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Domestikos ''Domestikos'' (; (ギリシア語:δομέστικος), from the Latin ''domesticus'', "of the household"), in English sometimes () Domestic, was a civil, ecclesiastic and military office in the late Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire. ==Military usage== The ''domestikoi'' trace their ancestry to the ''protectores domestici'' guard unit of the Late Roman army, established in the late 3rd century. These were a corps of men that served as a staff to the Roman Emperor, while also functioning as an officer school.〔.〕 These continued in existence in the Eastern Roman Empire until the late 6th century. In the Byzantine army, the old ''protectores domestici'' had vanished by the 7th century, and the name only remained as a title associated with certain guard units. Following the creation of the ''tagmata'' in the mid-8th century, four of them, the ''Scholai'', the ''Exkoubitoi'', the ''Hikanatoi'' and the ''Noumeroi'', as well as, uniquely, the ''thema'' of the Optimatoi, were led by a ''domestikos''.〔.〕 To them was added the short-lived ''tagma'' of the ''Athanatoi'' in the late 10th century.〔.〕 The most important among them, the ''domestikos tōn scholōn'' ("Domestic of the Schools") would by the 10th century rise to be the commander-in-chief of the army after the Emperor, and the post would later in the same century be divided in two, with the ''domestikoi'' of the East (''tēs anatolēs'') and of the West (''tēs dyseōs'') commanding the military forces in Asia Minor and Europe (the Balkans) respectively.〔.〕 In his capacity as the ''de facto'' commander-in-chief of the army, the ''domestikos tōn scholōn'' was replaced by the ''megas domestikos'' ("Grand Domestic") in the 12th–13th centuries, while the ordinary ''domestikos'' became an honorary title awarded to mid-level officials during the Palaiologan period.〔.〕 The ''megas domestikos'' remained the commander-in-chief of the Byzantine army thereafter until the end of the Byzantine Empire. In the Komnenian period, in an echo of the 10th-century arrangements, the ''megas domestikos'' would sometimes command the entire field army of East or West, but in the Palaiologan period, there was only one holder of the office, who came to be one of the senior-most courtiers, ranking directly after the ''Caesar''.〔.〕
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