Cecile | |
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Lady of Tarsus and Mamistra, Countess of Tripoli | |
Marriage of the daughters of Philippe Ier Guillaume de Tyr, Historia
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Born | 1097 |
Died | 1145 |
Burial | Church of the Holy Sepulchre |
Spouse |
Tancred, Prince of Galilee Pons, Count of Tripoli |
Issue | Raymond II, Count of Tripoli |
Father | Philip I of France |
Mother | Bertrade de Montfort |
Cecile of France (1097 – after 1145) was a daughter of Philip I of France and Bertrade de Montfort. Her parentage is recorded by William of Tyre, who also records her marriages.
Her first marriage was arranged while Bohemond I of Antioch was visiting the French court seeking support against Alexios I Komnenos. She sailed for Antioch at the end of 1106 and became Lady of Tarsus and Mamistra, in Cilician Armenia. Cecile married firstly (late 1106) Tancred, Prince of Galilee, Regent of Antioch, who succeeded in 1111 as Prince of Antioch.
While dying in 1112, Tancred made Pons of Tripoli, promise to marry her, and Tancred gave her the fortresses of Arcicanum and Rugia as a dowry. They married in 1112. In 1133, Pons was besieged at his castle of Montferrand by Imad ad-Din Zengi, atabeg of Mosul, in 1133, and Cecile appealed to her half-brother Fulk, King of Jerusalem, to come to his aid. Zengi abandoned the siege, but during a second siege in 1137, Pons was captured and killed. He was succeeded by his son with Cecile, Raymond II. Cecile died in 1145.