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      • Bohemond VI (c. 1237 –1275), also known as the Fair, was the prince of Antioch and count of Tripoli from 1251 until his death. He ruled while Antioch was caught between the warring Mongol Empire and Mamluk Sultanate.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bohemond_VI_of_Antioch
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  2. Bohemond VI ( c. 1237 –1275), also known as the Fair, was the prince of Antioch and count of Tripoli from 1251 until his death. He ruled while Antioch was caught between the warring Mongol Empire and Mamluk Sultanate.

  3. Bohemond VI was the prince of Antioch (125268) and count of Tripoli (1252–75). The son of Bohemond V by Luciana, he succeeded his father in 1252. In 1250 his sister Plaisance had married Henry I of Cyprus, the son of Hugh I, and the Cypriot connection of Antioch was thus maintained.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Bohemond I (born 1050–58—died March 5 or 7, 1109, probably Bari [Italy]) was the prince of Otranto (1089–1111) and prince of Antioch (1098–1101, 1103–04), one of the leaders of the First Crusade, who conquered Antioch (June 3, 1098).

  5. He became one of the expedition’s most influential leaders, and he played a particularly important role during the Siege of Antioch (1097-1098): the city ultimately fell to the crusaders through a betrayal arranged by him.

  6. Bohemond V of Antioch (1199 − January 17, 1252) [1] was ruler of the Principality of Antioch, a Crusader state, from 1233 to his death. He was simultaneously Count of Tripoli . Life. Bohemond V was the son of Bohemond IV of Antioch and Plaisance of Gibelet.

  7. Bohemond I of Antioch (c. 1054 – 5 or 7 March 1111), also known as Bohemond of Taranto or Bohemond of Hauteville, was the prince of Taranto from 1089 to 1111 and the prince of Antioch from 1098 to 1111. He was a leader of the First Crusade, leading a contingent of Normans on the quest eastward.

  8. The son of the Norman Robert Guiscard and his kinswoman Alberada of Buonal-bergo, known to history as Bohemund, was born in Southern Italy in about 1055. The child was baptised Marc, but his father had heard tell of the prowess of a giant called Bohemund and become so enamoured of his exploits that he never called his son by any other name.