The archontopouloi () were an elite military formation of the Byzantine army during the Komnenian era, in the 11th-12th centuries. They were founded by Emperor Alexios I Komnenos () as part of his military reforms and were recruited among the of Byzantine officers who were killed in battle.
The archontopouloi are considered to be the only Byzantine orphan care institution directly influenced by Ancient Greece policies. Although Alexios's daughter and biographer, Anna Komnene, compared her father's archontopouloi to a institution, the better documented Classical Athens tradition to aid the children of deceased warriors was the probable inspiration for Alexios. The Byzantinist John Birkenmeier sees the archontopouloi as being primarily a 'palace officer-training corps', and their deployment as a field regiment by Alexios I as an isolated expedient.
The regiment suffered 300 casualties during a battle at Chariopolis against the Pechenegs. The archontopouloi regiment disappears from Byzantine sources after the death of Alexios in 1118. However, people termed archontopouloi continue to be recorded later in Byzantine history. The later archontopouloi appear to have belonged to two perhaps related groups. The first group consists of young aristocrats attached to the Byzantine imperial court who may have had a military function, and the second group consists of a type of provincial "", an elite soldier who held an imperial land-grant in return for military service. The latter group were possibly recruited from the former, following their training at the imperial court.
|
|