Doxapatres (Greek: Δοξαπατρη̑ς, anglicized Doxapater) is Byzantinefamily name. The forms Δοξόπατρος, Doxopatros, Doxopatres and Doxopater are erroneous.[1]
Persons with this name include;
Gregory Doxapatres (11th century), commentator on the Basilika[2]
John Doxapatres (11th century), rhetorician and commentator[3]
Nicholas Doxapatres (12th century), canonist, possibly identical with Neilos[2]
Neilos Doxapatres (12th century), Siculo-Greek monk and writer, possibly identical with Nicholas[2]
^Ronald F. Hock and Edward N. O'Neil (eds.), The Chreia and Ancient Rhetoric: Classroom Exercises (Brill, 2002), p. 74.
^ abcJ. Morton (2017), "A Byzantine Canon Law Scholar in Norman Sicily: Revisiting Neilos Doxapatres's Order of the Patriarchal Thrones," Speculum92(3), 724–754. doi:10.1086/692591