- male, deceased (1100)
- Godfrey of Bouillon (c. 1060, Baisy-Thy, near Brussels - 18 July 1100, Jerusalem) was a medieval knight and soldier who was a leader of the First...
- male, deceased (1194)
- Guy of Lusignan (c. 1150 - 1194) was a French knight who, through marriage, became king-consort of Jerusalem, and led the kingdom to disaster at...
- male, deceased (1192)
- Conrad of Montferrat, or Conrad I of Jerusalem (Piedmontese: Corad dël Monfrà; Italian: Corrado del Monferrato; mid-1140s - 28 April, 1192) was on...
- male, deceased (1237)
- John of Brienne (Jean) (c. 1148 - 1237), king of Jerusalem and Latin emperor-regent of Constantinople, was a man of sixty years of age before he...
- male, deceased (1250)
- Frederick II (December 26, 1194 - December 13, 1250), of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, was a pretender to the title of King of the Romans from 1212 and...
- male, deceased (1118)
- Baldwin of Boulogne (died April 2, 1118) was one of the leaders of the First Crusade, who became the first Count of Edessa and then the second...
- female, deceased (1190)
- Sibylla (c. 1160 - 1190) was the Countess of Jaffa and Ascalon from 1176 and Queen of Jerusalem from 1186 to 1190. She was the eldest daughter of...
- male, deceased (1254)
- Conrad IV (25 April, 1228 - 21 May, 1254) was king of Jerusalem (as Conrad II) (1228-1254), of Germany (1237-1254), and of Sicily (as Conrad I)...
- male, deceased (1143)
- Fulk V of Anjou (1089/1092 - November 13, 1143), also known as Fulk the Young, and after 1131 as Fulk of Jerusalem, was Count of Anjou from 1109 to...
- male, deceased (1107)
- Dagobert (died 1107), Archbishop of Pisa, was the first Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem after it was captured in the First Crusade. Dagobert arrived...
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