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epi tes katastaseos : ウィキペディア英語版 | epi tes katastaseos The ''epi tes katastaseos'' ((ギリシア語:ἐπὶ τῆς καταστάσεως)) was a court office of the Byzantine Empire, attested in the 9th–10th centuries. The origin and exact nature of the office are unclear. J. B. Bury translated the title as "master of ceremonies" since ''katastasis'' may be interpreted as "order", and derived its origin from the late Roman ''comes dispositionum'', the head of the ''scrinium dispositionum'', a department under the authority of the ''magister officiorum''. George Ostrogorsky and Ernst Stein on the other hand pointed out that the ''scrinium dispositionum'' ceases to be mentioned after 534, and suggested that the ''epi tes katastaseos'' was a descendant of the ''comes admissionum'', attested from the time of Justinian I (reigned 527–565) on. The mid-9th century ''Taktikon Uspensky'' is ambiguous as to its role, placing the office first among the civil officials (between the ''protonotarios tou dromou'' and the ''archon tou armamentou'') and then among the lower-ranking courtiers. The ''Kletorologion'' of 899 records the office as one of the "special dignities" (''eidikai axiai''), and records that his staff comprised the orders (''taxeis'') of ''hypatoi'', ''vestitores'', ''silentiarioi'', and ''synkletikoi'', although most of them were ranks of dignitaries rather than court functionaries. The ''De Ceremoniis'', compiled in the later 10th century, on the other hand, places the office firmly among the court officials, usually in conjunction with the ''silentiarioi''. ==References==
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