Oultrejordain
Oultrejordain or
Oultrejourdain (
French for "beyond the Jordan") was the name used during the
Crusades for an extensive and partly undefined region to the east of the
Jordan river, an area known in ancient times as
Edom and
Moab.
Oultrejordain extended southwards through the
Negev Desert to the
Gulf of Aqaba. To the north and east (the ancient
Gilead) there were no real borders — to the north was the
Dead Sea and to the east were
caravan and
pilgrimage routes, part of the
Muslim Hijaz. These areas were also under the control of the sultan of
Damascus, and by custom the two opponents rarely met there, for battle or for other purposes.
Before the
First Crusade Oultrejordain was controlled by the
Fatimids of
Egypt, whose representatives (originally very few, if any at all) withdrew when the Crusaders arrived. The various tribes there quickly made peace with the Crusaders. The first expedition to the area was under
Baldwin I of Jerusalem in
1100. Baldwin also invaded again in
1107 and
1112, and built
Montreal in
1115 to control the Muslim
caravan routes, which provided enormous revenue to the kingdom. The crusaders also controlled the area around
Petra, where they set up an
archbishopric under the authority of the
Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem.
There were very few Christians in Oultrejordain, most of the inhabitants being
Shiite Bedouin nomads. Many of the
Syrian Christians who lived there were transplanted to
Jerusalem in
1115 to fill up the former Jewish quarter (the Jews had been either killed or expelled). The other Christians who lived in Oultrejordain were nomadic or semi-nomadic and were often distrusted by the Crusaders.
According to
John of Ibelin, it was one of the four major
Vassals of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. John, writing in the
13th century, called it a lordship, but it may have been treated as a principality in the
12th century. It was established after the expedition of Baldwin I, but due to the relative size and inaccessibility of the area, the lords of Oultrejordain tended to claim some independence from the kingdom. With its mostly undefined borders, it was one of the largest seigneuries. Baldwin I may have given it away to Roman of Le Puy in
1118, but it probably remained under royal control until
1126 when Pagan the Butler was created lord (
1126–
1147). There was also a tradition that the ruler of Oultrejordain could not hold any other positions in the kingdom at the same time, so they were somewhat cut off from political life. Around
1134 a revolt occurred against
King Fulk under
Hugh II of Le Puiset,
count of Jaffa, and Roman of Le Puy (who was possibly lord of Oultrejordain). They were defeated and exiled. In
1142, Fulk built the castle of
Kerak (Crac des Moabites), replacing Montreal as the Crusader stronghold in the area. Other castles in Oultrejordain included Safed and Subeibe.
Toron, near
Tyre, and
Nablus, in
Judea, were not located in Oultrejordain, though they were sometimes ruled by the same people, usually through marriage.
In
1148 the lord of Oultrejordain was involved in the decision to attack Damascus during the
Second Crusade, despite the truce between Jerusalem and Damascus that was vital to the survival of the kingdom and especially the lordship. The crusade ended in defeat and the security of the lordship diminished as a result.
Maurice of Oultrejordain left the lordship to his daughter Isabella (c.
1125–
1166) and her husband
Philip de Milly, lord of Nablus (c.
1120 – aft.
1170), who was compelled to resign Nablus in order to be recognized as ruler of Oultrejordain. After Isabella died, Philip (who ruled Oultrejordain
1161–
1168) became a warrior-monk and finally Grand Master of the
Knights Templar. Meanwhile, their son-in-law
Humphrey III of Toron, son of the royal constable
Humphrey II, had become ruler of Oultrejordain in right of his wife, their daughter
Stephanie de Milly. Stephanie's later husbands also became lords of Oultrejordain in turn.
Raynald of Chatillon, formerly
Prince of Antioch through his wife
Constance, became lord of Oultrejordain by marriage to Stephanie in
1177. He began to claim that the king had no authority in Oultrejordain and acted as a petty king himself. He used his position to attack pilgrims and caravans, and threatened to attack
Mecca, which resulted in an invasion of the kingdom by
Saladin in
1187. Raynald was executed by Saladin himself after the
Battle of Hattin on
July 4 of that year. By
1189 Saladin had taken all of Oultrejordain and destroyed its castles. In
1229 Jerusalem was briefly recovered by treaty by
Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, but the remnant of the kingdom never again controlled territory to the east of the Jordan. The principality was of course claimed by crusader nobles for a long time, the title passing to the line of Isabelle de Toron, daughter of Stephanie, and for several generations belonged to Montfort family, who were lords of Tyre. After the 1350s, when the Montfort line went extinct without close heirs, the hereditary rights presumably passed to the kings of Cyprus who also were descendants of lords of Toron and Tyre.
While under Crusader control, the Bedouin nomads were generally left to themselves, although the king collected taxes on caravans passing through. The land was relatively good for agriculture, and
wheat,
pomegranates and
olives were grown there.
Salt was also collected from the Dead Sea.
Oultrejordain was also known in
Latin as
Transjordan, and covered territory that would later become part of the Emirate of
Transjordan and the modern country of
Jordan.
*Roman of Le Puy (possibly
1118–
1126)
*Payen (Pagan) the Butler (
1126–
1147)
*Maurice (?–?)
*
Philip of Milly (
1161–
1168) and his wife Isabella, daughter of Maurice
**
Stephanie de Milly, daughter and heiress, whose husbands exercised the powers of the lordship:
*
Humphrey III of Toron (died
1173)
*
Miles of Plancy (?–
1174)
*
Raynald of Chatillon (
1176–
1187), third husband of Stephanie, the heiress
Humphrey de Toron, son of Stephanie from her first marriage to Humphrey III of Toron, titular prince of Oultrejordain, Lord of Toron
Alice of Armenia, niece of Humphrey, and her husband
Raymond of AntiochIn the time of Philip of Nablus, Arabian
Petra was a vassal fief under the princes of Oultrejordain.
*John L. La Monte,
Feudal Monarchy in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1100-1291. The Medieval Academy of America, 1932.
*
Jonathan Riley-Smith,
The Feudal Nobility and the Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1174-1277. The Macmillan Press, 1973.
*
Steven Runciman,
A History of the Crusades, Vol. II: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East, 1100-1187.
Cambridge University Press, 1952.
*Steven Tibble,
Monarchy and Lordships in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1099-1291. Clarendon Press, 1989.