Andronikos Doukas Palaiologos (Greek: Ἀνδρόνικος Δούκας Παλαιολόγος; c. 1083/85 – c. 1115/18) was a Byzantine aristocrat and governor of Thessalonica early in the 12th century.
P. Gautier suggested that he is to be identified with the logothetes ton sekreton Andronikos Doukas, active under Alexios I, possibly after 1109.
The Timarion, a satirical dialogue placed in the city, alludes to him without naming him, while an act preserved in the Docheiariou monastery records the "pansebastos sebastos Andronikos Doukas" serving as "doux and praetor" of Thessalonica in January/February 1112.
[1][4] According to Demetrios Polemis, he was survived by his wife—Polemis surmises that this was a daughter of the porphyrogennete princess Zoe Doukaina, youngest daughter of Constantine X Doukas and wife of Adrianos Komnenos—and was possibly the father of the megas hetaireiarches George Palaiologos (who may alternatively have been his brother),[7] but Jean-Claude Cheynet and Jean-François Vannier believe that he had no offspring.
[8] The court poet Nicholas Kallikles wrote an epitaph and four other poems in his honour,[9][10] and his parents were later buried in the same tomb following their death.