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Byzantine consuls

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Heraclius
Heraclius (, ; 11 February 641) was Byzantine emperor from 610 to 641. His rise to power began in 608, when he and his father, Heraclius the Elder, the Exarch of Africa, led a revolt against the unpopular emperor Phocas.
Leo III the Syrian
emperor of Byzantine Empire
Justinian II
Byzantine Emperor from 685 to 695 and from 705 to 711
Leo VI the Wise
Byzantine Emperor
Constans II
Byzantine Emperor from 641 to 668
Basil I
Byzantine emperor from 867 to 886
Konstantinos V
emperor of Byzantium
Phocas
Phocas (; ; 5475 October 610) was Eastern Roman emperor from 602 to 610. Initially a middle-ranking officer in the Roman army, Phocas rose to prominence as a spokesman for dissatisfied soldiers in their disputes with the court of the Emperor Maurice. When the army rebelled in 602, Phocas emerged as the leader of the mutiny. The revolt led to the overthrow and execution of Maurice in November 602.
Nikephoros I
Byzantine emperor
Heraclius Constantine
Byzantine Emperor in 641
Michael III
Byzantine emperor from 842 to 867
Leo V the Armenian
Byzantine emperor (lived 775–820)
Michael I Rangabe
Byzantine emperor
Tiberios III
Byzantine emperor from 698 to 705
Konstantinos VI
Byzantine Emperor (771-802)
Leo IV the Khazar
Byzantine emperor
Theophilos
Byzantine emperor from 829 to 842
Philippikos Bardanes
Philippicus (; ), born Bardanes (; ) was Byzantine emperor from 711 to 713. He took power in a coup against the unpopular emperor Justinian II, and was deposed in a similarly violent manner nineteen months later. During his brief reign, Philippicus supported monothelitism in Byzantine theological disputes, and saw conflict with the First Bulgarian Empire and the Umayyad Caliphate.
Heraklonas
Heraclius (; 626 – 642), known by the diminutive Heraclonas or Heracleonas (), and sometimes called Heraclius II, was briefly Byzantine emperor in 641.
Anastasios II
Byzantine Emperor
Theodosios III
Byzantine Emperor
Heraclius the Elder
Byzantine general