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.
13
Profiles
38
Assets / Institutions
37
Power Types
8
Eras
Most Powerful
- IraqSyria CriminalCriminal EnterprisePolitical 21st Century Illicit NetworksState Power Power: 100Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi (1971 – 2019) was an Iraqi militant leader who became the head of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and the wider Islamic State (IS) network. Operating in the breakdown of state authority after the Iraq War and amid the civil war in Syria, he led an insurgent movement that briefly combined guerrilla tactics with territorial rule. In June 2014, after a rapid military advance across northern Iraq, he proclaimed himself “caliph” in Mosul, a claim that sought to frame the organization as a state rather than a clandestine group.
- Gulf regionIranIraqLebanonMashhadMiddle EastSyriaTehran PoliticalReligionReligious Hierarchy 21st Century Religious HierarchyState Power Power: 100Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (1939–2026) was an Iranian cleric and politician who served as president of Iran from 1981 to 1989 and as Supreme Leader from 1989 until his death in 2026. As the highest authority in the Islamic Republic, he controlled key levers of state power through appointment rights over the judiciary, military leadership, state broadcasting, and influential oversight bodies. His rule consolidated a theocratic security state in which religious legitimacy, revolutionary ideology, and coercive institutions reinforced one another.
- Syria MilitaryParty State ControlPolitical Cold War and Globalization Military CommandState Power Power: 100Bashar al-Assad (born 1965) is a president of Syria (2000–2024) associated with Syria. Bashar al-Assad is best known for presiding over Syria’s security state during the Syrian civil war and being overthrown in December 2024 after 24 years as president. This profile belongs to the site’s study of party state control and state power, where influence depends on controlling systems rather than possessing money alone. In the modern and globalized world, concentrated influence is often exercised through finance, media, regulation, infrastructure, corporate governance, and cross-border market access.
- Syria Party State ControlPolitical Cold War and Globalization State Power Power: 100Hafez al‑Assad (6 October 1930 – 10 June 2000) was a Syrian military officer and politician who served as president of Syria from 1971 until his death in 2000. He rose within the Ba’ath Party and the armed forces during a period of repeated coups and ideological struggle, and he seized power in 1970 in what became known as the “Corrective Movement.” Assad built a highly centralized security state that combined party control with military authority, reshaping Syria’s institutions around regime stability. His rule brought a measure of administrative continuity after years of instability and established Syria as a major regional actor through intervention in Lebanon and sustained confrontation with Israel. At the same time, his government was widely criticized for harsh repression, including the crushing of an Islamist uprising in the early 1980s. Assad also laid the groundwork for a dynastic succession, and his son [Bashar al‑Assad](https://moneytyrants.com/bashar-al-assad/) succeeded him, extending the Assad family’s grip on Syrian politics.
- IranLebanonSyria MilitaryParty State ControlPolitical 21st Century Military CommandState Power Power: 100Hassan Nasrallah (1960–2024) was a Lebanese Shia cleric and political leader who served as secretary-general of Hezbollah from 1992 until his death in 2024. Under his leadership, Hezbollah evolved from a militia rooted in the Lebanese civil war era into a hybrid organization combining an armed wing, a political party with parliamentary influence, and a broad social-services network. Nasrallah became the movement’s most recognizable public figure and a central node in the regional alliance linking Hezbollah with Iran and, at various points, with Syrian state interests.
- #6 Nur ad-DinSyria Imperial SovereigntyMilitaryPolitical Medieval Military CommandState Power Power: 100Nur ad-Din (born 1118) is a ruler of Aleppo and Damascus associated with Syria. Nur ad-Din is best known for Building a disciplined state that set conditions for later unification against Crusader polities. This profile belongs to the site’s study of imperial sovereignty and state power, where influence depends on controlling systems rather than possessing money alone. In the medieval world, power depended on dynastic authority, taxation, fortified routes, control of armed retainers, and the ability to hold together networks of loyalty across distance.
