In the poem, Prince
Hugh II of Tiberias (
Hue de Tabarie) is captured in a skirmish by
Saladin, king of Egypt. During his captivity he instructs Saladin in the order of chivalry and leads him through the stages of becoming a
knight, although he refuses to give him the
accolade. In the end, Hugh asks Saladin to give him money to pay his ransom and the king instructs his
emirs to give money to Hugh, who thereby pays his ransom and has money to spare. This fictional account seems to be based on the conflation of a historical event and a legendary one regarded as historical at the end of the 12th century. In 1178 or 1179, Hugh of Tiberias, who was also
prince of Galilee, was captured in a skirmish by the troops of Saladin on the banks of the
Litani River not far from
Beaufort Castle. He was soon released. This event seems to have been merged with the legend that Lord
Humphrey II of Toron, a vassal of Hugh, so impressed Saladin as a warrior that the latter asked to be knighted by him. A desire to increase the prestige of the
house of saint-Omer may have motivated the poet to transfer the legend of the knighting of Saladin from Hugh's vassal to Hugh himself. ==Manuscripts and reception==