Constance inherited titles and, in theory, power but was controlled by many other people in her life. She also was kidnapped and forced to marry Raymond of Antioch.

She is my 22 x great-grandmother.

Constance was born in 11271 2 or 1128 3, most likely in Antioch. She is the daughter of Bohemond II Prince of Antioch and Alice of Jerusalem1 3.

Principality of Antioch
Principality of Antioch By MapMaster – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0

Titles

Her father died in 1130, without any male heirs1. As his only child, she inherited the title of Princess of Antioch1 2.

She was an infant when she inherited the title, so she lived under the regency of4:

  1. Her mother, Alice
  2. Her maternal grandfather, Baldwin II of Jerusalem.
  3. Her mother’s brother-in-law, Fulk d’Anjou, King of Jerusalem. Fulk delegated this to Raynald Le Mazoir5.

In 1136, she succeeded her mother as Lady of Latekieh and Jabala upon marriage.

Family

She first married Raymond of Poitiers2 3 in April or May 11364.

The political intrigue that led to her marriage is detailed in this article, and involves the Bishop of Antioch, her uncle and Raymond of Poitiers.

Raymond became Prince of Antioch because of this marriage.

A 3D reconstruction of the city of Antioch in Roman times
3D reconstruction of the city of Antioch in Roman times

Together they had five children3:

  • Bohemond III “The Stutterer” Prince of Antioch.
  • Marie of Antioch, who married the Emperor of Byzantium.
  • Philippa of Antioch.
  • Baudouin of Antioch.
  • Raymond of Antioch.

Second marriage

After Raymond died, Baudouin III, King of Jerusalem, proposed three French candidates as a husband for her. She rejected them all4. Emperor Manuel suggested a member of the Norman nobility but she rejected him too4.

Sometime before May 1153, she married Frenchman Renaud de Châtillon-sur-Loing2 3 who had remained in Jerusalem after the Second Crusade4. In 1160, Governor of Aleppo Majd ed-Din imprisoned Renaud for 16 years4. Sensing an opportunity, Constance claimed that power in Antioch reverted to her in Renaud’s absence4. King Boudouin declared her son, Bohemond III, to be the rightful prince. He ruled under the regency of Patriarch Aimery4. Constance appealed to Emperor Manuel4, leveraging the tension between Byzantium and Jerusalem. Manuel then negotiated a marriage with Constance’s eldest daughter, Marie.

A picture of Bohemond III
Bohemond III

Manuel was cheeky to get Constance’s hand in marriage, influence her second marriage, and to marry her daughter! It goes to show how they treated women as currency in those days.

As the negotiations took place, the city rioted and by 1163 Constance was living in exile3.

Constance and Renauld had two children2 3:

  1. AGNÈS de Châtillon-sur-Loing, who married Bela III, King of Hungary.
  2. JEANNE de Châtillon-sur-Loing, who married Bonifazio I, King of Thessaloniki.

Notable events

Constance’s title was unusual in that it was rare to have a female successor.

In September 1134 a charter records that “the daughter of Bohemond II” donated to the church of the Holy Sepulchre4.

On 19 April 1140, a charter records that Raymond of Antioch donated property to the church of the Holy Sepulchre, by consent of his wife Constance4.

Death

She died between 11632 3 and 11671. We know this because a charter dated 1167 shows her son had inherited her titles, showing she was dead by then4.

It is unclear where she died, or what of.

They buried her in the Abbey of St Mary of the Valley of Jehosaphat, reputed to be the burial place of the Virgin Mary1 4.

Lineage

This person is my 22 x great-grandmother.

  1. Antioch – Chapter 1; Medieval Lands; Charles Cawley; 2020-10-11[][][][][][]
  2. Royalty for Commoners (4th edition); Roderick W Stuart; Genealogical Publishing Ltd; 2002[][][][][][]
  3. Constance Of Antioch (1128–1164); Encyclopaedia.com; (Retrieved 2022-02-19) [][][][][][][][]
  4. Antioch – Chapter 2; Medieval Lands; Charles Cawley; 2020-10-11[][][][][][][][][][][][][]
  5. Ralph of Domfront, Patriarch of Antioch (1135-40); Bernard Hamilton; Nottingham medieval studies, Vol 28; 1984-01[]