First years After his return from Constantinople early in 1177, Raynald married
Stephanie of Milly, the lady of
Transjordan, and BaldwinIV also granted him
Hebron. The first extant charter styling Raynald as "Lord of Hebron and Montréal" was issued in November 1177. He owed service of 60 knights to the Crown, showing that he had become one of the wealthiest barons of the realm. From his castles at
Kerak and
Montréal, he controlled the routes between the two main parts of Saladin's empire, Syria and Egypt. Raynald and BaldwinIV's brother-in-law,
William of Montferrat, jointly granted large estates to
Rodrigo Álvarez, the founder of the
Order of Mountjoy, to strengthen the defence of the southern and eastern frontier of the kingdom. After William of Montferrat died in June 1177, the king made Raynald regent of the kingdom. Baldwin IV's cousin Count
Philip I of Flanders came to the Holy Land at the head of a crusader army in early August 1177. The king offered him the regency, but Philip refused the offer, saying that he did not want to stay in the kingdom. Philip declared that he was "willing to take orders" from anybody, but he protested when Baldwin confirmed Raynald's position as "regent of the kingdom and of the armies" as he thought that a military commander without special powers should lead the army. Philip left the kingdom a month after his arrival. Saladin invaded the region of
Ascalon, but the royal army launched an attack on him in the
Battle of Montgisard on 25November, leading to his defeat. William of Tyre and
Ernoul attributed the victory to the king, but
Baha ad-Din ibn Shaddad and other Muslim authors recorded that Raynald was the supreme commander. Saladin himself referred to the battle as a "major defeat which God mended with the famous battle of Hattin", according to Baha ad-Din. Raynald signed a majority of royal charters between 1177 and 1180, with his name always first among signatories, showing that he was the king's most influential official during this period. Raynald became one of the principal supporters of
Guy of Lusignan, who married the king's elder sister,
Sybilla, in early 1180, although many barons of the realm had opposed the marriage. The king's half-sister,
Isabella (whose stepfather,
Balian of Ibelin, was Guy of Lusignan's opponent), was engaged to Raynald's stepson,
Humphrey IV of Toron, in autumn 1180. BaldwinIV dispatched Raynald, along with
Heraclius, the
Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, to mediate a reconciliation between Bohemond III of Antioch and Patriarch Aimery in early 1181. The same year,
Roupen III, Lord of Cilician Armenia, married Raynald's stepdaughter,
Isabella of Toron.
Fights against Saladin , a major fortress in the
Lordship of Transjordan (present-day
al-Karak in
Jordan) Raynald was the only Christian leader who fought against Saladin in the 1180s. The contemporary chronicler Ernoul mentions two raids that Raynald made against
caravans travelling between Egypt and Syria, breaking the truce. Modern historians debate whether Raynald's military actions sprang from a desire for booty, or were deliberate maneuvers to prevent Saladin from annexing new territories. After as-Salih died on 18November 1181, Saladin tried to seize Aleppo, but Raynald stormed into Saladin's territory, reaching as far as
Tabuk on the route between
Damascus and
Mecca. Saladin's nephew,
Farrukh Shah, invaded Transjordan instead of attacking Aleppo to compel Raynald to return from the
Arabian Desert. Before long, Raynald seized a caravan and imprisoned its members. On Saladin's protest, BaldwinIV ordered Raynald to free them, but Raynald refused. His defiance annoyed the king, enabling
Raymond III of Tripoli's partisans to reconcile him with the monarch. A close relative of Baldwin, Raymond had assumed the regency in 1174 but was banned from the kingdom for allegedly plotting against the ailing king. Raymond's return to the royal court put an end to Raynald's paramount position. After accepting the new situation, Raynald cooperated with the king and Raymond during the fights against Saladin in the summer of 1182. Saladin revived the
Egyptian naval force and tried to capture
Beirut, but his ships were forced to retreat. Raynald ordered the building of at least five ships in Transjordan. They were carried across the
Negev desert to the
Gulf of Aqaba at the northern end of the
Red Sea in January or February 1183. He captured the fort of Ayla (present-day
Eilat in Israel), and attacked the Egyptian fortress on
Pharaoh's Island. Part of his fleet
made a plundering raid along the coasts against ships delivering
Muslim pilgrims and goods, threatening the security of the holy cities of Mecca and
Medina. Raynald left the island, but his fleet continued the siege. Saladin's brother,
