James of Avesnes
James of Avesnes was a son of Nicholas d'Oisy, Lord of Avesnes and Matilda de la Roche. He was the lord of Avesnes, Condé, and Leuze from 1171. In November 1187, James joined the Third Crusade as leader of a detachment of French, Flemish, and Frisian crusaders arriving by ship on the Palestinian coast near Acre around 10 September 1189. James and his men came as military reinforcements for the Acre (1189–91)|Siege of Acre]. While leading his contingent of soldiers, the other main leaders of the siege were Guy of Lusignan and Henry of Champagne, neither of them gaining a dominant position in leading the siege.
At the Battle of Arsuf, James was thrown from his saddle and, after slaying fifteen enemy warriors, was himself cut down. The next day, a search party of Hospitallers and Templars found his body on the battlefield. It was taken back to Arsuf and buried there in a ceremony attended by Richard the Lionheart and Guy of Lusignan. The early 13th-century Brevis ordinacio de predicacione Sancte Crucis, a manual for crusade preachers, records how, when his companions urged him to retreat because of the great losses, he responded, "I shall much more gladly go where no one knows me."
He married Adela, daughter of Bouchard of Guise, and was the father of:
- Walter II of Avesnes
- James, lord of Landrecies
- William
- Bouchard [IV of Avesnes]
- Matilda, married Nicholas IV of Rumigny and Louis IV of Chiny
- Adelaide, married Rogier of Rosoy
- Ida, married Engelbert IV of Edingen
- Adela, married Henry III of Grandpré and Ralph, Count of Soissons