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Byzantine honorary dignity, 9th–11th centuries
notable members were the kanstresios Manuel Dishypatos and the 14th-century Palamite monk David Dishypatos. Bury 1911, p. 27. Kazhdan 1991, p. 638. Bury
Dishypatos
Manuel Opsaras Dishypatos or Disypatos (Greek: Μανουὴλ Ὀψαρᾶς Δισύπατος) was the metropolitan of Thessalonica between 1258 and 1260/61. In 1258, he allegedly
Manuel_Opsaras_Dishypatos
Last Byzantine Emperor from 1449 to 1453
male children at the time. In February 1449, Constantine had sent Manuel Dishypatos as an envoy to Italy to speak with Alfonso V of Aragon and Naples in order
Constantine_XI_Palaiologos
Byzantine title
anthypatos (lit. 'vice-consul', the original translation of proconsul) and dishypatos (lit. 'twice consul'), as well as the office of hypatos ton philosophon
Hypatos
Byzantine court dignity, 7th–11th centuries
9th-century lists of precedence (Taktika), the dignity ranks below that of dishypatos and above that of spatharios among the dignities intended for 'bearded
Spatharokandidatos
held the post include Manuel Dishypatos of the order of the Levites (probably to be identified with Manuel Opsaras Dishypatos, Metropolitan of Thessaloniki
Kanstresios
Province of the Byzantine Empire
Strategos Photeinos (c. 828) Arab rule (843–961) Michael (10th/11th century), dishypatos Basil (c. 1000), patrician Bracheon Philaretos (c. 1028), protospatharios
Byzantine_Crete
Government of the Byzantine Empire
Palaiologan period, but had declined to the 35th place of the hierarchy. Dishypatos (δισύπατος), "twice consul" — A rare dignity, which originated possibly
Byzantine bureaucracy and aristocracy
Byzantine_bureaucracy_and_aristocracy
Byzantine court title
prōtospatharios is recorded as ranking below the patrikios and above the dishypatos. The award of the dignity also meant the entry of its holder in the Byzantine
Protospatharios
Byzantine politician and military leader (died 1345)
His first wife was the daughter of a priest of the Hagia Sophia called Dishypatos, and the second, whom he married sometime around 1341, the cousin of the
Alexios_Apokaukos
Constantinople by the Turks in 1453. His last name, Bissipat, comes from the word "Dishypatos", which literally means "twice consul", being a title of Byzantine dignitaries
George_Paléologos_de_Bissipat
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Girl/Female
Muslim
Female minister
Girl/Female
American, Australian, Finnish, German, Latin, Polish, Swedish
Symbol of Innocence; Purity; Beauty; Flower of Lily; Combination of Lily and Anna; Similar to Lillian; Derived from the Flower Name Lily
Girl/Female
Hindu
Promoted
Boy/Male
Indian
Old Arabic name
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Beloved; Decoration; Painting
Female
French
French form of Latin Melaena, MÉLANIE means "black, dark."Â
Male
Scandinavian
 Variant spelling of Scandinavian Kai, CAY means "lord." Compare with another form of Cay.
Male
Hindi/Indian
(जà¥à¤¯à¥‹à¤¤à¤¿à¤·) Hindi name JYOTISH means "light" or "heavenly body." Another source states that it is the Sanskrit word for astrology.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Budding
Boy/Male
Gaelic
Slender; fair. Form of Caelan.
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