A third army had arrived, led by…
September 1101 CE
A third army had arrived, led by William IX of Aquitaine, Hugh of Vermandois (one of those who had not fulfilled his vow on the First Crusade), and Welf I, Duke of Bavaria, as soon as William II left Constantinople; accompanying them is Ida of Austria, mother of Leopold III of Austria.
They had pillaged imperial territory on the way to Constantinople and had almost come into conflict with the Pecheneg mercenaries sent to stop them, until William and Welf intervened.
From Constantinople, the Aquitanian-Bavarian army had split in two, with one half traveling directly to Jaffa by ship; among them is the chronicler Ekkehard of Aura.
The rest, traveling by land, reach Heraclea in September, and, like the previous army, are ambushed and massacred by Kilij Arslan.
William and Welf escape, but Hugh is mortally wounded; the survivors will eventually arrive at Tarsus, where Hugh will die on October 18.
Ida disappears during this ambush and is presumably killed.