The mandatà Âr (), deriving from the Latin word for "messenger", was a subaltern official in the middle Byzantine Empire.
The mandatores were a corps of messengers for special duties attached to the bureaux of all senior civil and military officials, such as the thematic stratÃÂgoi, the commanders of the tagmata, the logothetes and others. They were then headed by a prà Âtomandatà Âr (ÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÿüñýôìÃÂÃÂÃÂ, "first mandatà Âr"), a mid-level official.
These officials must be distinguished from the honorary dignity of basilikos mandatà Âr (òñÃÂùûùúὸàüñýôìÃÂÃÂÃÂ, "imperial mandatà Âr"), which was one of the lower court titles (fourth from the bottom, between the vestÃÂtà Âr and the kandidatos) intended for "bearded men" (i.e. non-eunuchs). According to the KlÃÂtorologion of 899, its insigne was a red wand. Together with the other lower rank classes, the basilikoi mandatores were designated as the basilikoi anthrà Âpoi ("the emperor's men"), and headed collectively by a dedicated official with the title of prà Âtospatharios tà Ân basilikà Ân.
Both the simple mandatores and the basilikoi mandatores, as well as the prà Âtomandatores, are attested in the 7thâÂÂ11th centuries. They seem to have disappeared thereafter. The French Byzantinist Rodolphe Guilland suggested that they were replaced by the tzaousioi. The term itself survived however in Georgia, where "áÂÂáÂÂáÂÂáÂÂáÂÂá¢á£á áÂÂ" (mandaturi) serves as a term for security forces serving in Parliament, courts as well as public schools.