The Best General in History

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Three 'generals'.

Arthur Wellesly, 1st Duke of Wellington. It took a special kind of man to defeat Napoleon, and he was that kind of man.

Hannibal, see above.

Boudica, who put the stuffing into the Romans in London and Cambridge, had a massive army, and likely as not went down with her army. You can't be a true great general without dying in battle (unless your name is Wellington).
 
Her strategic and tactical skills have been under reported, but I really don't think she's the greatest general in history.

As for neglected, she has more movies and wiki pages than most of the other folks on this list.

I think I've underestimated Genghis and his ilk as well, but Belisarius still gets my vote. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belisarius

I'm sure we have different opinions about which characteristics are most important too. Is great generalship revealed most by tactical or strategic victory, is its surest test in avoiding or overcoming great odds or is the greatest general simply the one who best served his (or her) nation or political masters? And how should the evidence be weighted to account for various historical circumstances?

Well for such a short life that she led she achieved a lot. If it weren't for her, there might not be a France as we know it today.

So I think Jeanne d'Arc certainly should be considered as the greatest general in history.
 
5. Julius Caesar

i dont know if you should put gaius julius that far up the list. he was more of a politician than a general, his main accomplishments in the gallics wars where to divide the gallic tribes, get germanic cavalry as auxiliae and being able to pay the 4 (?) legions he had standing for years. of course militarily he wasnt a complete idiot, but he generally took the well working roman legionary system and training and used it againts inferior opponents. (who where partially inferior because of his political accomplishments...)
he did so in the civil war too (hispanic campaigns against ill prepared troops, lost the only really big battle against pompeius himself at dyrracchium, who later attacked caesars troops unnessesarily at pharsalos in a weak strategic position and got routed (and killed in egypt))
 
I know that my list of generals and education on them are not complete, but of the generals that I know of and have any sort of knowledge of, I'd have to say that General Robert E. Lee is the best.
 
While I don't entirely agree with a few of the rankings, I'll just talk about the ones that are just screwed up.
12. Leonidas
Losing a battle to the Persians and otherwise exhibiting few characteristics other than bravery are both excellent qualifications for getting on this list. I highly approve. ;) Personally, I don't think that being quotable in a recent movie really constitutes military genius, but what do I know?
LightSpectra said:
6. Sun-Tzu
If writing a military classic is all you need to do to get on the list (never mind actual achievements), then why aren't Jomini, von Clausewitz, Mahan, Liddell Hart, and co. on here? :p
LightSpectra said:
2. Khalid ibn al-Walid
And he is so fantastic because...? IMHO victories against two exhausted empires aren't as impressive as victories against two fairly vigorous kingdoms with virtually no resources. The lack of production of any tactical or strategic masterpieces, instead relying on either sandstorms (Yarmuk) or the almost miniscule tactical advantage that charging light cavalry gives sort of makes me want to rank him around 25; while he did have some skill, he wasn't an epoch-making military genius innovator or a particularly brilliant practitioner and perfectionist of a standard form.
 
What's the argument for Alexander NOT being the greatest of all?

I read something earlier about 'because he lost control of his army, unlike leader XYZ'. To that I would say, that Alexander pushed the limits of his men farther than any other - ultimately to the breaking point. Is that really a 'fault', or just a consequence of being 'too good'? (i.e. ambitious, bold, and relentless more than any other man could cope with) I would say the latter.
 
What's the argument for Alexander NOT being the greatest of all?

I read something earlier about 'because he lost control of his army, unlike leader XYZ'. To that I would say, that Alexander pushed the limits of his men farther than any other - ultimately to the breaking point. Is that really a 'fault', or just a consequence of being 'too good'? (i.e. ambitious, bold, and relentless more than any other man could cope with) I would say the latter.

To an extent I think its a positive attribute in a General, but ultimately being able to command your forces is their main role... half the fights fought off the battlefield and all that.
He would surely have been a better General if he hadn't forced such consequences.
 
1. Genghis Khan: Forged what would become the largest contiguous land empire in history. However, said empire did not last all that long (compared to other empires).

2. Hannibal Barca: Had more success fighting against the Roman Empire than any other general in history, and had the chance to take Rome, but he lost in the end.

3. Alexander the Great: Defeated the largest empire in the world using very well trained troops, but his enemy was incompetant. He spread Hellenic culture all over, but he died in the end.

