| Frederick, Archbishop Of Tyre |
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BISHOP OF ACRE Frederick was a Canon Regular of the Templum Domini in Jerusalem , and was appointed Bishop of Acre and chancellor of Jerusalem around 1150. He participated in the Siege Of Ascalon in 1153 , and in 1154 King Baldwin III sent him to Antioch to mediate in the dispute between Raynald Of Chatillon and the Latin Patriarch . The Patriarch returned to Jerusalem with Frederick. In 1155 Frederick accompanied the Latin Patriarch Of Jerusalem to Rome to complain to Pope Hadrian IV about the conduct of various abbeys and churches of Jerusalem, which had been neglecting to recognize the authority of the Patriarch. When Amalric Of Nesle was elected Patriarch of Jerusalem in 1157 , he was opposed by Hernesius, Archbishop Of Caesarea and Bishop Ralph of Bethlehem , but Frederick supported him and returned to Rome to appeal to Hadrian IV. Frederick won Hadrian's blessing for the new Patriarch, "by the use of lavish gifts, it is claimed", as William Of Tyre explains. ARCHBISHOP OF TYRE In March, 1164, Archbishop Peter of Tyre died, and within a month Frederick was appointed to replace him, at the request of King Amalric I. He accompanied Amalric on the expedition against Egypt in 1167 , with his own "rather distinguished retinue", according to William. Frederick suffered from Dysentery in Egypt after drinking from the Nile and soon returned home. In August of that year he presided over the marriage of Amalric to the Byzantine princess Maria Comnena . A few days later, Frederick appointed William Archdeacon of Tyre, but in 1169 he accused the archdeacon probably of receiving to great a salary for his post, which William had probably gained through his friendship with King Amalric. William went to Rome to defend himself against the charges. Embassy to the West In and Henry II Of England were already occupied in warring against each other, but Frederick persuaded Henry to donate money and make a pilgrimage later. Frederick Barbarossa had been excommunicated by Alexander III in 1160 and was currently at war with the Papacy, so no support was forthcoming from him either. The embassy was also meant to find a suitable husband for the then-eleven-year-old Sibylla , the king's daughter, who might one day reign, her brother Baldwin being a Leper . In France , Frederick persuaded Stephen , Count Of Sancerre and brother-in-law of Louis VII, to come to the east and marry Sibylla. The embassy returned to Jerusalem in 1171 , along with Stephen and Hugh III, Duke Of Burgundy , who came as a representative of Louis VII. It is unknown what Frederick offered the young count, but it seems he never got it, for he returned to France without marrying the princess. DEATH After a long illness, Frederick died in Nablus on October 30, 1174, and was buried in the Templum Domini in Jerusalem. William was appointed archbishop and was consecrated on June 8 of the next year. William describes Frederick as "an extremely tall man. He possessed little education but was inordinately devoted to the art of war." SOURCES
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