- of Leo's
daughter Anna to
Artabasdos, and the
marriage took
place after Leo III
ascended the
throne in
March 717.
Artabasdos was
awarded the rank of kouropalates...
- the
defeat of
Artabasdos. The
first major battle took
place near Sardis,
Lydia in May 743. An army led by Niketas,
another son of
Artabasdos, was defeated...
- Constantine's
accession in 741, his brother-in-law
Artabasdos,
husband of his
older sister, Anna, rebelled.
Artabasdos was the stratēgos (military governor) of...
-
Artabasdos (r. 741–743)
usurped Emperor Constantine V (r. 741–775).
Constantine seized power again on 2
November 743, and Nikephoros,
Artabasdos, and...
-
attacked by the
forces of his brother-in-law
Artabasdos, the stratēgos of the
Armeniac theme.
Artabasdos was the
husband of Anna, an
older sister of Constantine...
-
Nicholas Artabasdos Rhabdas was an early-14th
century Byzantine mathematician. Born in Smyrna, he
occupied a
position in
imperial administration in Constantinople...
-
frontier against the
Umayyad Caliphate. Constantine's brother-in-law
Artabasdos, who was
kouropalates ("master of the palace"), and
commanded both the...
- (Gr****: Νικήτας) was the
eldest son of the
Byzantine general and
usurper Artabasdos (r. 741–743). He
served as a
general during his father's
usurpation against...
-
renderings in Gr****
include Artabazos (Ἀρτάβαζος),
Artabazes (Ἀρταβάζης), and
Artabasdos (Ἀρτάβασδος); in
Armenian Artavazd (Արտավազդ); and in
Latin Ardabastus...
-
Armeniacs under their respective strategoi (generals) Leo the
Isaurian and
Artabasdos. Leo
declared himself emperor in the
summer of 716 and
allied himself...