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Sebastokrator (, ; ; ), was a senior court title in the late . It was also used by other rulers whose states bordered the Empire or were within its sphere of influence (Bulgarian Empire, ). The word is a compound of (, the Greek equivalent of the Augustus) and krátōr ('ruler', the same element as is found in , 'emperor'). The wife of a Sebastokrator was named sebastokratorissa (σεβαστοκρατόρισσα, sevastokratórissa) in Greek, sevastokratitsa (севастократица) in Bulgarian and sevastokratorica in Serbian.


Eastern Roman Empire
The title was created by Emperor Alexios I Komnenos () to honour his elder brother Isaac Komnenos.. According to , Alexios did this to raise Isaac above the rank of Caesar, which he had already promised to his brother-in-law, Nikephoros Melissenos. Anna Komnene compares the rank of sebastokratōr to "a second emperor", and also records that along with the Caesar a sebastokratōr was granted the right to wear a crown (but not the imperial diadem).. , . During the Komnenian dynasty (1081–1185), the title continued to be the highest below that of Emperor until 1163, when Emperor Manuel I created the title of despotes. During that period, it was given exclusively to members of the imperial family, chiefly younger sons of the emperor.

After the dismemberment of the Byzantine Empire by the in 1204, the title was adopted in the , the Empire of Nicaea, and the Bulgarian Empire. In Nicaea and the post-1261 restored Byzantine Empire, the title remained one of the highest court dignities, and was almost always restricted to members of the imperial family. The last known holder of the title was Demetrios Kantakouzenos, a ruler in the in the late 14th century.

According to the sources, the distinctive colour associated with the title was blue: the sebastokratōr′s included blue and blue . In circa 1260, according to George Akropolites, the sebastokratores who were members of the imperial family were distinguished from those who were not by having embroidered golden on their shoes.. By the time of in the mid-14th century, the insignia associated with the rank were a skiadion hat in red and gold, decorated with gold-wire embroideries, with a veil bearing the wearer's name and identical to those of the despotēs. He wore a red tunic ( rouchon) similar to the emperor's, but without the rizai decorations and the insignia of military power. His mantle ( tamparion) was no longer known, but the stockings were blue; under John VI Kantakouzenos (), however, when the emperor raised his brothers-in-law Manuel and John Asanes to the rank, he permitted them to wear tamparia and stockings like those of the despotēs. The sebastokratōrs shoes and stockings were blue, with gold-embroidered eagles on red background; and his was also of blue, his featuring furthermore four red-embroidered eagles. His tent was white with blue decorations. The form of the domed skaranikon, on the other hand, for the sebastokratōr was unknown to pseudo-Kodinos. The sebastokratōr also had the prerogative of signing documents with a special blue .


Bulgaria
Kaloyan inherited the title possibly from his father Aleksandar (d. after 1232), a son of Ivan Asen I of Bulgaria ().


Serbia
This title was also adopted in the court of medieval , under the Nemanjić dynasty, the Serbian Kings and (1217–1346; 1346–1371).


List of holders

Albania
  • Andrea I Muzaka, Albanian nobleman, Sevastocrator & Marshal of Albania, c. 1279–1319.
  • , Albanian nobleman, Sevastocrator
  • Blasius Matarango (fl. 1358–67), Albanian nobleman, Sevastocrator
  • , Albanian nobleman, Sevastocrator


Byzantium
  • Isaac Komnenos (brother of Alexios I), 1081–1102/04.
  • Isaac Komnenos (son of Alexios I), 1118–a. 1152.
  • Isaac Komnenos (son of John II), c. 1122–a. 1146.
  • Andronikos Komnenos (son of John II), c. 1122–1142.
  • Manuel I Komnenos, c.1122–1143.
  • John Doukas, uncle of Isaac II Angelos, c. 1185–c. 1200.
  • Stefan the First-Crowned, husband of , c. 1190–1217.

