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Constantine of Baberon

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Name
  
Constantine Baberon


Died
  
1263

Constantine of Baberon Constantine of Baberon YouTube

Children
  
Hethum I, King of Armenia, Sempad the Constable

Grandchildren
  
Leo II, King of Armenia, Sibylla of Armenia

Great grandchildren
  
Sempad, King of Armenia

People also search for
  
Hethum I, King of Armenia

Constantine of Baberon (died c. 1263) was a powerful Armenian noble of the Het‛umid family. He was the son of Vassag and the father of King Het‛um I, who ruled the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia from 1226 to 1270. Constantine played a pivotal role in placing his son on the throne by engineering the murder of Philip, the husband of Isabella, Queen of Armenia. He tricked Philip’s father, Bohemond IV of Antioch, to search for his son at Amouda rather than at Sis, where he was being tortured and poisoned. He then took his army to the gates of Silifke Castle, forced its Frankish lords to surrender Isabella, and arranged the marriage, making his son the first Het‛umid ruler of the Armenian Kingdom.

Constantine of Baberon Constantine of Baberon Biography

Constantine began construction on the elaborate baronial apartments at Baberon (Çandır Castle), which were still standing in 1979. Nearby, at a site known today as Kız Kilisesi near Gösne, he built a monastic retreat with an ornate chapel whose dedicatory inscription is dated to 1241.

Constantine, also known as the Grand Baron Constantine, was married to Alix Pahlavouni (a third-cousin of Leo II), with whom he fathered:

  • Hethum I of Armenia
  • Sempad the Constable
  • John the Bishop of Sis
  • Ochine of Korykos, father of the historian Hayton of Corycus
  • Maria, who married John of Ibelin, Count of Jaffa and Ascalon, the famous jurist
  • Stephanie, married in 1237 to King Henry I of Cyprus
  • References

    Constantine of Baberon Wikipedia