Melisende of Lusignan was born in 1200.
Melisende of Lusignan died in 1249.
Battle of Arsuf happened on 1191-09-07.
You can only get to it after Altair fails the third and final assassination in Jerusalem. If you exit Jerusalem and go into the Kingdom and check the map, you'll see that the way to Arsuf has opened up. It's Southeast of Acre.
Battles of Acre, Arsuf.
In Asia, King Baldwin I of Jerusalem captures Arsuf and Caesarea. In Europe, Robert Curthose, duke of Normandy, signs the Treaty of Alton, which established Henry I as the King of England.
The Leader? Good Question. His name was Saladin, and under Arsuf, they fought. But then, Harold tried taking the throne, so the Crusade's were pointless.
Robert de Sable, Altair's final assassination target, is in Arsuf. The location is only unlocked for the final assassination sequence although I think it shows up on the map throughout the game anyways.
The Battle of Arsuf was a battle that occured roughly halfway between Acre and Jerusalem, near the coast of the Mediterranean during the Third Crusade. The Crusaders, along with the Knights Templar and the Knights Hospitaller and lead by RIchard the Lionheart, faced the Muslims under Saladin. The Battle was a triumph for the Crusading forces. Numbers on each side were roughly equal (20,000) although casualties weren't: approximately 700 Crusaders dead for approximately 7,000 Muslims dead, including 32 of their Emirs.
You can't get by them, they gradually go away as you complete the game.Try taking a different, more direct route. Maybe the way you're going takes you into areas you're not supposed to be in yet.
they fought in the battle of arsuf on the day of 7 September 1191 which richard the lionheart won the battle against saladin the leader of the saracens mens.richard the lionheart killed ltos of saladin men with their crossbow men.this victory was the road the jerasulem
Saladin was defeated by Richard I (Richard the Lionheart) at the Battle of Arsuf, however Richard failed to take Jerusalem. The two men came to an agreement in the Treaty_of_Ramlain 1192, whereby Jerusalem would remain in Muslim hands but would be open to Christian Pilgrimage.