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.
2
Profiles
38
Assets / Institutions
37
Power Types
8
Eras
Most Powerful
- Qatar Imperial SovereigntyPolitical 21st Century State Power Power: 100Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani (born 1980) is the Emir of Qatar, having assumed the throne in June 2013 after the abdication of his father, Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani. He is associated with a state strategy that pairs liquefied natural gas revenue with sovereign investment and outward-facing diplomacy, while using media and sport to expand Qatar’s international profile.
- InternationalMiddle EastQatar PoliticalResource Extraction Control 21st Century State Power Power: 77Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani (born 1980) is the emir of Qatar and the central political figure in a state whose extraordinary influence rests on natural gas wealth, energy infrastructure, and sovereign investment. His significance lies less in personal flamboyance than in his stewardship of a compact but exceptionally rich hydrocarbon state that has learned to turn resource abundance into diplomatic visibility, strategic resilience, and long-term capital power. Under his rule, Qatar has continued to behave like a country much larger than its population by using liquefied natural gas, overseas investment, state aviation, media reach, and mediation diplomacy in mutually reinforcing ways.He belongs in resource extraction control because the material basis of Qatari power is the monetization of gas reserves, especially the giant field shared with Iran and the industrial system built to liquefy, ship, and market that gas to the world. The state’s global posture depends on the steady conversion of underground reserves into budget capacity, sovereign wealth, and foreign leverage. In Qatar’s case, extraction is not a narrow sector. It is the base layer of the entire national model.Tamim inherited a structure already made formidable by the rule of his father, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, but his own importance emerged from preservation under pressure. He took power in 2013 and then confronted one of the most serious tests in modern Gulf politics when neighboring states imposed a blockade on Qatar in 2017. The fact that Qatar endured that confrontation without political collapse, financial panic, or strategic retreat strengthened his standing and highlighted the depth of the country’s gas-backed buffers.His profile matters because it shows how resource wealth can sustain a sophisticated form of small-state strategy. Qatar under Tamim is not simply a rentier monarchy distributing income from gas. It is a state that uses extraction revenue to fund infrastructure, sovereign investment, diplomatic mediation, elite continuity, and international branding. That makes him an important case in the study of how geology, capital, and political centralization combine in the twenty-first century.
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…