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Hugh, Count of Brienne

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Noble family
  
House of Brienne

Mother
  
Marie de Lusignan

Father
  
Walter IV of Brienne

Name
  
Hugh, of

Spouse(s)
  
Isabella de la Roche Helena Komnena Dukaina

Died
  
August 9, 1296, Sicily, Italy

Parents
  
Mary of Lusignan, Countess of Brienne

Children
  
Walter V, Count of Brienne

Grandchildren
  
Walter VI, Count of Brienne, Isabella, Countess of Brienne

Grandparents
  
Alice of Champagne, Hugh I of Cyprus

Great-grandparents
  
Henry II, Count of Champagne, Isabella I of Jerusalem, Aimery of Cyprus, Eschive d'Ibelin

Hugh, Count of Brienne and Lecce (c. 1240 – 9 August 1296) was the second surviving son of Count Walter IV of Brienne and Marie de Lusignan of Cyprus.

Contents

Life

His father, Count of Jaffa and Ascalon in Palestine, was murdered in 1244 in Cairo, and was succeeded by his elder son, John.

On the death of John (c. 1260), Hugh inherited the County of Brienne, in France, and the family's claims in southern Italy, including the Principality of Taranto and the County of Lecce, which had been confiscated in 1205.

He claimed the regency of the Kingdom of Jerusalem (and, indirectly, a place in the succession) in 1264 as senior heir of Alice of Jerusalem and Hugh I of Cyprus, being the son of their eldest daughter, but was passed over by the Haute Cour in favor of his cousin Hugh of Antioch, and thereafter took little part in the affairs of Outremer. His first cousin King Hugh II of Cyprus died in 1267, and despite Hugh's rights as the senior heir, Hugh of Antioch, was crowned as Hugh III of Cyprus. When his second cousin's son Conradin, King of Jerusalem, was killed in 1268, the succession again went to the junior cousin Hugh III.

Hugh decided to seek his fortune in Europe rather than Outremer, and took service under Charles I of Naples. Charles made him Captain-General of Brindisi, Otranto and Apulia and Lord of Conversano, and he was an enthusiastic partisan of the Angevin cause in Italy. For this service, his family's County of Lecce was restored to him. He was taken prisoner at the Battle of the Gulf of Naples in 1284 with Charles II of Naples and again at the Battle of the Counts in 1287, both times in sea battles against Roger of Lauria. On one of these occasions, he obtained his parole by leaving his only son Walter as a hostage. He was killed in Sicily, at the Battle of Gagliano, fighting Catalan Almogavars, and was succeeded by Walter.

Marriage and issue

Hugh's first wife was Isabella de la Roche, heiress of Thebes. She bore him two children:

  • Walter of Brienne (d. 1311), Duke of Athens, his heir.
  • Agnes of Brienne, married John, Count of Joigny
  • His second wife was Helena Komnene Doukaina, heiress of Lamia and Larisa, daughter of John I Doukas of Thessaly. She bore him one daughter:

  • Joanna of Brienne, married Niccolo Sanudo, Duke of Naxos (d. 1341).
  • References

    Hugh, Count of Brienne Wikipedia