He also met with the Mongol leader Kutlushah in 1301, in an unsuccessful attempt to coordinate a military attack against the Muslims.
[7] In 1302 he and his family were captured by pirates while staying at their ancestral fiefdom in Episcopia, Cyprus.
[8] He died on 14 February 1304 and was buried in Nicosia, Cyprus, in a pauper's grave in accordance with his vows.
Guy must have been held in high regard on the island, judging from the turmoil following his death reported by the chronicler Amadi.
His second wife was Maria, Lady of Ascalon and Naumachia, daughter of Philip of Ibelin and Simone de Montbeliard.