Andromachus () is the name of a number of people from classical antiquity:
Andromachus () is the name of a number of people from classical antiquity: Andromachus of Cyprus, 4th century BCE commander of the Cyprian fleet at the Siege of Tyre by Alexander the Great Andromachus (ruler of Tauromenium), 4th century BCE ruler of ancient Tauromenium, Sicily Andromachus (cavalry general), commander of the Eleans in 364 BCE who committed suicide after his army was defeated by the Arcadians Andromachus (son of Achaeus), 3rd century BCE Anatolian nobleman, son of Achaeus, and grandson of Seleucus I Nicator Andromachus of Aspendus, one of the commanders of the forces of Ptolemy IV Philopator at the Battle of Raphia in 217 BCE Andromachus (physician), two Greek physicians, father and son, who lived in the time of Roman emperor Nero in the 1st century CE Andromachus (grammarian), quoted in the Scholia on Homer and possibly the author of the 12th-century Etymologicum Magnum Andromachus Philologus, the 3rd-century CE husband of Moero and father of Homerus
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).