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Source: Encyclopedia Britannica: Fulk, King of Jerusalem

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Titre Encyclopedia Britannica: Fulk, King of Jerusalem

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FOULQUES V d'Anjou Roi de Jérusalem HP01

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Fulk
KING OF JERUSALEM
WRITTEN BY: The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
See Article History
Alternative Titles: Foulques le Jeune, Fulk V, Fulk the Younger
Fulk, byname Fulk the Younger, French Foulques le Jeune, (born 1092—died November 1143, Acre, Palestine [now ʿAkko, Israel]), count of Anjou and Maine as Fulk V (1109–31) and king of Jerusalem (1131–43).

Son of Fulk IV the Surly and Bertrada of Montfort, he was married in 1109 to Arenburga of Maine. Fulk exerted his control over his vassals and was later caught up in dynastic quarrels between the French and English kings. In 1128 his son Geoffrey Plantagenet married Matilda, daughter of Henry I of England, and became the progenitor of England’s branch of the Angevin dynasty. Fulk first visited Palestine in 1120 and returned in 1129 to marry Melisende, daughter of King Baldwin II of Jerusalem.

Fulk became king of Jerusalem on Baldwin II’s death in 1131 and spent the first year of his reign settling a dispute in Antioch (Turkey) and putting down a revolt led by his wife’s lover, Hugh of Le Puiset. In 1137 he allied himself with the Byzantines against a Turkish leader, ʿImād ad-Dīn Zangī, of Mosul (Iraq), and in 1140 helped the Muslims of Damascus ward off Zangī’s armies. He protected Jerusalem in the south by constructing a series of fortresses, including Krak des Chevaliers. He was killed in a hunting accident in November 1143.