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.
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Profiles
38
Assets / Institutions
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Power Types
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Eras
Most Powerful
- Philippines Party State ControlPolitical Cold War and Globalization State Power Power: 100Ferdinand Emmanuel Edralin Marcos (11 September 1917 – 28 September 1989) was a Filipino lawyer and politician who served as president of the Philippines from 1965 to 1986 and ruled as a dictator during a long period of martial law. He rose from a legal and legislative career into national office during the Cold War, presenting himself as a builder of infrastructure and a defender of order. After declaring martial law in 1972, Marcos concentrated executive power, restricted civil liberties, and used the military, police, and intelligence services to suppress opposition. His presidency ended after the 1986 People Power Revolution, which followed a disputed snap election and years of economic crisis and political violence. The Marcos era remains one of the Philippines’ most contested chapters, remembered for state‑led construction and diplomatic maneuvering as well as for corruption allegations, human‑rights abuses, and the creation of patronage structures that outlived his exile.
- Philippines Party State ControlPolitical Cold War and Globalization State Power Power: 100Imelda Marcos (born Imelda Romuáldez, 2 July 1929) is a Filipino politician and former first lady of the Philippines, best known as the wife of President {ilink(‘Ferdinand Marcos‘)}. During the Marcos presidency and martial‑law era, she became a prominent political actor in her own right, holding public positions that included governor of Metro Manila and minister roles associated with housing and urban development. She also served as an international representative of the regime, cultivating an image of glamour and cultural patronage that supporters described as national promotion and critics described as political theater masking repression and corruption.
- MoluccasNew SpainPhilippinesSpanish Empire Colonial AdministrationMilitaryPolitical Early Modern Conquest & TributeState Power Power: 100Ruy López de Villalobos was a Spanish expedition commander of the early Pacific age whose historical significance lies less in a successful conquest than in the administrative logic of his mission. He was sent out from New Spain in 1542 under the authority of Viceroy Antonio de Mendoza to project Castilian power into waters that were already contested by Portugal under the treaties of Tordesillas and Zaragoza. The expedition aimed to establish a western Pacific foothold that could support longer-term access to the Spice Islands and eventually to China trade. In that sense Villalobos operated not merely as an explorer but as an agent of imperial extension, carrying law, claims of sovereignty, soldiers, clergy, and expectations of future revenue across an ocean that Spain did not yet know how to master.His expedition is most often remembered because some sources credit him, or men under his command, with applying the name Filipinas to Leyte and Samar in honor of the Spanish crown prince Philip, later Philip II. Yet the deeper importance of the voyage lies in what it revealed about the mechanics and limits of colonial administration. Villalobos had ships, commissions, and claims, but he lacked a stable return route, dependable resupply, and local economic integration. The expedition was therefore an early demonstration that empire could not be sustained by proclamation alone. It required logistics, food, diplomacy, coercion, and navigational knowledge that Spain had not yet fully assembled in the Pacific.
- #4 Paul Le RouxPhilippinesSouth AfricaUnited StatesZimbabwe CriminalCriminal Enterprise Cold War and Globalization Illicit Networks Power: 62Paul Le Roux (born 1972) is a Zimbabwe-born programmer and criminal organizer whose career revealed how digital expertise, offshore finance, and old-fashioned coercion could be fused into a modern transnational crime empire. He first accumulated major wealth through online prescription-drug operations and related technology infrastructure, then expanded into narcotics trafficking, arms transactions, precious-metals smuggling, timber extraction, and murder-for-hire schemes across multiple countries. Le Roux is historically significant because his organization did not resemble a traditional territorial mafia. It operated more like a private clandestine corporation, with encrypted communications, compartmentalized teams, shell companies, and outsourced violence. His 2012 arrest in a U.S. sting and later cooperation with authorities exposed a criminal model in which software skill and global logistics became force multipliers for organized crime.
Books by Drew Higgins
Spiritual Warfare
Bible Study / Spiritual Warfare
Ephesians 6 Field Guide: Spiritual Warfare and the Full Armor of God
Spiritual warfare is real—but it was never meant to turn your life into panic, obsession, or…