Category
page 111th-century Byzantine military personnel
Tatikios
Tatikios or Taticius (, c. 1048 – died after 1110) was an Eastern Roman general of Turkish origin during the reign of Alexios I Komnenos. His name is also rendered as Tetigus, Tatizius, Tatitius, Tatic, or Tetig.
Nikephoros Bryennios the Elder
late 11th-century Byzantine Empire usurper
Roussel de Bailleul
Norman adventurer and Byzantine general
Philaretos Brachamios
Byzantine general and usurper
Gregory Pakourianos
Byzantine general
John Komnenos
Byzantine aristocrat and military leader, brother of Isaac I Komnenos
Leo Tornikios
mid-11th century Byzantine general and noble
Nikephoros Palaiologos
Byzantine general
Nikephoros Ouranos
Byzantine general
Nikephoros Komnenos
Byzantine military leader
John Doukas
Byzantine admiral
Katakalon Kekaumenos
Byzantine general
Manuel Boutoumites
Byzantine general and diplomat
Nikephoros Xiphias
Byzantine military commander
Theophylact Botaneiates
Byzantine general and governor
Konstantinos Dalassenos
Byzantine military leader
Theophylact Dalassenos
Byzantine aristocrat and general
Manuel Komnenos
Byzantine aristocrat and military commander
David Arianites
Byzantine general
Theophilos Erotikos
11th-century Byzantine general, governor, and rebel

Michael Maurex
Byzantine admiral
Isaac Kontostephanos
Byzantine admiral
Konstantinos Euphorbenos Katakalon
Byzantine governor and general
Nikephoros Bryennios the Eldest
Byzantine general
Hervé Frankopoulos
Normal mercenery general
Constantine Arianites
byzantine general (died 1050)
Miriarch
Miriarcha is the name given in the Chronicon breve normannicum to the Byzantine general who led the defence of the Catapanate of Italy in 1060–1062. The anonymous chronicler has, however, misinterpreted the Greek title merarches (commander of a division, merarch) as a name. The actual name of the general is unknown, and since the rank of merarches is not otherwise clearly attested in southern Italy his exact function is not known either. Probably the office was immediately below that of the catapan.
David of Ohrid
Military commander
Catacalo Tarcaniota
11th-century Byzantine official
Nikephoros Carandino
Doux of Skopje
Nikon of Montenegro
soldier, monk and Byzantine writer
Nikephoros Kabasilas
byzantine military commander
Aspietes
Armenian noble
Guy of Hauteville
Italo-Norman duke of Amalfi