Infancy Henry was born on 3 May 1217 to
Hugh I of Cyprus and
Alice of Champagne. He had two sisters,
Maria and
Isabella. His mother, Queen Alice, was the aunt and
heir presumptive to
Isabella II of Jerusalem. King Hugh died on 10 January 1218 and the 8-month-old Henry succeeded him with Alice as both his
regent and guardian. Alice appointed her uncle
Philip of Ibelin to govern the
Kingdom of Cyprus as her
bailli. The kingdom had been established by Hugh's father,
Aimery of Lusignan (), who accepted the
suzerainty of
Emperor Henry VI in return for a crown. During Henry's minority, Duke
Leopold VI of Austria laid claim to the kingdom. Leopold was a second cousin once removed of the last
Byzantine ruler of Cyprus,
Isaac Komnenos, and must have tried to displace Henry in 1217–1219, while participating in the
Fifth Crusade. The barons thwarted Leopold's attempt. Philip's brother,
John,
lord of Beirut, credited himself and his family with preserving the island for Henry.
Conflicts over regency Imperial claims By 1223 or 1224, relations between Alice and Philip had broken down and the Queen left for
Syria. In an attempt to get rid of her uncle, she married
Bohemond of Antioch and possibly tried to pass the government to him.
Philip of Novara, an Ibelin partisan, relates that the barons of Cyprus unanimously rejected Bohemond out of fear for Henry's safety. Alice then appointed
Aimery Barlais, but Aimery was not able to dislodge Philip. Another claimant to the rule over Cyprus during Henry's minority was
Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II, who considered himself Henry's suzerain on the basis of King Aimery's fealty to Emperor Henry VI. Frederick married Queen Isabella II of Jerusalem on 9 November 1225 and planned to come to the
Latin East on a
crusade. Fearing that Frederick might seize the regency of Cyprus, the Ibelins decided to expedite Henry's
coronation. In 1225, the
archbishop of Nicosia,
Eustorge of Montaigu crowned Henry
king of Cyprus at the
Cathedral of Saint Sophia. Frederick was enraged about not having received prior notification. In early 1226,
Pope Honorius III instructed Philip to govern to the benefit of King Henry and the kingdom. He also ordered the
military orders and people of Cyprus to be loyal to Henry and Philip and placed Henry under papal protection. After Philip died in 1127 or 1128, his brother John, lord of Beirut, seized power. Empress Isabella died in 1228 after giving birth to her successor,
Conrad II. The widowed Emperor Frederick set out for the Latin East nonetheless and arrived in Cyprus in July 1228. At the Emperor's request, John joined Frederick at a banquet in
Limassol and brought his sons and King Henry. John and Frederick argued at the banquet, and John soon took up armed resistance. In September the men agreed that Queen Alice was the rightful regent, that the Emperor should have the profits from the royal revenues, that the fortresses should nominally be under the King's control and in the custody of his vassals until he came of age, and the Emperor took the fealty of the Cypriots as the kingdom's suzerain. Henry was left in Frederick's hands. A plot was hatched to kidnap King Henry and desert Frederick, but John refused to sanction it. When in 1229 Frederick decided to return to Europe, he took Henry to Limassol and had him
married by proxy to
Alice of Montferrat, a daughter of the Emperor's kinsman and vassal
William VI of Montferrat. The Emperor then handed over Henry to his supporters in Cyprus and named Aimery Barlais,
Amalric of Bethsan,
Hugh of Jubail,
William of Rivet and
Gauvain of Cheneche—leaders of the opposition to the Ibelins—as co-
baillis. In June 1229 the Emperor was back in Italy. With the emperor gone, the
baillis invited Philip of Novara—according to Philip's testimony—to King Henry's court and tried to tempt him into abandoning the Ibelin party while the young king looked at him helplessly. An armed conflict followed. The
baillis sent the King under guard to
Dieudamour before being defeated by the Ibelins at Nicosia in July. They retired to the castles of Dieudamour,
Kyrenia, and
Kantara, which the Ibelins promptly besieged. Kyrenia was taken swiftly, but the siege of Dieudamour lasted for nearly a year, starving the defenders. John of Ibelin feared that the
baillis might smuggle the King away to Italy. Dieudamour capitulated in April or May 1230. A peace was then concluded and the
baillis handed over the fortresses, the King and his sisters.
Imperialist rule In late 1231, Emperor Frederick sent a great host to Cyprus. John of Ibelin was warned, and he took Henry to
Kiti. The first detachment of the imperial host anchored off
Cape Gata and demanded an audience with the King; when told that he was at Kiti, the Emperor's messengers sailed there. They relayed to Henry a message from the Emperor, who requested that the King banish the Ibelins. Henry took counsel with his advisors and responded, through his vassal
William Visconte, that the Emperor's command was astonishing because John was his granduncle and vassal.
Richard Filangieri then arrived with the rest of the imperial forces and attacked John's
lordship of Beirut in the Kingdom of Jerusalem. John appealed to King Henry and his fellow vassals for help at a meeting of the
High Court of Cyprus in Nicosia, and they all agreed. Unable to lift the siege of Beirut, John of Ibelin negotiated the marriage of Henry's sister Isabella with
Henry, the youngest son of Prince
Bohemond IV of Antioch. In 1232, King Henry sent John's son
Balian, William Visconte, and Philip of Novara to conclude this alliance. The Imperialists overran Cyprus and seized all fortresses except Dieudamour and
Buffavento, which was defended by the king's cousin
Eschiva of Montbéliard. John allied with the
Genoese and decided to attack Filangieri at
Tyre. After news reached him that his son Balian had raised the siege of Beirut, John decided to go to
Acre to make peace. He left the King at
Casal Imbert with his sons
Baldwin,
Hugh, and
Guy;
his namesake nephew; and
Anselm of Brie. The Imperialists surprised them at night and defeated them. Henry escaped to Acre riding under guard almost naked. There he recruited men by offering fiefs and took out loans from
John of Caesarea and the younger John of Ibelin. The King and the lord of Beirut took their small force to Cyprus, defeated the Imperialists in battle, and proceeded to retake the fortresses. ==Personal rule==