Eusebius (consul 489)

Flavius Eusebius was a bureaucrat of the Eastern Roman Empire. He was magister officiorum (492-497) under the rule of Anastasius I, and appointed twice consul for Constantinople: once in 489 with Petronius Probinus as his Western counterpart; and again in 493 with Albinus as his counterpart.

The fact he was appointed consul twice suggests he was somehow related to the Emperor Anastatius.[1]

References

  1. Bagnall, Roger S.; Cameron, Alan; Schwartz, Seth R.; Worp, Klaas A. Consuls of the later Roman Empire, Philological Monographs #36. (Atlanta: American Philological Association, 1987), p. 513
Political offices
Preceded by
Claudius Iulius Ecclesius Dynamius,
and Rufius Achilius Sividius
Consul of the Roman Empire
489
With: Petronius Probinus
Succeeded by
Flavius Longinus,
and Anicius Probus Faustus
Preceded by
Flavius Anastasius Augustus
and Flavius Rufus
Consul of the Roman Empire
493
With: Albinus
Succeeded by
Flavius Turcius Rufius Apronianus Asterius,
and Flavius Praesidius
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