Albéric Clément
Albéric Clément was the first Marshal of France, a position created for him by Philip Augustus in 1185. He also inherited the seigneurie of Mez in Gâtinais after his father's death in 1182.
Albéric was born sometime in the mid-1160s to Robert III Clément and Hersende de Mez, and thus came from a knightly family- the Cléments of Mez. He accompanied Philip on the Third Crusade as Marshal, and distinguished himself at the [Siege of Acre, Israel|Acre (1189–1191)|Siege of Acre] in particular, frequently leading the advanced guard into battle.
Albéric is said to have died on 3 July 1191, during an attempted breach of the city's walls, with accounts by those such as contemporary poet Ambroise suggesting the Marshal led the charge himself and died on- or close to the Accursed Tower, after swearing that he would either die that day or enter Acre. Some accounts describe Albéric charging the walls with Philip's standard in hand and a number of men with him, attempting to scale the walls with a ladder, being pulled up with a grappling hook by the Saracen defenders and isolated from his men by rocks thrown onto the climbing assault party. Other accounts describe the ladder breaking under the weight of the Marshal's followers, leaving him alone on the wall. Thomas Asbridge presents two differing accounts of what happened on top of the wall, one from Christian’ observers: " was reported to have fought on alone with 'exceptional valour', leaving his stricken compatriots to watch from below as ’the Turks surrounded and crushed him, stabbing him to death'". From a Muslim perspective, Asbridge presents the following testimony: " made a pathetic attempt to plead for his life, offering to arrange the withdrawal of the entire crusade, before being butchered by a zealous Kurd". What actually happened, however, seems uncertain.
Accounts also go on to describe a defending soldier parading the walls wearing Albéric's armour after his death, stopping only when Richard I of England shot the man down.
Albéric had two siblings, one of whom- Henry I Clément- would go on to become Marshal of France himself.