Andronicus (Greek: Ἀνδρόνικος) of Olynthus was a Macedonian nobleman and general in the 4th century BCE.
[1] This Andronicus is probably the same as the son of Agerrhus mentioned by Arrian[2] and Diodorus Siculus:[3] that is, the same Andronicus who accompanied Alexander the Great on his expedition in Asia,[4] and was the father of Proteas of Macedon and husband to Lanike.
If this is indeed the same Andronicus, he would also be the father of two sons, whose names are lost to us now, who died at Miletus in 334.
Andronicus was then sent against the rebellious Persian satrap Satibarzanes, along with Artabazos, Caranus, and Erigyius.
[3][6] He may have ended his career as one of Ptolemy's philoi (that is, a trusted friend and advisor).