Category
page 2Patricii
Adarnase I of Iberia
Prince of Iberia from 627 to c, 640
Michael Doukeianos
Byzantine catepan of Italy
Flavius Optatus
politician
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.
Nikephoros Xiphias
Byzantine military commander
Turcius Rufius Apronianus Asterius
Roman senator, consul 494
Theophylact Dalassenos
Byzantine aristocrat and general
Messius Phoebus Severus
Roman consul in 470
Anatolius
5th century Eastern Roman Empire consul, diplomat and general
Bulcsú
Hungarian chieftain

Flavius Constantinus
politician of the Eastern Roman Empire
Remistus
Remistus (died 17 September 456) was a general of the Western Roman Empire and commander-in-chief of the army under Emperor Avitus.
David Arianites
Byzantine general

Theoktistos
thumb|250px|Michael III with Theodora and Theoktistos (with the white cap), from the Madrid Skylitzes
Arsaber
Arsaber (, from Armenian Arshavir), was a Byzantine noble who attempted an unsuccessful usurpation of the Byzantine imperial throne in 808.
Nikephoros Phokas Barytrachelos
Byzantine aristocrat and magnate
Comentiolus
brother of Byzantine emperor Phocas

Taurus
4th century Roman senator
Theophilos Kourkouas
10th-century Byzantine general
Strategius Apion
6th-century patrician and jurist of the Eastern Roman Empire
Stephen II of Naples
Italian duke and bishop
Constantine Gongyles
Byzantine aristocrat and official
Theodore Daphnopates
Byzantine writer and orator
Caesarius
4th century politician, consul 397
Domentziolus
Byzantine general
Marcian
Byzantine general
Melias
Melias () or Mleh (, often Mleh-mec, "Mleh the Great" in Armenian sources) was an Armenian prince who entered Byzantine service and became a distinguished general, founding the theme of Lykandos and participating in the campaigns of John Kourkouas against the Arabs.
Al-Mundhir III ibn al-Harith
King of the Ghassanid Arabs from 569 to 581
Christopher of Mytilene
11th-century Byzantine poet and writer
Manso I of Amalfi
Italian noble

Michael Maurex
Byzantine admiral
Krakra of Pernik
Bulgarian noble
Rufius Achilius Sividius
Aristocrat and consul of Imperial Rome
Constantine Lips
Byzantine admiral
Leo Argyros
10th-century Byzantine general
Decius Marius Venantius Basilius
politician (0401-0600)
Rufius Petronius Nicomachus Cethegus
Roman consul
Gennadius
Byzantine general
Peter Barsymes
Byzantine official
Zeno
general and politician of the Eastern Roman Empire
Gyula II
the gyula who was baptized in Constantinople around 950
Decius
politician
Alexios Mosele
Byzantine aristocrat and general
Adarnase II of Iberia
ruler of Iberia
Basilius Venantius
politician
Gregory IV of Naples
Italian noble
Eustathios Daphnomeles
Byzantine general and governor
Trajan the Patrician
Byzantine historian
John Chaldos
byzantine general (fl. 995–1030)
Caecina Decius Basilius
praetorian prefect of Italy in 458 AD
Flavius Secundinus
politician
Flavius Studius
Roman politician, consul 454 AD
Romanus
senator in the West Roman Empire
Theodorus
Roman consul 505 AD
Romanos Kourkouas
10th-century Byzantine general
Hypatius
politician
Manuel the Armenian
9th-century Byzantine general
Asterius
Roman general, comes Hispaniarum
Stephen II of Iberia
prince of Iberia
Anicius Maximus
consul of the Roman Empire