Category
page 3Patricii
Paulus
Roman senator, consul 512
Leo Choirosphaktes
Byzantine scholar and diplomat
Flavius Antoninus Messala Vivianus
praetorian prefect of the East between 459 and 460
Guaimar II of Salerno
Italian prince
Basil of Naples
byzantine soldier
Agapitus
Roman consul 517 AD, patricius
Eustathios Argyros
Byzantine general and aristocrat
Niketas Chalkoutzes
10th-century Byzantine general
Pamprepius
Pamprepius (, Pamprépios; Latin: Pamprepius; 29 September 440 – November 484) was a philosopher and a pagan poet who rebelled against the Eastern Roman Emperor Zeno.
Aetios
Byzantine eunuch official
Sergios Niketiates
Eastern Orthodox saint venerated for his role in the restoration of the veneration of icons
Florentius
Roman politician, consul 429
Paul
father of Byzantine Emperor Maurice
Sigisvultus
Flavius Sigisvultus (fl. 427–448) was a general of the late Western Roman Empire.
Basil Skleros
Byzantine aristocrat and provincial governor
Marinus II of Naples
Italian noble
Flavius Albinus iunior
Roman politician, consul 493 AD
Avienus
consul of the Roman Empire
Taurus
Roman consul 428 AD
Inportunus
Inportunus ( 509–523) was a Roman aristocrat who lived during the reign of Theodoric the Great. He held the consulship without colleague in 509.

Basil Apokapes
Byzantine general
Kalokyros Delphinas
Byzantine general
Heraclius
Brother of the Byzantine emperor Tiberius III (died 705)
Claudius Julius Ecclesius Dynamius
Roman consul 488 AD
Niketas the Persian
Byzantine officer
Aaron of Bulgaria
younger son of the last tsar
Alexios Mosele
Byzantine general
Vard Mamikonian
Armenian noble
John I of Gaeta
877-933
Eustathios Argyros
Byzantine admiral
Symbatios the Armenian
logothete and governor of the Thracesian Theme, rebel against Michael III in 866
John Mystikos
macedonian-era Byzantine politician
Paulinus
politician (0498-0511)
Konstantinos Maniakes
byzantine court official
Flavius Petrus
5th century Roman consul
Procopius
general and politician in the Eastern Roman Empire, father of emperor Anthemius
John II of Amalfi
Italian duke
Michael Melissenos
Byzantine general and aristocrat
Niketas Triphyllios
Byzantine politician
Caecina Decius Aginatius Albinus
Roman politician, consul 444
Nomus
Nomus (fl. 443–450 AD) was a politician and an ambassador of the Eastern Roman Empire.
Antiochus
eunuch courtier and official of the Byzantine Empire
Adamantius
praefectus urbi of Constantinople between 474-479
Konstantinos Podopagouros
Kalokyros
Kalokyros (, died 971) was a pretender to the Byzantine throne during the Rus'–Byzantine War (970–971) in the reigns of Nikephoros II and John I Tzimiskes.
Nikulitsa
250px|thumb|right|Capture and imprisonment of Nikulitsa by the Byzantine Empire|Byzantines.
Nikulitsa (; ) was a noble from Larissa and governor of Servia during the reign of Samuil (). Nikulitzas belonged to a prominent family in the city. In 980, Emperor Basil II had appointed his grandfather as leader (archon) of the Vlachs; a local ethnic group that was also at the center of the rebellion of 1066–1067. The leaders of that rebellion were all prominent men of Larissa, two of whom are specifically mentioned by Kekaumenos as being Vlachs; Slavota Karmalakis and a certain Beriboes (Berivoi).
Leo Sarakenopoulos
Byzantine general
Andrew the Scythian
Byzantine military officer of the 9th century
Basil Hexamilites
John Pitzigaudes
C.7 Byzantine official and envoy
Constantine Barbaros
Byzantine eunuch servant
Basilides
Sisinnios Triphyllios
Byzantine official
Peter the Patrician
Saint Nicetas the Patrician
Byzantine official and saint
Theodore Parsakoutenos
Byzantine general
Basiliskianos
Basiliskianos (), also Basiliskos () or Basilikinos (), was a Byzantine courtier and companion of emperor Michael III.
thumb|250x250px|Emperor Michael III and "Basilikinos" in imperial garb, from the Madrid Skylitzes
Very little is known about his origin and early life. John Skylitzes and Theophanes Continuatus (as well as Zonaras, who follows them) report that he was originally a simple rower in one of the emperor's personal ships, but this may well be later fabrication to disparage him. Theophanes Constinuatus also reports that he was the brother of Constantine Kapnogenes, who later became u
Theodoulos Parsakoutenos
Byzantine general