- #7 SaladinEgyptLevantMesopotamiaSyria MilitaryMilitary CommandPolitical Medieval Military CommandState Power Power: 100Saladin (Ṣalāḥ ad-Dīn Yūsuf ibn Ayyūb, c. 1137–1193) was the founder of the Ayyubid dynasty and one of the most consequential rulers of the medieval eastern Mediterranean. Rising from a military household of Kurdish origin, he became vizier of Fatimid Egypt and then transformed that office into sovereign authority. By bringing Egypt’s fiscal resources into a wider coalition and by absorbing large portions of Syria and Mesopotamia, he built a state capable of challenging the Crusader kingdoms on both the battlefield and the balance sheet.His victory at Hattin in 1187 shattered the military system that protected the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem and led to the Muslim reconquest of Jerusalem. The campaigns that followed, including the confrontation with the Third Crusade, showed how his power relied not only on cavalry and fortresses but on revenue, grain supply, port customs, and patronage networks that held a coalition together. In later memory he became a symbol of chivalry in some European sources and a model of Sunni political renewal in many Muslim accounts, though his wars were also marked by coercion, siege suffering, and hard bargaining over lives and ransoms.
- AfricaInternationalRussiaSyriaUkraine FinancialMilitaryMilitary Command 21st Century Finance and WealthMilitary Command Power: 100Yevgeny Viktorovich Prigozhin (1961–2023) was a Russian businessman and paramilitary leader best known for his role in building and directing the Wagner Group, a private military organization that operated in multiple conflict zones while maintaining deep connections to Russian state interests. He also controlled a contracting and catering business empire that obtained substantial government-linked procurement, which contributed to his nickname in international media as “Putin’s chef.”
- Asia MinorGreeceIranian plateauSeleucid EmpireSyria Imperial SovereigntyMilitaryPolitical AncientAncient and Classical Military CommandState Power Power: 96Antiochus III “the Great” (c. 241–187 BCE) was the sixth ruler of the Seleucid Empire, reigning from 223 to 187 BCE. His career is often treated as the last major attempt to restore Seleucid strength across the vast territory carved from Alexander’s conquests.
- Asia MinorGreeceHellenistic worldSyria Imperial SovereigntyMilitaryPolitical AncientAncient and Classical Military CommandState Power Power: 93Antigonus I Monophthalmus (382–301 BCE) was a Macedonian general and one of the principal successors of [Alexander the Great](https://moneytyrants.com/alexander-the-great/) during the Wars of the Diadochi. Nicknamed “the One‑Eyed,” he rose from satrapal command in Asia Minor to become, for a time
- EgyptIranian plateauJudeaSeleucid EmpireSyria Imperial SovereigntyPolitical AncientAncient and Classical State Power Power: 77Antiochus IV Epiphanes (c. 215–164 BCE) was a Seleucid king who reigned from 175 to 164 BCE. A younger son of [Antiochus III the Great](https://moneytyrants.com/antiochus-iii-the-great/)
- Roman RepublicRomeSyria Financial Network ControlPolitical AncientAncient and Classical Finance and WealthState Power Power: 57Marcus Licinius Crassus (c. 115–53 BCE) was a Roman politician, financier, and military commander whose wealth and ambition helped shape the final decades of the Roman Republic. Ancient writers regularly describe him as one of the richest men of his age
- #13 Monzer al-KassarSpainSyriaUnited States CriminalCriminal Enterprise World Wars and Midcentury Illicit Networks Power: 47Monzer al-Kassar (born 1945) is a Syrian-born international arms broker whose name became associated with the gray zone between state interest, private profiteering, and illicit logistics in the late Cold War and post–Cold War periods. Based for years in Spain, he was widely portrayed as a broker capable of supplying weapons across borders by exploiting intermediaries, false documentation, and shipping techniques designed to bypass embargoes and obscure end users.Al-Kassar’s public notoriety culminated in a U.S. prosecution that framed his work as part of a conspiracy to sell weapons intended for use against Americans abroad. Extradited from Spain to the United States in 2008, he was convicted in federal court later that year after a sting operation in which undercover agents posed as representatives for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). He received a lengthy prison sentence. His case illustrates how arms trafficking operates as a criminal enterprise: profits flow from moving restricted goods through weak points in international oversight, while power comes from reliable access to supply, transport, and protection.