A[rsène] Cahour, Baudouin de Constantinople, Chronique de Belgique et de France en 1225, Poussielgue-Rusand, Paris, 1850. 356 s, 18 x 10.5 cm, döneminin sayfa kenarları yaldızlı, sırtı tümsekli ön ve arka kapakları desenli ve haç işareti baskılı deri cildinde. In 1225, a man appeared in Flanders claiming to be the presumed dead Baldwin (Baldwin I (Dutch: Boudewijn ; French: Baudouin ; July 1172 – c. 1205) was the first emperor of the Latin Empire of Constantinople). His claim soon became entangled in a series of rebellions and revolts in Flanders against the rule of Baldwin's daughter Jeanne. A number of people who had known Baldwin before the crusade rejected his claim, but he nonetheless attracted many followers from the ranks of the peasantry. Eventually unmasked as a Burgundian serf named Bertrand of Ray, the false Baldwin was executed in 1226. Arsène Cahour (1806-1871) Écrivain, jésuite et professeur de rhétorique.