4. Napoleon: Brought France out of the pits, modernized it, and created a massive empire that was feared by all, but he was an egomaniac and lost badly a couple times (though he came back briefly, only to lose again).

5. Belisarius: Doubled the size of the Byzantine empire. He wiped out the Vandals, who were some of the most powerful barbarians around, but was later forced to become a blind beggar.

6. Julius Caesar: Won a major military victory and greatly increased the size of the Roman Republic, which he changed to an Empire. However, he was a crappy populist politician, and was assassinated.

7. Robert E. Lee: Very good general, he beat many a Union opponent. He fought for his state, not for the 'vile institution'. He lost the most crucial battle of the war, though. He was smart enough to know that dragging the war on was stupid, at least.

8. Erwin Rommel: Very solid general, who won much and lost some, and tried to make Germany great despite Hitler's insanity. He screwed up on D-day though, and was later forced to commit suicide.

9. Mao Zedong: Modern China's greatest war hero, he lead the longest forced march in history, and fought for years to control China, eventually winning. He really screwed up his country with his social reforms, though.

10. Mohammed: Founded the most powerful (in terms of spread) religion in the world, and started out what would later become a massive series of powerful Caliphates. Really though, the actual amount of territory he gained was small.
 
Losing a battle to the Persians and otherwise exhibiting few characteristics other than bravery are both excellent qualifications for getting on this list. I highly approve.

He also killed 25,000 Persians with roughly 1,500 men. I dunno, maybe he should be lower.

If writing a military classic is all you need to do to get on the list (never mind actual achievements), then why aren't Jomini, von Clausewitz, Mahan, Liddell Hart, and co. on here?

I sort of agree with you here, though I wanted Sun-Tzu somewhere on the list.

And he is so fantastic because...?

Undefeated against superior and often twice as many troops. Yarmouk is his most impressive victory; he didn't win off of the luck of a sandstorm. I've read nothing of the sort.
 
Huh? :huh: Last time I checked, Christianity was twice as big.


Well, now that I think of it, Christianity IS bigger on paper. (by 10% only, though; 33% of world vs. 21% of world) I ought to change it to most widespread religion, which IS true.

http://www.adherents.com/Religions_By_Adherents.html

Still, one has to keep in mind that every country which is 'Islamic' is around 90% to 100% Islamic, whereas every country that is 'Christian' probably has a decent portion of atheists in it, as most are secular western countries.

Edit: I changed my earlier post.
 
By 10%? :lol: You must be kidding me! Check the links below.

Still, one has to keep in mind that every country which is 'Islamic' is around 90% to 100% Islamic, whereas every country that is 'Christian' probably has a decent portion of atheists in it, as most are secular western countries.

Not true at all. All declared atheists are not included. Those who say they are Christian and aren't, on the inside, can never be counted exactly, of course, but the same happens with Muslims that will claim they are Muslims but not respect the Muslim way of life or not embrace the ideas.

Christianity: 2.1 billion adherents (ATHEISTS NOT INCLUDED IN THE NUMBER)
Islam: between 0.9 and 1.4 billion adherents.

That means that taking the lower estimate for Islam, Christianity is more than twice as big as Islam, while taking the highest estimate Christianity is one time and a half bigger than Islam.

Islam is also not the most widespread religion, again being far behind Christianity:
800px-Islam_percentage_by_country.png


Now compare that with North and South America, Europe, Russia, Australia and a good part of Africa. Absolutely no debate here!
 
What's the argument for Alexander NOT being the greatest of all?

I read something earlier about 'because he lost control of his army, unlike leader XYZ'. To that I would say, that Alexander pushed the limits of his men farther than any other - ultimately to the breaking point. Is that really a 'fault', or just a consequence of being 'too good'? (i.e. ambitious, bold, and relentless more than any other man could cope with) I would say the latter.

To an extent I think its a positive attribute in a General, but ultimately being able to command your forces is their main role... half the fights fought off the battlefield and all that.
He would surely have been a better General if he hadn't forced such consequences.

Alexander accomplished all that he accomplished in a tiny time frame. His troops (especially the ones from Macedonia) just needed a rest, but they never deserted him as is sometimes suggested, they just refused to go further into India. I would suggest that given time, and if he had not died so unfortunately, he would have been heading off on new expeditions fairly soon after his return to the Persian heartland. There is evidence that his next target was Arabia, and then a push west into the Mediterranean. After this a return to India would have been almost inevitable, given the man's personality.

