Constantine the Great, Roman emperor and member of Thetrarchy, from 306 to 337. He was born in Naissus, Dacia Mediterranea and according to one of his dynastic member Julian, his family was of Thracian origin from the Moesi tribe. Thus, the Constantinian dynasty was one of the Thraco-Roman dynasties.
Leo I, Byzantine emperor from 457 to 474. He is also called "Thrax". His dynasty called Leonid were commonly referred as the "Thracian dynasty".
John Cassian, a 4th-century monk who contributed to bringing the Egyptian monastic tradition to western Europe. Born in Scythia Minor and died near modern-day Marseille, southern France.
Dionysius Exiguus, a 6th-century monk born in Scythia Minor, most likely of local Thraco-Roman origin.[4]: 130–131
Justin I, Byzantine emperor from 518 to 527, was of Thraco-Roman origin. He was the father of Justinian I who was referred by John Malalas as being a Thracian.[5][6][7][8][9]
Vitalian, Byzantine general who rebelled in 513 against emperor Anastasius I (r. 491–518). Vitalian may have been of local Thracian stock, born in Scythia Minor or in Moesia; his father bore a Latin name, Patriciolus, while two of his sons had Thracian names and one a Gothic name.[4]: 129
Belisarius, general during the reign of Justinian I. He was born in Germane (nowadays Sapareva Banya) in western Thrace or in Germania in Dacia Mediterranea, possibly of Thraco-Roman or Greek origin.
Justin II, nephew of Justinian, and Byzantine emperor from 565 to 578. He was a member of the Justinian dynasty, which is one of the Thraco-Roman dynasties.
^ abPatrick Amory, People and Identity in Ostrogothic Italy, 489–554, Cambridge University Press, 2003.
^Russu, Ion I. (1976). Elementele traco-getice în Imperiul Roman și în Byzantium (in Romanian). Vol. veacurile III-VII. Editura Academiei R. S. România. p. 95.
^Iv Velkov, Velizar (1977). Cities in Thrace and Dacia in Late Antiquity: (studies and Materials). University of Michigan. p. 47.
^Browning, Robert (2003). Justinian and Theodora. Gorgias Press LLC. p. 23. ISBN1-59333-053-7.
^Johnson, Scott Fitzgerald (2006). Greek Literature in Late Antiquity. Ashgate Publishing. p. 166. ISBN0-7546-5683-7.
Nicolae Șerban Tanașoca: “«Torna, torna, fratre» et la romanité balkanique au VI e siècle” ("Torna, torna, fratre, and Balkan Romanity in the 6th century") Revue roumaine de linguistique, XXXVIII, Bucharest, 1993.
Nicolae Iorga: “Geschichte des rumänischen Volkes im Rahmen seiner Staatsbildungen” ("History of the Romanian people in the context of its statal formation"), I, Gotha, 1905; “Istoria românilor” ("History of the Romanians"), II, Bucharest, 1936. Istoria României ("History of Romania"), I, Bucharest, 1960.