- male, deceased (1198)
- Eustathius of Thessalonica (1110c. - 1198) was a native of Constantinople who became archbishop of Thessalonica. After being a monk in the...
- male
- Antipater of Thessalonica was the author of upwards of a hundred epigrams in the "Greek Anthology". He is the most copious and perhaps the most...
- male
- Aristarchus, "a Macedonian of Thessalonica", was an early Christian mentioned in a few passages of the New Testament. He accompanied Saint Paul on...
- male, deceased (1463)
- Isidore of Thessalonica (b. at Thessalonica towards the end of the fourteenth century; d. at Rome, 27 April1463) was a Cardinal and sometime...
- male
- Crescens was an individual who appears in the New Testament. He was said to be a missionary in Galatia and became a companion of Paul. Crescens, a...
- male, deceased (1359)
- Gregory Palamas was a monk of Mount Athos in Greece and later Archbishop of Thessalonica known as a preeminent theologian of Hesychasm. He is...
- male
- Cassander, King of Macedon (305—297 BC), was the eldest son of Antipater, and founder of the short-lived Antipatrid dynasty. He first appears at th...
- deceased (462)
- Licinia Eudoxia (422-462) was a Roman Empress, daughter of Eastern Emperor Theodosius II and wife of the Western Emperors Valentinian III and...
- female
- Thessalonica or Thessalonike, a Macedonian princess, was a daughter of king Philip II of Macedon, by his Thessalian wife or concubine, Nicesipolis,...
- male, deceased (1391)
- Nicolaus Cabasilas (born 1319/23, died after 1391) was a Byzantine mystic and theological writer. He was on intimate terms with the emperor John VI...
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