@ wkndwrrr - About his opponents - Generals like Memnon and Porus were certainly not incompetent. ;) But they were still beaten. Yes Darius was not a particularly great emperor/general, but he was not so bad, his main problem seems to have been his own (or his bodyguard's, depending on who you read) concern for personal safety, coupled with his troops propensity to run when their leader did.
 
By 10%? :lol: You must be kidding me! Check the links below.


Not true at all. All declared atheists are not included. Those who say they are Christian and aren't, on the inside, can never be counted exactly, of course, but the same happens with Muslims that will claim they are Muslims but not respect the Muslim way of life or not embrace the ideas.


Islam is also not the most widespread religion, again being far behind Christianity:

Now compare that with North and South America, Europe, Russia, Australia and a good part of Africa. Absolutely no debate here!


1. As a percentage of the population of the world, yes; Christianity is around 10% larger:



2. As to closet atheists: no, they can't be exactly counted, but I can guarantee you that the percentage is larger in Christianity. Christianity has no real equivalent to Sharia law, which seriously punishes apostacy. Secularism in general is also actively worked against in most of the Islamic world. Not so at all for Europe. In fact, Christianity is greatly losing popularity in places like Scandanavia. (see below map)

3. I already admitted I was wrong about Islam being larger in terms of adherants.

4. Spread of Islam: Over half of Africa, the entire middle east, a significant portion of India, (even if the percentage is low, India has a huge population) Bangladesh, Central Asia, as well as Southeast Asia and parts of Europe and the US, and (and I did not know this until seeing your map) Suriname.

Spread of Christianity: Europe, North America, South America, the southern third of Africa, Australia, and Central Asia. Parts of China as well (same reason as India).

(spread of Christianity)


Seems there can indeed be debate over which is farther spread.

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Why are we even arguing about this? All I did was posit that Mohammed was one of the world's greatest military leaders because of the legacy that he left behind. I'm going to stop posting in this thread so that it won't be further derailed.
 


Seems there can indeed be debate over which is farther spread.
Take a look at the talk page of that image. :p Everyone is complaining about how wrong and biased that map is. Norway for example is shown with about 3 times less Christians than there confirmed by studies. Even Romania is shown as 85% Christian, when even Wiki mentions it has 98% Christians. Russia is shown as 50% Christian when it's actually over 70%... etc.

As for the 10%, I thought you meant 10% more than Islam (as in, for every 100 Muslims there are 110 Christians), not 10% of the world. :crazyeye: Sorry.

-----------------------------

Why are we even arguing about this? All I did was posit that Mohammed was one of the world's greatest military leaders because of the legacy that he left behind. I'm going to stop posting in this thread so that it won't be further derailed.

I agree, we're going off-topic. I'm going to stop too now. :)
 
I think most posters dont really know a good general.

Lee is overrated, Grant was better. So is Rommel overrated, Patton was way better.

My list includes:

Alexander
Julius Caesar
Hannibal (grudgingly)
Frederick the Great
Napolean
Gustavus Adolphus
Wellignton
Patton
MacArthur
Washington

I've probably got too many americans in there, but I am pressed for time to really think about it.
 
Hello everyone. This is my first post. Glad to be here. I have a an old 'project' I put together - over time and with the help of others - I pulled out of 'storage' to share with this thread.

Mon Mauler said:
I'm not sure if I've posted on this board before, but, in my mind, there can be no discussion over who the top 5 military commanders of all-time were. They were Alexander the Great, Napoleon, Genghis Khan, Julius Caesar, and Hannibal...

We are not far off with our opinions, Mon. As a battlefield commander, I would rate Scipio Africanus above Caesar (it's close, though).


I had a lot of fun, my primary aim, in compiling my own 'top military leaders list', which I constantly revise thanks to the contributions and suggestions of other posters, whom I thank. There really is no such veritiable title as the 'greatest commander of all time'; it's like assessing what the best doughnut is, or the which mountain range is the most breathtaking. But it's fun to make a list, and enjoy the debates.

