Sebastos
Ancient Greek and Byzantine honorific title / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sebastos (Greek: σεβαστός, translit. sebastós, lit. "venerable one, Augustus", Byzantine Greek pronunciation: [sevasˈtos]; plural σεβαστοί, sebastoí [sevasˈty]) was an honorific used by the ancient Greeks to render the Roman imperial title of Augustus. The female form of the title was sebaste (σεβαστή). It was revived as an honorific in the 11th-century Byzantine Empire, and came to form the basis of a new system of court titles. From the Komnenian period onwards, the Byzantine hierarchy included the title sebastos and variants derived from it, like sebastokrator, protosebastos, panhypersebastos, and sebastohypertatos.