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Ida was the daughter of Rapoto IV of Cham and Mathilde.[disputed – discuss] She is also known as Itha. She married Leopold II of Austria and had a son, Leopold III. She was known as one of the great beauties of her day.
In 1101, Ida, alongside Thiemo of Salzburg and the Bavarian duke Welf IV and the French duke William IX of Aquitaine, joined the Crusade of 1101,[1] and raised and led her own army toward Jerusalem.
In September of that year, Ida and her army were among those ambushed at Heraclea Cybistra by the sultan Kilij Arslan I. Ekkehard of Aura reports that Ida was killed in the fighting, but rumors persisted that she survived, and was carried off to a harem, according to Albert von Aachen. Later legends claimed that she was the mother of the Muslim hero Zengi, as in Historia Welforum, but this is impossible on chronological grounds. However, Ekkehard of Aura's is probably the most likely version, as he is the only one who can rely on eyewitnesses who were survivors of the Battle of Heraclea Cybistra, whom Ekkehard met a few weeks later in Jaffa, while Albert von Aachen and the author of the Historia Welforum reported only after hearsay.
In fiction
Ida's fate is depicted in Beloved Pilgrim (2011) by Christopher Hawthorne.
Issue
Leopold III (1073–1136), who succeeded his father as Austrian margrave
Adelaide (d. after 1120), married Count Theoderic II of Formbach