Amalric II | Crusader, Crusader King & Jerusalem | Britannica
king of Jerusalem
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Also known as: Amalric of Lusignan, Amauri de Lusignan, Amaury de Lusignan
Byname:
Amalric of Lusignan
French:
Amaury de Lusignan
Amaury also spelled:
Amauri
Born:
c. 1155
Died:
April 1, 1205
House / Dynasty:
Lusignan family

Amalric II (born c. 1155—died April 1, 1205) was the king of Cyprus (1194–1205) and of Jerusalem (1197–1205) who ably ruled the two separated kingdoms.

Amalric had been constable of Palestine before he was summoned by the Franks in Cyprus to become king there after the death of his brother Guy of Lusignan. Amalric planned a close alliance with Henry of Champagne, the uncrowned ruler of Palestine, betrothing his three sons to Henry’s three daughters. He also became the vassal of the Holy Roman emperor Henry VI. On Henry of Champagne’s accidental death (1197), Amalric, a widower, was induced to marry Henry’s widow, Queen Isabella I, because the emperor’s German advisers were hoping to get the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem (then only a thin strip of the Palestinian coast) as a fief like Cyprus. Amalric, however, decided to administer Jerusalem separately and to regard himself as merely its regent.

Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon in Coronation Robes or Napoleon I Emperor of France, 1804 by Baron Francois Gerard or Baron Francois-Pascal-Simon Gerard, from the Musee National, Chateau de Versailles.
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As king of Jerusalem, Amalric was able to make peace with his Muslim neighbours, thanks to the struggle that took place among them after Saladin’s death in 1193. Though both sides periodically broke the treaty, it was renewed in September 1204 for six years. On Amalric’s death Cyprus was left to his six-year-old son, Hugh, and the kingdom of Jerusalem remained in Isabella’s possession.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.