Background
He was the son of Garnier l"Aleman and Pavie de Gibelet, and the older brother of Hugh Aleman.
He was the son of Garnier l"Aleman and Pavie de Gibelet, and the older brother of Hugh Aleman.
John was active politically and militarily, although less influential than the previous lords of Caesarea had been. The first reference to John as lord of Caesarea comes in the Assizes of Jerusalem of John of Ibelin. Since his father-in-law, Lord John of Caesarea, was dead, this is probably a reference to Aleman.
This included two—Seisor and Mergelcolon and Gedin—that he had inherited from his mother, and Beit Jann and Nahf.
In 1253 they sold First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Damun (and several villages in the vicinity) near Acre to the Hospitallers for 12,000 besants. In 1255 they also sold the Hospitallers everything they owned in Acre as well as the casalia of Chasteillon and Rout.
On this occasion they were accepted into the lay confraternity of the order as confrater and consoror. Some of the money from the sales to the Hospitallers was used to pay the dower of John"s brother Hugh"s wife, Isabelle de Tenremonde, of the family of the lords of Adelon.
She confirmed the payment of part of her dower in an act of 1259.
In 1254, after Louis IX of France and the Seventh Crusade had departed, John and some other barons of the kingdom wrote a letter to Henry III of England requesting aid. He is referred to in the letter as "John Asa, great lord of Caesarea" (Johannes Asa magnus dominus Caesareae). In 1257 John approved and confirmed a treaty made by the bailiff John of Arsuf with the citizens of trading city of Ancona.
According to the Lignages d"Outremer, John and Margaret had a third son named Thomas.
John may have been alive when Sultan Baibars of Egypt conquered Caesarea for the last time in 1265. If so, he must have fled to Cyprus, where the subsequent lords of Caesarea resided.