'Lucia of Tripoli' (died after
1292) was the last
countess of Tripoli.
She was the daughter of
Bohemund VI of Antioch and
Sibylla of Armenia. Her brother was
Bohemund VII of Tripoli. When Bohemund VII died in 1287, their mother appointed as regent
Bertrand of Gibelet. He proved to be very unpopular with the
commune of the city, who created their own administration. Lucia then came to Tripoli from
Auxerre, where she had married
Narjot de Toucy, to take control of the county, although she was opposed by both the commune and the
Genoese. The Genoese, led by Benedetto Zaccaria, tried to install a ''
podestà'', an official administrator from Genoa, which would have made Tripoli essentially a Genoese colony. At this the leader of the commune consented to acknowledge Lucia, but Lucia unexpectedly allied herself with the Genoese instead.
The
Venetians and
Pisans, who also had trading links with Tripoli, were shocked at this and supposedly conspired with the
Mameluk sultan
Qalawun to attack the city. Lucia allied with the
Mongols, who, knowing that Tripoli was too weak to defend itself even with their help, asked for support from Europe, although no aid was to be found there. Qalawun besieged Tripoli for one month in 1289 and captured it on
April 26. Two years later
Acre, the last
Crusader outpost in the
Holy Land was also captured.
Although he could have claimed the county through her, Lucia's husband never came to Tripoli, as he was attending to business in the
Kingdom of Naples, where he died in 1292. The date of Lucia's death is unknown. Narjot and Lucia had one son,
Philippe de Toucy, who inherited the lordship of Terza on Narjot's death and the claim to Antioch on Lucia's death.