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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manuel Kourtikes or Kourtikios (‹See Tfd›Greek: Μανουήλ Κουρτίκης/Κουρτίκιος) was a Byzantine official and military commander in the 940s.
The Kourtikios or Kourtikes family was Armenian in origin and entered Byzantine service under Basil I the Macedonian (r. 867–886), when its eponymous founder, K'urdik, ceded his fortress of Lokana to the Empire.[1][2]
Manuel is mentioned for the first time as one of the officials who conspired with the co-emperor Stephen Lekapenos, when the latter deposed his father, Emperor Romanos I, in December 944.[3][4] Shortly after, however, Stephen and his brother, Constantine, were in turn deposed by their brother-in-law, the legitimate emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos.[5] Constantine VII raised Manuel to the rank of patrikios and given the post of droungarios tes viglas,[3][6] a critical position as its holder's chief duty was guarding the emperor on campaign and in the palace.[7] This suggests that Manuel either quickly defected to Constantine VII's side, or that he had been a partisan of the latter all along, and co-operated with the Lekapenoi to get rid of Romanos I, before supporting the restoration of Constantine VII.[3] A similar role is explicitly suggested by the Byzantine historian George Kedrenos for at least one other co-conspirator, Basil Peteinos.[4][8]
According to the Byzantine chroniclers, Kourtikes died an ignominious death soon after as divine punishment for his deeds.[3][9] This moralizing fable is almost certainly an invention; Theophanes Continuatus reports that he sunk with his dromon on the way to Crete, likely in the failed expedition of 949 against the Emirate of Crete.[3] Manuel was possibly related to the general Michael Kourtikios, who was active in the 970s.[3]
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