al-Adil, the governor of Egypt, dispatched a fleet to the Red Sea. The Egyptians relieved Pharaoh's Island and destroyed the Christian fleet. Some of the soldiers were captured near Medina because they landed either to escape or to attack the city. Raynald's men were executed, and Saladin took an oath that he would never forgive him. Though Raynald's naval expedition "showed a remarkable degree of initiative" according to Hamilton, most modern historians agree that it contributed to the unification of Syria and Egypt under Saladin's rule. Saladin captured Aleppo in June 1183, completing the encirclement of the crusader states. Baldwin IV, who had become seriously ill, made Guy of Lusignan regent in October 1183. Within a month, Baldwin had dismissed Guy and had his nephew and Guy's stepson, the five-year-old
Baldwin V, crowned king in association with himself. Raynald was not present at BaldwinV's coronation because he was at the wedding of his stepson, Humphrey, and BaldwinIV's half-sister, Isabella, in Kerak. Saladin unexpectedly invaded Transjordan, forcing the local inhabitants to seek refuge in Kerak. After Saladin broke into the town, Raynald only managed to escape to the fortress because one of his retainers had hindered the attackers from seizing the bridge between the town and the castle. Saladin
laid siege to Kerak. According to Ernoul, Raynald's wife sent dishes from the wedding to Saladin, persuading him to stop bombarding the tower where her son and his wife stayed. After envoys from Kerak informed BaldwinIV of the siege, the royal army left Jerusalem for Kerak under the command of the king and RaymondIII of Tripoli. Saladin abandoned the siege before their arrival on 4December. On Saladin's order,
Izz ad-Din Usama had a fortress built at
Ajloun, near the northern border of Raynald's domains.
Kingmaker by his wife
Sybilla of Jerusalem, who was proclaimed queen with Raynald's assistance (from a late-15th-century manuscript of William of Tyre's and its
Continuation). Baldwin IV died in early 1185. His successor, BaldwinV, died in late summer 1186. The
High Court of Jerusalem had ruled that neither BaldwinV's mother, Sybilla, nor her half-sister Isabella could be crowned without the decision of the pope, the
Holy Roman Emperor, and the kings of France and England on BaldwinV's lawful successor. However, Sybilla's uncle, JoscelinIII of Courtenay, took control of Jerusalem with the support of Raynald and other influential prelates and royal officials. Raynald urged the townspeople to accept Sybilla as the lawful monarch, according to the . Raymond of Tripoli and his supporters tried to prevent her coronation and reminded her partisans of the decision of the High Court. Ignoring their protest, Raynald and
Gerard of Ridefort,
Grand Master of the Knights Templar, accompanied Sybilla to the
Holy Sepulchre, where she was crowned. She also arranged the coronation of her husband, Guy, although he was unpopular even among her supporters. Her opponents tried to persuade Raynald's stepson, Humphrey, to claim the crown on his wife's behalf, but Humphrey deserted them and swore fealty to Sybilla and Guy. Raynald headed the list of secular witnesses in four royal charters issued between 21October 1186 and 7March 1187, showing that he had become a principal figure in the new king's court.
Ali ibn al-Athir and other Muslim historians stated that Raynald made a separate truce with Saladin in 1186. This "seems unlikely to be true", according to Hamilton, because the truce between the Kingdom of Jerusalem and Saladin legally covered Raynald's domains as they formed a
large fiefdom in the kingdom. In late 1186 or early 1187, a rich caravan travelled through Transjordan from Egypt to Syria. Ali ibn al-Athir mentioned that a group of armed men accompanied the caravan. Raynald seized the caravan, possibly because he regarded the presence of soldiers as a breach of the truce, according to Hamilton. He took all the merchants and their families prisoner, seized a large amount of booty, and refused to receive envoys from Saladin demanding compensation. Saladin sent his envoys to King Guy, who accepted his demands. However, Raynald refused to obey the king, stating in the words of the that "he was lord of his land, just as Guy was lord of his, and he had no truces with the
Saracens". For Barber, Raynald's disobedience indicates that the kingdom was "on the brink of breaking up into a collection of semi-autonomous fiefdoms" under Guy's rule. Saladin proclaimed a (or holy war) against the kingdom, taking an oath that he would personally kill Raynald for breaking the truce. The historian
Paul M. Cobb remarks that Saladin "badly needed a victory against the Franks to silence those who criticized him for spending so much time at war with his fellow Muslims". == Capture and execution ==