Epistates
An epistates in ancient Greece was any sort of superintendent or overseer. In the Hellenistic kingdoms generally, an epistates is always connected with a subject district, where the epistates, as resident representative of the king, exercised control and collected taxes.Military use
In military texts, an epistates is the man behind a protostates. The phalanx was made up of alternate ranks of protostates and epistates. Thus, in a file of eight men, the protostates were the men in positions 1, 3, 5, and 7, while the epistates occupied positions 2, 4, 6, and 8.The word epistates is also used in "common" Koine Greek and in the Greek New Testament to refer to Christ. This word is translated into English as 'master,' but that is a simplistic translation. The word might be better understood as belonging to the set of Greek words meaning 'visitor' or 'divine visitation', 'letter of instruction', as well as 'guardian' or 'caretaker', which was a word later translated as bishop. The word only appears in Luke's gospel.