Money Tyrants Directory
Wealthiest and Most Powerful People in the History of the World
Money Tyrants is built to study concentrated wealth and command across empires, dynasties, banking networks, industrial monopolies, political systems, media systems, and modern platforms. Browse by region, power type, era, and wealth source, then sort by power, wealth, A–Z, or time to see how different civilizations produced different forms of dominant force.
7
Profiles
38
Assets / Institutions
37
Power Types
8
Eras
Most Powerful
- IndonesiaNetherlands Colonial AdministrationMilitaryPolitical Early Modern Conquest & TributeState Power Power: 100Jan Pieterszoon Coen (1587 – 1629) was a senior official of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) who served as Governor-General in Asia and became a central architect of Dutch colonial power in the Indonesian archipelago. He pursued an aggressive strategy of monopoly enforcement in the spice trade, using naval force, fortified ports, and administrative restructuring to redirect production and commerce into company-controlled channels. His career demonstrates how a chartered corporation could operate as a quasi-state, converting trade privileges into territorial administration and wealth extraction through coercion.
- #2 Joko WidodoIndonesia Imperial SovereigntyPolitical 21st Century State Power Power: 100Joko Widodo (born 1961), widely known as Jokowi, is an Indonesian politician who served as the seventh President of Indonesia from 2014 to 2024. He rose to national prominence as a leader with a managerial, infrastructure-focused style rather than a background in the military or long-standing national party elites. His presidency emphasized large public works programs, expanded connectivity across the archipelago, and a development model aimed at attracting investment and boosting domestic capacity.Jokowi governed a vast, decentralized country with complex regional identities, powerful security institutions, and an economy shaped by commodities, manufacturing, and informal labor. His administration relied on a broad coalition that required constant negotiation among parties, ministries, provincial authorities, and business interests. Over two terms, he pursued regulatory reform and state-led investment while also centralizing certain decision pathways, especially in strategic projects, industrial policy, and resource downstreaming.His time in office coincided with major shocks and transitions: global trade shifts, the COVID-19 pandemic, and an increasingly contested debate about democratic norms in Indonesia. Supporters credit him with tangible infrastructure outcomes and pragmatic governance, while critics argue that legal reforms and political alliances weakened anti-corruption bodies, constrained civic space, and encouraged dynastic politics. In the “imperial sovereignty” topology, his influence operated through the Indonesian state’s capacity to steer development, manage licensing and procurement, and project authority across territory and institutions.
- #3 SuhartoIndonesia MilitaryParty State ControlPolitical Cold War and Globalization Military CommandState Power Power: 100Suharto (8 June 1921 – 27 January 2008) was an Indonesian army officer and politician who served as president of Indonesia from 1967 to 1998. He rose to power in the aftermath of the 1965–1966 crisis that ended President Sukarno’s dominant role and ushered in the “New Order,” an authoritarian governance system that relied on military influence, bureaucratic control, and a managed electoral structure centered on the Golkar organization. Under Suharto, Indonesia experienced decades of economic growth, poverty reduction, and large-scale development programs, supported by foreign investment and technocratic policy. His rule was also marked by severe human-rights abuses, restrictions on political freedom, and extensive corruption and patronage, including business networks associated with his family and allies. The Asian financial crisis of 1997–1998 undermined the regime’s economic foundation and triggered mass protests that culminated in Suharto’s resignation in 1998.
- #4 SukarnoIndonesia Imperial SovereigntyPolitical World Wars and Midcentury State Power Power: 100Sukarno (1901–1970) was the leading figure of Indonesian independence and the first President of Indonesia, shaping the transition from colonial rule to a sovereign republic across a vast and diverse archipelago. He emerged as a nationalist organizer and orator during the late Dutch colonial period, and he became the symbol of independence during the Japanese occupation and the subsequent revolutionary struggle. Proclaimed president in 1945, he navigated a prolonged conflict with the Netherlands that ended in recognition of Indonesian sovereignty, and he then confronted the central problem of the new state: how to hold together regions, parties, and armed forces with different interests, languages, and economic structures.Within an imperial sovereignty topology, Sukarno’s power was built around executive authority and the capacity to define national legitimacy. His influence did not rest on personal wealth comparable to industrial elites, but on the ability to mobilize mass politics, direct state institutions, and distribute recognition and access. He promoted an inclusive nationalist ideology centered on Pancasila and framed Indonesia as a leader of decolonization. His diplomacy helped establish Indonesia’s place in the Non-Aligned Movement and the Afro-Asian conference network, presenting sovereignty as independence from both Western and Soviet blocs.Domestic governance became increasingly authoritarian as parliamentary coalitions fractured and regional rebellions challenged the center. Sukarno moved toward “Guided Democracy,” concentrating authority in the presidency while balancing the army, Islamist parties, nationalists, and the Indonesian Communist Party. Economic management deteriorated amid ambitious state projects, nationalizations, and foreign exchange constraints, producing severe inflation and administrative disorder. The crisis culminated after the 1965 attempted coup and subsequent anti-communist violence, after which Sukarno was gradually stripped of power by the military under Suharto. His career illustrates how post-colonial sovereignty can be constructed through charisma and coalition management, yet remain vulnerable when coercive institutions and economic capacity outgrow ideological unity.
- #5 Budi HartonoIndonesia FinancialFinancial Network ControlIndustrial 21st Century Finance and Wealth Power: 72Budi Hartono (born 1940) is a businessman associated with Indonesia. Budi Hartono is best known for building wealth through consumer industry and major banking ownership. This profile belongs to the site’s study of financial network control and finance and wealth, where influence depends on controlling systems rather than possessing money alone. In the twenty-first century, power frequently travels through digital platforms, data, logistics, attention, cloud infrastructure, and the ability to set terms for other participants in the market.
- Indonesia FinancialFinancial Network ControlIndustrial 21st Century Finance and Wealth Power: 72Michael Hartono (born 1939) is a businessman and conglomerate owner associated with Indonesia. Michael Hartono is best known for Co-owner of Djarum Group; major shareholder in Bank Central Asia (BCA). This profile belongs to the site’s study of financial network control and finance and wealth, where influence depends on controlling systems rather than possessing money alone. In the twenty-first century, power frequently travels through digital platforms, data, logistics, attention, cloud infrastructure, and the ability to set terms for other participants in the market.
- Indonesia IndustrialIndustrial Capital ControlResources 21st Century Industrial Capital Power: 72Prajogo Pangestu (born 1944) is an Indonesian business magnate and investor best known as the founder of Barito Pacific, a conglomerate that grew from the timber trade into a set of large industrial holdings tied to petrochemicals, power, and renewable energy. His influence has been built through industrial capital control: acquiring resource-linked businesses, scaling production capacity, controlling critical infrastructure in upstream and downstream supply chains, and using public listings to raise capital for long-horizon projects.