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Vardariotai
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The Vardariotai (, ), sometimes as Vardariots, were an ethnic and territorial group (probably originally of and origin)

(2025). 9789004307759
in the later , which provided a palace guard regiment during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.


History
The exact origin and nature of the is uncertain. The name first appears in the tenth century, when a bishopric of the " or " is mentioned as subject to the diocese of .. The mid-fourteenth century writer calls them "Persians" by race (a typical Byzantine anachronism for "Turks"), and recalls that they were settled in the valley by an unnamed Byzantine emperor of old. In both cases, however, "Turks" probably implies the and , who were called "" by the Byzantines in the tenth–eleventh centuries. Hence it seems that the were Cumans and Pechenegs resettled in Macedonia in the tenth century, and that they had become by the end of that century..

By the twelfth century, the , their Cuman and Pecheneg identity by now much diluted, were being recruited into the , and, at the latest during the latter part of the reign of Emperor Manuel I Komnenos (), they were formed into a distinct palace guard regiment... Their functions, however, at least in the Palaiologan period, appear to have been more those of a police force than a military unit: Pseudo-Kodinos lists them not with the guards, but with the unarmed palace personnel, and states that their duty was "to keep people orderly" during ceremonies. Unlike the armed members of the and the regiment, they were equipped only with a whip (the ) and a staff (the ).. Kodinos also records that they wore distinctive red uniforms and a "Persian" hat called (), and that the whip, hanging at their belt, was their symbol. This latter reference has led to the hypothesis that the were the replacement of the older guards corps. They were commanded by a , first attested in the year 1166.. The thirteenth-century historian George Akropolites further states that the accompanied the Byzantine emperor to his military camp whilst on campaign..

It is unclear whether and how the , administrative officials of in the tenth–eleventh centuries, known through their seals, are related to the .


See also
  • Komnenian Byzantine army
  • Palaiologan Byzantine army


Sources

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