  • Alexios III Angelos, brother of Isaac II Angelos, named c. 1190–1195.
  • Isaac Komnenos Vatatzes, son-in-law of Alexios III Angelos, c. 1195–1196.
  • , Byzantine, late 12th/early 13th century

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  • Empire of Nicaea
    • , sympetheros of Theodore I Laskaris, a. 1206–c. 1216
    • Nikephoros Kontostephanos, c. 1217.Macrides (2007), p. 218.
    • , brother of Theodore I Laskaris, a. 1207–1224.
    • , brother of Theodore I Laskaris, b. 1221–1224.
    • , brother of Theodore I Laskaris, b. 1211–1224?.Macrides (2007), pp. 167-168
    • Isaac Doukas Vatatzes, brother of John III Doukas Vatatzes, c. 1253- b. 1261.
    • John Palaiologos (brother of Michael VIII), 1259–1260.
    • Constantine Palaiologos (half-brother of Michael VIII), 1260–1271.
    • Constantine Tornikios, father-in-law of John Palaiologos, 1260–1274.

    • Conon de Béthune, regent for Peter II of Courtenay, c.1217– 1219.

  • , relative of Constantine Tornikios, a. 1261.Macrides (2007), p.24.

  • John I Doukas of Thessaly, husband of Anna Palaiologina Kantakouzene, c. 1272–1289.
  • Constantine Doukas of Thessaly, son of Anna Palaiologina Kantakouzene, c. 1295–1303.
  • , son of John I Doukas of Thessaly, c. 1295–c. 1299.
  • John II Doukas of Thessaly, son-in-law of Andronikos II Palaiologos, c. 1315–1318.
  • Stephen Gabrielopoulos, ruler of Thessaly, b. 1325–1332/33.
  • Hrelja (fl. 1330s), semi-independent lord in the region of northeastern Macedonia and mountain, Byzantine magnate
  • John Angelos, ruler of Thessaly, c. 1342–1348.
  • , brigand in Rhodopes, 1344–1345.
  • Manuel Komnenos Raul Asanes, brother-in-law of John VI Kantakouzenos, c. 1347–c. 1354.Prosopographisches Lexikon der Palaiologenzeit, 1506.
  • , brother of Manuel Komnenos Raul Asanes, c. 1347–1355.Prosopographisches Lexikon der Palaiologenzeit, 1499.

  • Andronikos Asanes, son of Manuel Komnenos Raul Asanes, c. 1354.Prosopographisches Lexikon der Palaiologenzeit, 1487.
  • Nikephoros Kantakouzenos, relative of John VI Kantakouzenos, 1351–1355.Prosopographisches Lexikon der Palaiologenzeit, 10986.

  • Demetrios I Kantakouzenos, son of Matthew Kantakouzenos, 1357–c. 1383.


Bulgaria
  • (fl. 1207–1214), Bulgarian
  • (d. after 1232), Bulgarian prince
  • Kaloyan (fl. 1259), magnate, held
  • Peter (f. 1253), sebastokrator of Sredets, Bulgaria


Serbia
  • , Serbian, under Dušan the Mighty (r. 1331–1355)
  • Branko Mladenović (fl. 1331–65), Serbian
  • Dejan (fl. 1346-1356), Serbian magnate, held Žegligovo and Preševo, and the Upper Struma river with
  • Vlatko Paskačić, Serbian under the Mrnjavčevići (1366–1395)


Gallery
File:Kalojan desislava.jpg|Donor portrait of the sebastokratōr Kaloyan and his wife Desislava, fresco from the (1259). File:Constantine Palaiologos sebastokrator and Eirene.jpg|The sebastokratōr Constantine Palaiologos and his wife Eirene. from an early 14th-century monastery .Note the distinctive stephanos, as well as the red chlamys embroidered with golden double-headed eagles, worn over the kabbadion kaftan. File:Isaac Komnenos the Porphyrogennetos.jpg|A Byzantine in the depicting the sebastokratōr Isaac Komnenos, son of Emperor Alexios I Komnenos. File:Jovan Oliver.jpg|The Sevastokrator , fresco from the Lesnovo monastery. File:ManuelAsanandAnnaDoukaina.jpg|Manuel Asanes and his wife Anna Doukaina Synadene


Sources
  • (2025). 954528613X, Trud, Sirma. 954528613X
  • (2025). 9780199210671, Oxford University Press. .
  • (2025). 9789004124622, Brill. .

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