1149
Battle of Inab
Nur al-Din destroyed Prince Raymond of Antioch's army in a swampy meadow east of the Orontes and had his head sent to the caliph in Baghdad packed in silver. The County of Antioch lost most of its hinterland in a single afternoon and never fully recovered. Raymond's widow Constance was left to defend the principality with a handful of knights and a desperate appeal to the king of Jerusalem.
Eleanor of Aquitaine and the crusade scandals
Louis VII's queen was rumored to have had an affair with her own uncle Raymond of Antioch during the French stop in the Crusader states. The marriage never recovered from the gossip. Within three years the couple's annulment would redraw the European political map. Eleanor's subsequent marriage to Henry of Anjou would bring Aquitaine into the Plantagenet orbit, creating an empire that stretched from Scotland to the Pyrenees.
Rededication of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
The Crusaders, having rebuilt the shrine into a single Romanesque church enclosing Calvary and the tomb, celebrated its dedication fifty years to the day after Jerusalem's capture. The consecration date was chosen with unusual precision; it was the peak of the Latin kingdom's confidence. The rebuilt church unified the scattered shrines of the ancient site under a single roof for the first time, creating the complex that still stands today.
Tortosa taken by the Count of Barcelona
Raymond Berenguer IV of Barcelona captured the fortified town at the mouth of the Ebro from the Almohads after a six-month siege with Genoese naval support. The capture completed Catalan control of the lower Ebro valley and opened it to Christian settlement. Colonists from across the Pyrenees were granted generous land charters, transforming the conquered territory from a Muslim frontier march into a Catalan-speaking agricultural heartland.