- romanized: Iōánnēs Axoûchos, (fl. 1087 – c. 1150), also
transliterated as
Axuch, was the commander-in-chief (megas domestikos) of the
Byzantine army during...
-
Alexios Axouch or Axouchos,
sometimes found as
Axuch (Gr****: Ἀλέξιος Ἀξούχ or Ἀξοῦχος), was a 12th-century
Byzantine nobleman and
military leader of Turkish...
- by a new
emissary of
Manuel I. This was
Alexius Axuch, the son of Manuel's
chief advisor John
Axuch.
Though his constable,
Richard of Mandra, was captured...
- (commander-in-chief of the
Byzantine army), who was a
close friend of John II.
Alexios Axuch served as Duke of
Cilicia and protostrator. However, he
eventually fell...
- Hungary. The
first army,
which was
under the
command of
protostrator Alexios Axuch and
Stephen III's brother, Béla, was
stationed by the
Danube to distract...
-
forces in
Corfu was
eventually taken over by the
megas domestikos John
Axuch who
starved the
Norman garrison into
evacuating the island.
Varzos 1984a...