- The
Hethumids (Armenian: Հեթումյաններ Hethumian) (also
spelled Hetoumids or Het'umids), also
known as the
House of
Lampron (after
Lampron castle), were...
-
monarch Isabella, and her
husband Hethum I
became sole ruler,
beginning the
Hethumid dynasty.
After the
death of Leo IV in 1341 his
cousin was
elected to succeed...
-
later kings, of
Cilicia from
around 1080
until they were surp****ed by the
Hethumids in the mid-thirteenth century. The
Rubenid dynasty was
established when...
-
Cilician Armenia became a kingdom. In 1226, the
crown was p****ed to the
rival Hethumid dynasty through Leo's
daughter Isabella's
second husband,
Hethum I. As...
- 1222 1225/26
Isabella Hethum I (also co-ruler)
Constantine of
Baberon (
Hethumids) 1215 14 June 1226 23
January 1252 wife's
death and his own accession...
- Glücksburg
House of
Habsburg House of Habsburg-Lorraine
Rubenid dynasty Hethumid dynasty House of
Hamengkubuwono House of
Hanover Hashemite Hasmonean House...
-
Philip of Antioch, 1222–1224,
first husband and co-ruler of
Isabella The
Hethumid dynasty gained power through marriage with
Isabella of the
Rubenid dynasty...
-
proclaimed queen.
After he was ********inated,
Constantine of
Baberon (of the
Hethumid family) was
nominated as guardian. At this juncture, Raymond-Roupen, grandson...
-
Levon IV) (also
numbered Leo V; ) (1309 –
August 28, 1341) was the last
Hethumid king of Cilicia,
ruling from 1320
until his death. He was the son of Oshin...
- As
Crusader kings in the
Latin East, they soon had
connections with the
Hethumid rulers of the
Kingdom of Cilicia,
which they
inherited through marriage...