- A droungarios, also
spelled drungarios (Gr****: δρουγγάριος, Latin: drungarius) and
sometimes anglicized as Drungary, was a
military rank of the late Roman...
- The
Droungarios of the
Watch (Medieval Gr****: δρουγγάριος τῆς βίγλης/βίγλας, romanized: droungarios tēs viglēs/viglas),
sometimes anglicized as Drungary...
-
sometimes used the term to
designate the
captains of ships; the
terms drungarios or
strategos were used to
designate their admirals. In the
modern ****enic...
- hierarchy, as
deputies to
commanders of the
imperial tagmata,
deputy to a
drungarios.
Byzantine administrative nature was
characterized by its versatility...
- same as the
Byzantine ones (e.g. autokrator, sebastokrator, vestiarios,
drungarios). The
Videssian emperors and
their history strongly resemble the Byzantine...
-
Komnenos in 1099 just
after the
First Crusade. Its
architect was
Megas Drungarios Eustatias.
After the town
became a part of the
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia...
-
quite a way west of Neorion,
reaching the Gate of Bigla/Vigla (also
named Drungarios gate,
later the
Ottoman Odun Kapı, "Gate of the firewood"). With the rise...
-
soothe sick
people with singing, thus the name Sleepmaker. Lyy
becomes drungarios, an
officer in the
Imperial Army. They
travel with the
Great Imperial...