- The
dikaiodotes (Gr****: δικαιοδότης, "giver of the laws") was a
Byzantine judicial office attested in the 11th–12th centuries. The
title existed already...
- Empire,
along with the eparchos, the
megas droungarios tes viglas, the
dikaiodotes, the koiaistor, the epi ton kriseon, and the katholikos, who
headed the...
-
caduca property, and the
iuridicus (Koinē Gr****: δικαιοδότης, romanized:
dikaiodotes, lit. 'giver of laws'), the
senior legal official, were both imperially...
-
Komnenian period,
along with
those headed by the protasekretis, the
dikaiodotes, and the
droungarios tes vigles. In 1186, a
prokathemenos of the sekreta...
- that he may be
identical to the John Taronites,
pansebastos sebastos,
dikaiodotes, and
Eparch of the City, who
attended a
synod in 1147. It is unknown...
-
superior civil courts,
alongside those of the
Eparch of the City, the
dikaiodotēs, the koiaistōr, the epi tōn kriseōn, the prōtasēkrētis and the katholikos...
- high
judicial offices,
beginning as
koiaistor in 1164,
advancing to
dikaiodotes by ca. 1166, and
finally becoming Eparch of
Constantinople in 1182. Magdalino...
-
Monastery Diaconicon Dibaltum,
Battle of
Digenes Akritas Digest (Roman law)
Dikaiodotes Dikaiophylax Dimitri Obolensky Dimitris Krallis Dimbos,
Battle of Diocese...
- and most of its
members were arrested,
tried by a
tribunal under the
dikaiodotēs Theodore Pantechnes—who
succeeded Kamateros as eparch—and imprisoned...
- May 1157 he is
listed as a protonotarios, and in
November 1158 as a
dikaiodotes.
Standing high in Manuel's favour,
Styppeiotes became the
effective mesazon...