Skip to content
Category

Byzantine admirals

page 1
Tiberios III
Byzantine emperor from 698 to 705
Romanos I Lekapenos
Byzantine emperor from 919/920 to 944
Joseph Bringas
Byzantine admiral
Konstantinos Angelos
Byzantine aristocrat
Euphemios
Byzantine admiral
Licario
Licario, called Ikarios () by the Greek chroniclers, was a Byzantine admiral of Italian origin in the 13th century. At odds with the Latin barons (the "triarchs") of his native Euboea, he entered the service of the Byzantine emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos (r. 1259–1282), and reconquered many of the Aegean islands for him in the 1270s. For his exploits, he was rewarded with Euboea as a fief and rose to the rank of megas konostaulos and megas doux, the first foreigner to do so.
Niketas Ooryphas
Byzantine admiral
Manuel Boutoumites
Byzantine general and diplomat
Nasar
Nasar (), originally baptized Basil (), was a distinguished Byzantine military leader in the Byzantine–Arab conflicts of the latter half of the 9th century.
Nikephoros Komnenos
brother of Alexios I
Himerios
Byzantine admiral
Konstantinos Dalassenos
Byzantine military leader
Constantine Lips
Byzantine admiral
Michael Maurex
Byzantine admiral
Theophylact Rhangabe
byzantine Greek admiral
Constantine Gongyles
Byzantine aristocrat and official
Droungarios of the Fleet
commander of the Imperial Fleet of the Byzantine navy
Marinus
praetorian prefect of the East and admiral for Byzantine emperor Anastasius I
Demetrios Laskaris Leontares
Byzantine admiral and statesman
Eustathios Argyros
Byzantine admiral
Andrea Morisco
Italian privateer
David of Ohrid
Military commander
Basil Theodorokanos
Byzantine admiral
Bardas Parsakoutenos
Byzantine general and grandson of Bardas Phokas the Elder
Craterus
9th-century Byzantine naval commander
Alexios Mosele
Byzantine admiral
Basil Hexamilites
Nicholas Maurokatakalon
military commander at the time of Alexios I