Hodierna | |
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Jaufre Rudel dies in the arms of Hodierna of Tripoli (MS of troubadour songs, 13C North Italian, Bib. Nat. Française)
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Countess of Tripoli | |
Tenure | 1137-1152 |
Born | c. 1110 |
Died | c. 1164 |
Spouse | Raymond II of Tripoli |
Issue |
Melisende of Tripoli Raymond III |
House | House of Rethel House of Rouergue (by marriage) |
Father | Baldwin II of Jerusalem |
Mother | Morphia of Melitene |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Hodierna of Jerusalem (c. 1110 – c. 1164) was a Countess consort of Tripoli, one of the Crusader states. She was the daughter of Baldwin II of Jerusalem and the Armenian noblewoman Morphia. She was countess of Tripoli through her marriage to Raymond II of Tripoli. Her maternal grandfather was the ruler of Melitene called Gabriel. She was the regent of Tripoli during the minority of her son from 1152 until 1155.
Hodierna was the third of four daughters; her older sisters were Melisende (wife of Fulk of Jerusalem) and Alice (wife of Bohemund II of Antioch), and her younger sister was Ioveta (abbess of Bethany). Hodierna married Raymond II of Tripoli in about 1135.
Hodierna was close to her sisters: she may have asked Melisende to arrange for the assassination of Alphonse I of Toulouse, son of Raymond IV of Toulouse, in 1148, when Alphonse came to claim the County of Tripoli. Hodierna supported Melisende in her struggle with her son Baldwin III in 1150-52. Melisende ended up on the losing side by 1152, but she was given a small fief to rule in Nablus, where she and Hodierna were able to influence the election of the Latin Patriarch.