Category
page 111th-century rebels

Alexios I Komnenos
Byzantine emperor (1048–1118)

Isaac I Komnenos
Byzantine Emperor
Nikephoros III Botaneiates
Byzantine emperor

Béla I of Hungary
King of Hungary (1016-1063)

Baldwin V, Count of Flanders
Count of Flanders (1012-1067)

George Maniakes
Byzantine general and Catepan of Italy

Constantine Bodin
Medieval king of Duklja, and temporary of Bulgaria
Peter Delyan
Bulgarian emperor
Stefan Vojislav
prince of the Serbs (ὁ τῶν Σέρβων ἄρχων)
Nikephoros Bryennios the Elder
late 11th-century Byzantine Empire usurper
Hereward the Wake
11th-century leader of local resistance to the Norman conquest of England
Nikephoros Melissenos
Byzantine general and usurper
John Doukas
Byzantine usurper
Leo Tornikios
mid-11th century Byzantine general and noble
Nikephoros Basilakes
late 11th-century Byzantine Empire usurper
Nikephoros Xiphias
Byzantine military commander
Nikephoros Phokas Barytrachelos
Byzantine aristocrat and magnate
Theophilos Erotikos
11th-century Byzantine general, governor, and rebel
Theodore Gabras
11th-century Byzantine military leader and martyr
Georgi Voyteh
Bulgarian aristocrat
Eadric the Wild
11th-century Anglo-Saxon magnate
Nikoulitzas Delphinas
Karykes
Karykes (, Latinised Caryces) was the Byzantine governor of Crete who led a rebellion that began in 1090 or 1091 and lasted into 1092 or 1093 during the reign of Emperor Alexios I Komnenos. The principal narrative sources for the revolt are Anna Komnene and Joannes Zonaras, but they provide few details. The historian Michael Glykas confuses this revolt with the contemporary revolt of Rhapsomates in Cyprus.