- Zōstē
patrikía (Gr****: ζωστὴ πατρικία) was a
Byzantine court title reserved exclusively for the
woman who was the
chief attendant and ****istant to the...
-
feminine variant patrikia (πατρικία)
denoted the
spouses of patrikioi; it is not to be
confused with the
title of zostē
patrikia ("girded
patrikia"),
which was...
- the
reigning augusta,
Helena Lecapena, and
receiving the
titles zōstē
patrikía and the
styles of
archontissa and
hegemon of the Rus'. Her
baptism was...
-
Procopius of Scythopolis. The same late
source gives Antonina the
title zoste patrikia. If so, she
would have been the
first known holder of this title. A number...
-
surviving such
portrait in the
history of m****cript illumination. The
patrikia is
shown enthroned and
flanked by the
personifications of Megalopsychia...
- The
Acacian Schism will not be
resolved until 519. Antonina,
Byzantine patrikia and wife of
Belisarius (approximate date) Brendan,
Irish abbot and saint...
-
foreign rulers. The
spouses of
patricians bore the
title patrikia (not to be
confused with zōstē
patrikia, see below). Prōtospatharios (πρωτοσπαθάριος), "first...
-
volleyball player Antonina (wife of Belisarius) (c. 495 –
after 565),
Byzantine patrikia and wife of
Belisarius Antonina Bludova (1813–1891),
Russian philanthropist...
- husbands' titles. The only
specifically female dignity was that of the
Zoste patrikia, the
chief lady-in-waiting and
female attendant of the empress, who was...
- (Latin:
Anastasia Patricia, Gr****: Άναστασία Πατρικία, romanized: Anastasía
Patrikía; fl. 576) was a
Byzantine courtier and
later saint. She was a lady-in-waiting...