Category
page 1Prisoners of war held by the Byzantine Empire

Gelimer
thumb|The missorium (silver dish) of Gelimer (Bibliothèque nationale de France)
Gelimer (original form possibly Geilamir, 480–553 AD), was a Germanic king who ruled the Vandal Kingdom in North Africa during classical antiquity from 530 to 534 AD. He became ruler on 15 June 530 AD after deposing his first cousin twice removed, Hilderic, who had angered the Vandal nobility by converting to Chalcedonian Christianity; most Vandals at the time were fierce Arian Christians.

Boris II of Bulgaria
Bulgarian ruler
William II of Villehardouin
Prince of Achaea from 1246 to 1278
Roman of Bulgaria
Bulgarian ruler
Abu Firas al-Hamdani
Hamdanid dynasty prince and poet (932–968)
Martino Zaccaria
Lord of Chios
Abd al-Aziz ibn Shu'ayb
last emir of Crete
Andronikos Asen Zaccaria
prominent noble of the Principality of Achaea

Hugh the Red of Sully
13th century general under the Sicilian King Charles of Anjou
Bartholomew II Ghisi
Greek noble
Geoffrey of Briel
French 13th century knight and the third lord of the Barony of Karytaina in the Principality of Achaea, in Frankish Greece
Ibn Mulhim
10th century Arab leader
Abu'l-Faraj al-Tarsusi
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).
Abu'l-Fawaris Muhammad ibn Nasir al-Dawla
Hamdanid prince and general