- as
Saphitha (Gr****: CΑΦΙΘΑ).
During the Crusades, the site was
called Blanchegarde ("White guard"),
likely referring to the
white rock
outcrop next to the...
- four towers,
which is
comparable to
Castel Arnaldi, Beth Gibelin, and
Blanchegarde, of
which some
ruins survive. The
castles were
built on the initiative...
-
Walter Adam III
Guermond II, c. 1210
Baldwin Walter, c. 1310?
Thibaut Blanchegarde (modern Tell es-Safi) was
built by Fulk of
Jerusalem in 1142, as part...
- the
foundations of a
Crusader Castle recently found at the top,
called Blanchegarde. Ibn al-Athīr, one of the Arab chroniclers,
mentions that
Saladin intended...
- the Dead Sea. To help give the
kingdom access to the Red Sea, Fulk had
Blanchegarde, Ibelin, and
other forts built in the south-west to
overpower the Egyptian...
- as lord of Caesarea. He was
married to Agnes,
daughter of
Raoul de la
Blanchegarde. They died
without heirs, and the
title went into abeyance. John L. Lamonte...
- Itab Bethaatap, Arabic: Bayt 'Itab –
fortified manor (maison forte)
Blanchegarde at Tell es-Safi – castle, seat of a
lordship at
biblical tell Caco or...
- 1178–1179 Tour de la Quarantaine [fr], east of
Jerusalem Tell es-Safi (
Blanchegarde)
Properties in Acre, Israel,
including the still-extant
Templar Tunnel...
- the
Kingdom of
Castile Lordship of
Myllendonk 1166–1700
Lordship of
Blanchegarde [it] 1166–? Was a
crusader lordship within the
Kingdom of
Jerusalem Lordship...
- (Yibneh)
about 20
miles (32 km)
northeast of
Ascalon near the coast,
Blanchegarde (Tell es-Safi)
about 15
miles (24 km) to the northeast, Beth Gibelin...