Category
page 16th-century Byzantine bishops
Severus of Antioch
Patriarch of Antioch
Zacharias Rhetor
5th–6th century Bishop of Mytilene
Jacob Baradaeus
Non-Chalcedonian Bishop of Edessa
Maximianus of Ravenna
archbishop of Ravenna
Andreas of Caesarea
Greek theological writer; bishop of Caesarea
John the Silent
Greek bishop and saint
Victor of Tunnuna
priest and chronicler
Anastasius II of Antioch
bishop of Antioch
Anastasius I of Antioch
Greek Patriarch of Antioch
Theodore of Sykeon
Byzantine saint
Theophilus of Adana
Byzantine saint
Basiliscus
son of the East Roman military commander Armatus and briefly caesar of the Eastern Roman Empire in 476–477/8

Gregentius of Taphar
thumb|The only depiction of Gregentios from the Byzantine period: a 12th-century fresco in a Cypriot church
Gregentios () was the purported archbishop of Ẓafār, the capital of the kingdom of Ḥimyar, in the mid-6th century, according to a hagiographical dossier compiled in the 10th century. This compilation is essentially legendary and fictitious, although a few parts of it are of historical value. Written in Greek, it survives also in a Slavonic translation. The three works in the dossier are conventionally known as the Bios (Life), Nomoi (Laws) and Dialexis (Debate), respectively a biography
Facundus of Hermiane
Roman priest and theologian
Grigorios of Antioch
Greek Patriarch of Antioch
Julian of Halicarnassus
theologian
Primasius of Hadrumetum
bishop of Hadrumetum (6th century)

Paul the Black
Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch
Paul the Jew
patriarch of Antioch from 519 to 521
Agnellus
Bishop of Ravenna
Abraham of Ephesus
archbishop of Ephesus (6th century AD)
John of Tella
bishop
Sergius of Tella
Patriarch of Antioch
Pontianus Africae
6th-century bishop, involved in the Christological controversies of the period