- Strategos,
plural strategoi,
Latinized strategus, (Gr****: στρατηγός, pl. στρατηγοί;
Doric Gr****: στραταγός, stratagos;
meaning 'army leader') is used...
-
Theophylact and a
Frankish princess.
Given the
frequency with
which the
strategoi of
Sicily were eomplo**** in such emb****ies, he may be the
owner of an...
-
polemarchos (originally with a
military role,
which was
transferred to the ten
strategoi in 501 BC), and the
archon basileus (the
ceremonial vestige of the Athenian...
-
strategos (general)
controlled the league's
military forces. Originally, two
strategoi held
office simultaneously, but from 251,
there was only one, who was...
-
possessing an unen****bered
property of not less than ten minas, the
generals (
strategoi) and
commanders of
cavalry (hipparchoi) from
those who
could show an unen****bered...
-
strategos (Koinē Gr****: στρατηγός, romanized: stratēgós, lit. 'general'); the
strategoi were
civilian administrators,
without military functions, who performed...
- variable-quality
magistrates chosen by lot
under the democracy.
These strategoi were
given duties which included planning military expeditions, receiving...
- ****enotamias in 410 or 409, and as
strategos in 406. He was one of six
strategoi executed following the
Battle of
Arginusae for
failing to pick up survivors...
- the
largest and senior-most of the themes, and its
military governors (
stratēgoi) were
powerful individuals,
several of them
rising to the
imperial throne...
- Opsikion. In fact,
separate strategoi of
Thrace are not
clearly attested in
literary sources until 742,
while seals of
strategoi are also
extant only from...