The siege of Antioch continues, and at…
May 1098 CE
The siege of Antioch continues, and at the end of May 1098, a Muslim army from Mosul under the command of Kerbogha approaches the city.
This army is much larger than the previous attempts to relieve the siege.
Kerbogha has joined with Ridwan and Duqaq and his army also includes troops from Persia and from the Artuqids of Mesopotamia.
The crusaders are lucky in that they have been granted time to prepare for their arrival, as Kerbogha had first made a three-week long excursion to Edessa, which hare to have any chance of survival.
Weeks earlier, Bohemond had secretly established contact with someone inside the city named Firouz, an Armenian guard who controls the Tower of the Two Sisters.
Firouz's motivation is unclear even to Bohemond—it is perhaps avarice or revenge—but he offers to let Bohemond into the city in exchange for money and a title.
Bohemond now approaches the other crusaders and offers access to the city, through Firouz, if they will agree to make Bohemond the Prince of Antioch.
Raymond is furious and argues that the city should be handed over to Alexios, as they had agreed when they left Constantinople in 1097, but Godfrey, Tancred, Robert, and the other leaders, faced with a desperate situation, give in to Bohemond's demand.