Category
page 1Sebastokrators
Alexios III Angelos
Byzantine emperor

Stefan the First-Crowned
King of Serbia
sebastokrator
Sebastokrator (, ; ; ), was a senior court title in the late Byzantine Empire. It was also used by other rulers whose states bordered the Empire or were within its sphere of influence (Bulgarian Empire, Serbian Empire). The word is a compound of sebastós (, the Greek equivalent of the Latin Augustus) and krátōr ('ruler', the same element as is found in autokrator, 'emperor'). The wife of a Sebastokrator was named sebastokratorissa (, sevastokratórissa) in Greek, sevastokratitsa () in Bulgarian and sevastokratorica in Serbian.
Conon de Béthune
crusader and "trouvère" poet, born in 1150 in north of France
Isaac Komnenos
Byzantine noble
Isaac Komnenos
Byzantine nobleman, son of Emperor John II Komnenos
John I Doukas of Thessaly
Ruler of thessaly
Demetrios I Kantakouzenos
Despot of Morea
Andronikos Komnenos
Byzantine prince (1108-1142)
John Doukas
Greek nobleman and general
Manuel Komnenos
Byzantine noble (1143-1185)
Isaac Komnenos
Byzantine general, brother of emperor Alexios I
Konstantinos Doukas of Thessaly
Ruler of Thessaly
John II Doukas of Thessaly
Ruler of Thessaly
John Palaiologos
Byzantine general

Momchil
Momchil (, , ; – 7 July 1345) was a 14th-century Bulgarian brigand and local ruler. Initially a member of a bandit gang in the borderlands of Bulgaria, Byzantium and Serbia, Momchil was recruited by the Byzantines as a mercenary. Through his opportunistic involvement in the Byzantine civil war of 1341–1347, where he played the various sides against each other, he became ruler of a large area in the Rhodopes and western Thrace.

Konstantinos Palaiologos
Byzantine monk and noble
Jovan Oliver
Serbian general
Theodore Angelos
sebastokrator
Branko Mladenović
Serbian magnate
Andronikos Komnenos
Byzantine prince (1091-1130/31)

Strez
Strez (Bulgarian and ; original spelling: Стрѣзъ; fl. 1207–1214) was a medieval, semi-independent Bulgarian sebastokrator. He was a member of the Asen dynasty and a cousin or a brother of Boril of Bulgaria. A major contender for the Bulgarian throne, Strez initially opposed the ascension of his close relative Tsar Boril. He fled to Serbia, where he accepted the vassalage of Grand Prince Stefan Nemanjić, and Serbian support helped him establish himself as a largely independent ruler in a large part of the region of Macedonia. However, Strez turned against his suzerains to become a Bulgarian vas

Stefanos Gabrielopoulos
Byzantine governor

Dejan
Serbian nobleman

John Petraliphas
Byzantine governor
John Angelos
Byzantine aristocrat and governor of Epirus and Thessaly
Isaac Laskaris
Kaloyan
Bulgarian prince
Sabas Asidenos
Powerful magnate
Isaac Komnenos Vatatzes
byzantine aristocrat and military commander
Isaac Doukas Vatatzes
Byzantine prince (c. 1188–1261)
Peter
sebastokrator
Constantine Komnenos Angelos
Byzantine aristocrat and military commander