Sidon, sacked in the First Crusade by…
1260 CE
Sidon, sacked in the First Crusade by King Baldwin of Jerusalem and King Sigurd of Norway, has become the center of the Lordship of Sidon, an important seigneury in the Kingdom of Jerusalem given to Eustace I Grenier.
During the Crusades, it had been sacked several times: conquered by Saladin in 1187 and remaining in Muslim hands until 1197, the Saracens had finally destroyed it in 1249.
Julien Grenier, Count of Sidon from 1239, had attacked adjacent areas of Damascus after the Mongols’ capture of that city, killing a Mongol officer in the process.
The officer was the nephew of Kitbuqa, Mongol general of Hulagu Khan.
The Mongols avenge themselves by ravaging the territory of Sidon after the Battle of Ain Jalut, sacking the castle; the Mamluks capture its ruins.
(The remains of the original walls are still visible.)
Julian, who had already left the area, sells the devastated county to the Knights Templar.
Ruined, he enters the order of the Temple himself.