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Tagmata (military) : ウィキペディア英語版
Tagma (military)

The ''tagma'' ((ギリシア語:τάγμα), pl. ''τάγματα'') is a term for a military unit of battalion or regiment size. The best-known and most technical use of the term however refers to the elite regiments formed by Byzantine emperor Constantine V and comprising the central army of the Byzantine Empire in the 8th–11th centuries.
==History and role==
In its original sense, the term "tagma" (from the Greek τάσσειν, "to set in order") is attested from the 4th century and was used to refer to an infantry battalion of 200–400 men (also termed ''bandum'' or ''numerus'' in Latin, ''arithmos'' in Greek) in the contemporary East Roman army.〔Kazhdan (1991), p. 2007〕 In this sense, the term continues in use in the modern Greek military (''cf.'' Greek military ranks).

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