108:, Constantine forced Baktangios's widow to unearth his remains, carry them away in her own cloak and deposit them in the cemetery of Pelagios, where suicides were buried.
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in 741. After
Constantine made a comeback in November 743, Baktangios accompanied Artabasdos in his flight to the castle of Pouzanes in
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Continuité des élites à Byzance durant les siècles obscurs: les princes caucasiens et l'empire du VIe au IXe siècle
88:). They were both captured by Constantine's agents and brought to Constantinople, where Artabasdos was
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Baktangios was closely associated with
Artabasdos, a commander of Armenian origin, who seized
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The
Chronicle of Theophanes: an English translation of anni mundi 6095-6305 (A.D. 602-813)
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and one of the principal supporters of the usurping emperor
104:. Thirty years later, according to the chronicle of
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228:8th-century executions by the Byzantine Empire
57:descent, his name being a Hellenized form of "
186:. University of Pennsylvania Press. p.
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133:Prosopography of the Byzantine Empire
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100:for three days. He was buried in the
238:Byzantine people of Georgian descent
92:and Baktangios was beheaded in the
65:, he may have been a scion of King
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157:. De Boccard. pp. 419–420.
243:People executed by decapitation
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153:Settipani, Christian (2006).
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223:8th-century Byzantine people
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53:Baktangios was probably of
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178:Turtledove, Harry (1982).
96:, his head exposed on the
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102:monastery of the Chora
67:Vakhtang I of Iberia
63:Christian Settipani
16:Byzantine patrician
48: 741/742–743
30:; died 743) was a
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129:"Baktangios 1"
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136:. Retrieved
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138:10 February
218:743 deaths
212:Categories
112:References
106:Theophanes
86:Asia Minor
41:Artabasdos
28:Βακτάγγιος
20:Baktangios
36:patrikios
32:Byzantine
233:Patricii
94:Kynegion
82:Opsikion
59:Vakhtang
55:Georgian
90:blinded
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98:Milion
76:from
24:Greek
192:ISBN
159:ISBN
140:2019
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