Theobald III of Champagne
Theobald (or Thibaut) III of Champagne (
1179 –
May 24 1201) was
Count of Champagne and
Count of Troyes from
1197 to 1201.
Theobald was the younger son of
Henry I of Champagne and
Marie, a daughter of
Louis VII of France. He succeeded as Count of Champagne in 1197 upon the death of his older brother
Henry II.
Charters were written by he and
Philip Augustus in September 1198 to dictate Jews' rights in accordance with one another's Jews retainment and to repay debts by Augustus to the count of Champagne for the Jews' employment. These laws were reinforced subsequently in charters that were signed between
1198 and
1231.
In
1198,
Pope Innocent III called the
Fourth Crusade. There was little enthusiasm for the
crusade at first, but on
November 28 1199 various nobles of
France gathered at Theobald's court for a
tournament (in his Ecry-sur-Aisne's castle), including the preacher
Fulk of Neuilly. There, they "took the cross," and elected Theobald their leader, but he died the next year and was replaced by
Boniface of Montferrat.
Theobald married Blanche of Navarre on
July 1 1199 at
Chartres, and was succeeded by his posthumous son by
Blanche of Navarre,
Theobald IV. She was Theobald's dower thus receiving his seven castles (Epernay, Vertus, Sézanne, Chantemerle, Pont-sur-Seine, Nogent-sur-Seine and Méry-sur-Seine, and all the subsidiaries coming from these castles and castellaries at the Count's death. On
May 24 1201, she was to rule as regent for the following 21 years, during which the succession was contested by Theobald's nieces,
Alice and
Philippa of Champagne.
He was buried beside his father at the
Church Saint Stephen, built at Troyes by the latter. On his tomb the inscriptions are:
*"Intent upon making amends for the injuries of the Cross and the land of the Crucified
He paved a way with expenses, an army, a fleet.
Seeking the terrestrial city, he finds the one celestial;
While he is obtaining his goal far away, he finds it at home."