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Kouropalatai

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Justin II
Emperor of the Byzantine Empire from 565 to 574 (520-578)
Michael I Rangabe
Byzantine emperor
Artabasdos
Artabasdos or Artavasdos ( or , from , , , Latinized as Artabasdus) was a Byzantine general of Armenian descent who seized the throne from June 741 until November 743, in usurpation of the reign of Constantine V.
Bagrat III of Georgia
King of Georgia
Bagrat IV of Georgia
King of Georgia
Bardas
Bardas (; died 21 April 866) was a Byzantine noble and high-ranking minister. As the brother of Empress Theodora, he rose to high office under Theophilos (. Although sidelined after Theophilos's death by Theodora and Theoktistos, in 855 he engineered Theoktistos's murder and became the de facto regent for his nephew, Michael III (). Rising to the rank of Caesar, he was the effective ruler of the Byzantine Empire for ten years, a period which saw military success, renewed diplomatic and missionary activity, and an intellectual revival that heralded the Macedonian Renaissance. He was assassinate
David III of Tao
Georgian prince
George II of Georgia
King of Georgia (1054-1112)
curopalates
Kouropalatēs, Latinized as curopalates or curopalata (, from "[the one in] charge of the palace") and anglicized as curopalate, was a Byzantine court title, one of the highest from the time of Emperor Justinian I to the Komnenian period in the 12th century. The female variant, held by the spouses of the kouropalatai, was kouropalatissa.
Bardas Skleros
10th-century Byzantine general
Thoros of Edessa
Armenian ruler of Edessa at the time of the First Crusade
Leo Phokas the Younger
Byzantine general
Guaram I of Iberia
Georgian prince, who attained to the hereditary rulership of Iberia and the East Roman (Byzantine) title of curopalates from 588 to c
John Komnenos
Byzantine aristocrat and military leader, brother of Isaac I Komnenos
Ashot I of Iberia
presiding prince of Iberia (modern Georgia)
Theodore
brother of Byzantine emperor Heraclius
Theodore Rshtuni
prince of Armenia
Peter
brother of the Byzantine Emperor Maurice
Baduarius
Baduarius () was an East Roman aristocrat, the son-in-law of Byzantine emperor Justin II (r. 565–578 AD). Theophanes the Confessor erroneously calls him a brother of the Emperor.
Adarnase IV of Iberia
king of Iberia
Varaz-Tirots II Bagratuni
Marzpan of Armenia
Ashot II of Tao
Georgian prince
David I of Iberia
Georgian prince
Guaram III of Iberia
Smbat VI Bagratuni
Prince of Armenia
Manuel Komnenos
Byzantine aristocrat and military commander
Bagrat I of Iberia
Prince of Iberia (822-876)
Sumbat I of Iberia
King of Georgia
Gurgen I of Tao
Georgian prince
Hamazasp IV Mamikonian
prince of Armenia
Domentziolus
Byzantine general
Adarnase III of Iberia
Prince of Iberia
Guaram II of Iberia
David Saharuni
Armenian noble
Bagrat I of Tao
Georgian prince
Adarnase V of Tao
Georgian prince
Liparit IV, Duke of Kldekari
Catacalo Tarcaniota
11th-century Byzantine official
Nerseh Kamsarakan
Armenian Prince
Adarnase II of Klarjeti
Georgian prince (died 945)