A modest Latin recovery is already under…
April 1189 CE
A modest Latin recovery is already under way before the new Crusade can be organized.
Saladin, as he had promised, has released from captivity Guy de Lusignan, who had appeared at Tyre and demanded that Conrad hand over the keys to the city to him.
Conrad, the nearest male relative of Baldwin V, had refused, declaring that Guy had forfeited his rights to be king of Jerusalem at the Battle of Hattin.
Conrad claims that he is administering the kingdom until the kings should arrive from across the sea to settle the succession.
This is in accordance with Baldwin IV's will: he is the nearest paternal kinsman of Baldwin V. Guy leaves before appearing once again outside Tyre with his wife Queen Sibylla, who holds the legal title to the kingdom.
Conrad does not allow Guy and Queen Sibylla to enter the city, but does permit them to camp with their retainers outside the city walls.
William II of Sicily had sent a fleet with two hundred knights in late spring 1188; Ubaldo Lanfranchi, Archbishop of Pisa, arrives on April 6, 1189, with fifty-two ships.
Guy succeeds in bringing both contingents over to his side.