Profiles

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
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Most Powerful

  • Southern AfricaUnited Kingdom Colonial AdministrationIndustrialPolitical Industrial Conquest & TributeState Power Power: 100
    Cecil Rhodes (1853 – 1902) was a British businessman and imperial politician whose fortune and influence were rooted in the diamond industry of southern Africa and in the use of chartered-company power to extend British control north of the Cape. He became a central architect of late nineteenth-century imperial expansion, combining corporate consolidation with political office in a way that blurred the boundary between private profit and state policy. Rhodes served as Prime Minister of the Cape Colony (1890 – 1896) and played a leading role in the creation of the British South Africa Company, which administered and exploited large territories through a royal charter.Rhodes’s wealth came primarily from the consolidation of diamond mining around Kimberley, culminating in the dominance of De Beers. He helped build a system in which control over claims, finance, and distribution enabled a small group to regulate output and stabilize prices. That economic power translated into political leverage, funding lobbying, propaganda, and territorial ventures. His career illustrates how industrial-era wealth could be converted into governance capacity through corporate instruments and through strategic relationships with metropolitan politicians such as [Joseph Chamberlain](https://moneytyrants.com/joseph-chamberlain/).Rhodes’s legacy is highly contested. He is remembered by supporters for infrastructural ambition and for educational philanthropy through the Rhodes Scholarships, yet he is also widely criticized for policies and practices that entrenched racial hierarchy, dispossessed African communities, and exploited labor. His career exemplifies the colonial-administration topology: concentrated capital used to acquire territorial control, administer populations, and extract resources under the banner of empire.
  • Southern Africa MilitaryMilitary CommandPolitical Industrial Military CommandState Power Power: 100
    Shaka (c. 1787–1828) was the Zulu ruler who transformed a relatively small chiefdom in southeastern Africa into the core of a powerful regional kingdom. He is remembered as a brilliant and feared commander whose authority rested on military reorganization, personal discipline, and the rapid concentration of men, cattle, and allegiance under a central court. His rise altered the political geography of the region and became inseparable from the era of warfare, migration, and state formation often associated with the Mfecane.Shaka’s importance lies in the way command became system rather than episode. He built power by tightening regimental structure, binding youth to royal service, reorganizing settlement patterns, and turning victory in war into a continuing machine of extraction and obedience. His career sits at the intersection of strategy, kingship, and memory, because the stories told about him were shaped both by real violence and by later colonial, missionary, and nationalist retellings.

Books by Drew Higgins