Pagan I of Haifa

Pagan of Haifa (Latin: Paganus de Cayphas) was a 12th-century aristocrat in the Kingdom of Jerusalem.

[1] The lordship had been established in 1101 by Baldwin following a debate between two claimants, the Lotharingian crusader Geldemar Carpenel and the Italo-Norman aristocrat Tancred who ruled the Principality of Galilee in Palestine.

This year Tancred abandoned Galilee and went to the Principality of Antioch—a crusader state in northern Syria—to assume the regency for his uncle Prince Bohemond I, who had recently been captured by Muslim raiders.

This year, King Baldwin appointed him and an other influential nobleman, Eustace Grenier, as his envoys to Tancred and Willam Jordan.

Pagan and Eustace were sent to Tancred and William Jordan to deliver the king's summons for a council of Tripoli to them.

The borders of four nascent crusader states and the nearby Cilician Armenia depicted on a map of the eastern Mediterranean
Latin East c. 1102