Officers_of_the_Principality_of_Antioch
The Principality of Antioch mirrored the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem in its selection of great offices: constable, marshal, seneschal, chamberlain, butler, chancellor and at certain times also bailiff.
The officers of the Principality of Antioch are listed below. Dates are dates of attestation, not necessarily beginning and end dates of tenure.
- Robert FitzGerard (1098)[1][2]
- Richard (1101), perhaps Richard of the Principate[2] and perhaps only a titular constable[3]
- Adam (1113)[2][3]
- Rainald I Masoir (1127–1134)[4][5]
- Walter de Sourdeval (1134–1135)[1]
- Roger des Monts (1140–1149)[1][2][4]
- Archembaud (1153)[1][2][4]
- Geoffrey Jordan (1154)[1][4][6]
- Guiscard de l'Île (1170–1172),[1][4] initially as vice-constable (1170) and then constable (1172)[2]
- Baldwin (1175–1180)[4][7]
- Rainald II Masoir (1179)[2][8]
- Baldwin (1180)[2]
- Ralph des Monts (1186–1194)[1][9]
- Roger des Monts (1194–1216)[10][11]
- Robert Mansel (1207–1219),[10] also mayor in 1219[2]
- Simon Mansel (1262)[2][10]
According to Claude Cahen, there were usually two marshals serving concurrently.[2] Andrew Buck's listing implies otherwise.[12]
- Walter (1114–1122)[10][24]
- Ralph (1127),[10] may have been the chancellor of the patriarch[2]
- Franco (1133–1135)[10][25]
- Eudes (1140)[2][20][26]
- John (1149)[27][2][20]
- Walter (1154)[27]
- Geoffrey (1154)[20][28]
- Burchard (1155)[27][2][20]
- Bernard (1163–1170)[27][20][29]
- William (1172)[27][2][20]
- vacancy (1175)[2]
- John (1177–1183), absent for a time in 1178,[2] became bishop of Tripoli[27][20]
- Albert (1186–1191), archbishop of Tarsus, away from Antioch on an embassy in 1187[2][30]
- Alexander (1193–1200)[2][20][31]
- John of Corbonio (1203–1205)[27]
- Jordan (1215–1216[27] or 1216–1219[2])
- John (before 1225), probably John of Corbonio again[27]
- Geoffrey (1241),[27] elected bishop of Tiberias[2]
- William (1262)[27][2]
- Fulk (1133/4–1136), king of Jerusalem, acting as regent for Constance of Antioch[32]
- La Monte 1932, p. 257.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463.
- La Monte 1932, p. 257, gives his dates as 1101–1114.
- La Monte 1932, p. 257, gives 1126–1134. Cahen 1940, p. 463, gives 1127–1135.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, extends his tenuer at least to 1155.
- La Monte 1932, p. 257, has only 1174 or 1175. Cahen 1940, p. 463, has only 1175.
- La Monte 1932, p. 257, gives his dates as 1179–1181.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, does not mention him after 1190; Buck 2017, p. 123, after 1193.
- La Monte 1932, p. 258.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, gives his dates as 1195–1200. Buck 2017, p. 123, gives 1194–1201.
- La Monte 1932, p. 258, extends his tenure back at least to 1200.
- La Monte 1932, p. 258, calls him Guarin Malmuz; Cahen 1940, p. 463, calls him Garin de Malmont.
- La Monte 1932, p. 258, gives his dates as 1193 or perhaps 1200. Cahen 1940, p. 463, gives his dates as 1193–1195.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, does not mention him after 1163.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, mentions him only in 1143.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, extends his tenure down to 1154.
- La Monte 1932, p. 258, pushes the start of his tenure back at least to 1151.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, extends his tenure down to 1191. Buck 2017, p. 125, gives him two tenures, 1179–1181 and 1187–1201.
- La Monte 1932, p. 258, questions whether there is one Simon in 1195 and another in 1215–1216.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, has him as chancellor in 1113.
- La Monte 1932, p. 258, extends his tenure down to 1143.
- La Monte 1932, p. 259.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, has 1153–1154 and La Monte 1932, p. 259, has 1154–1155.
- Cahen 1940, p. 463, does not mention him after 1163.
- La Monte 1932, p. 259, extends Albert's titular chancellorship down to 1200 while making Alexander the acting chancellor from 1193.
- Buck, Andrew D. (2017). The Principality of Antioch and Its Frontiers in the Twelfth Century. The Boydell Press.
- Cahen, Claude (1940). La Syrie du nord a l'époque des Croisades et la principauté d'Antioche. Geuthner.
- La Monte, John L. (1932). Feudal Monarchy in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem 1100 to 1291. Medieval Academy of America.