds brought him into conflict with Patriarch Aimery and Emperor ManuelI during the subsequent years. The emperor forced Raynald to pay homage to him in the spring of 1159. Raynald was captured and imprisoned by Majd al-Din, governor of Aleppo, during a plundering raid in November 1160 or 1161. After her husband fell into captivity, Constance announced her intention to administer the principality, but most Antiochene noblemen preferred a male ruler. BaldwinIII of Jerusalem hurried to Antioch and declared Constance's fifteen-year-old son,
Bohemond III, the lawful prince, charging Patriarch Aimery with the administration of the principality. Constance did not accept Baldwin's decision and protested against it to Emperor Manuel. Manuel dispatched his nephew,
Alexios Bryennios Komnenos, and
John Kamateros to Antioch to begin negotiations about his marriage to Constance's daughter,
Maria. The marriage contract was signed and the emperor's delegates confirmed Constance's position as the ruler of the principality. BaldwinIII, who came to Antioch to meet the imperial envoys, did not protest. Constance's son, Bohemond, reached the age of majority in 1163. To strengthen her position against her son, Constance sought assistance from
Constantine Kalamanos, Byzantine governor of Cilicia. However, the Antiochene barons made an alliance with
Thoros II of Cilician Armenia and forced her to leave Antioch. After Constance's removal, BohemondIII took control of the principality. Before long, Constance died, probably in
Lattakieh or
Byblos, according to Steven Runciman. == Family ==