I had a lot of fun, my primary aim, in compiling my own 'top military leaders list', which I constantly revise thanks to the contributions and suggestions of other posters, whom I thank. There really is no such veritiable title as the 'greatest commander of all time'; it's like assessing what the best doughnut is, or the which mountain range is the most breathtaking. But it's fun to make a list, and enjoy the debates.

I would like to stress that I am merely an amateuer, and my knowledge of military history is much more thorough with the history of war in the West, so I apologize in advance if anyone feels I am too western-centric in my rankings, and/or if certain greats from the East are understated. I have done my best, and many should add to the list etc., as well as suggest changes of all sorts to this piece of subjective work.

War is not something to be happy about, but it is a powerful reality of history. Messiahs, diplomats, intellectuals, and philosophers have contributed to the twists and turns of history every bit as much as military leaders, but they have flourished only when protected by those very military leaders who could ensure the survival of their way of life. For the most part, the most significant and affecting leaders in world history have come not from the church, the governments, or the scholastic centers, but from the ranks of soldiers and sailors.

Perhaps a list of great (and not so great) could be broken up into two major TIERS - before gunpowder, which would comprise all the commanders before the 1420s or so, and after gunpowder. Gunpowder did indeed exist in China as early as the 9th century or earlier (potassium nitrate, the primary oxidising component of black powder gunpowder, was extant as early as the 1st century A.D.), but it was used almost exclusively for pyrotechnics. The knowledge and technology of gunpowder was transmitted to Europe via the Middle East. The first known use of fire-lances, indeed occuring in China, became prevalent during the Song Dynasty (960-1279). The Arabs produced the first known working gun in the early 14th century - the madfaa. The French improved upon this cannon, which the Moors utilized, with the pot-de-fur. Gunpowder became instrumental in warfare in the late 14th century but it was not generally adapted to civil purposes until the 17th century, when it began to be used in mining. When Henry V's artillery battered down the formidable fortress of Harfleur in 1415, at which 12 guns were a part of his siege-train, the era of impregnable fortresses seemingly ended. The Hussites, under the brilliant Jan Zizka and Andrew Procop, showed what gunpowder could do on the battlefield if employed with bold imagination; they employed siege guns mounted on wheels (the Wagenburg), giving them an advantage of fortified mobility.

The Dutch under Mauritz (Maurice) van Nassau developed an excellent system of drill to train soldiers amid their war against the might of Spain, and it was the great Gustavus Adolphus, enjoying the support of both the commons and government of Sweden, who innovated every branch of his national army (and of the finest mercenaries) to render his forces superior to anything his enemies could counter him with; discipline was supreme throughout his soldiers, even his mercenaries, and his engineers developed regimental pieces which revolutionized field artillery. Gustavus utilized the co-existence of his flexible reformed infantry (mobility over weight), cavalry (the caracole tactic replaced by pistol fire followed by shock action with cold steel), and field artillery in superb conjunction - ie, combined arms.

Moreover, a vast list could be piecemealed under specifics: strategic, tactical, operational, revolutionary, guerilla and artillery leaders etc. How much credit do monarchs merit in certain campaigns? Edward III and Henry V, 2 superb Medieval warrior-kings, surely deserve most of the credit for the tactical brilliance of their campaigns (though the lon-term strategic gains were slight). Was Shih Huang-ti a military commander? Augustus? Elizabeth I? Maybe, but probably not. Philip II of Spain, Otto von Bismarck, and Josef Stalin? I don't think so, in my opinion (this is arguable).

But I think I will bunch it together; the circumstances of war may never be repeated, but the essence of major tactics and strategy have not changed. It is the methods of their applications, due to the changes in technology, that have altered. Thus we can indeed compare the ancient commanders with the modern ones (IMHO) from this point of view. It must be understood, however, that modern commanders did not directly lead into action (modern meaning since, let's say, the time of Napoleon, and I mean this very broadly); they directed affairs from far away, and direct leadership was delegated to not just senior officers, but the junior ones. Thus tactical prowess was more significant in ancient and medieval times. Moreover, commanders who possessed autocratic power, such as Alexander, answered to no government or other ruler, which certainly facilitated his situation for conquest, in terms of decision-making. What if a Barcid had been the absolute ruler of Carthage? He merely could have ordered supplies and troops to be sent to Hannibal in southern Italy, something that proved could be effected (though only in detachments) soon after his devastating victory at Cannae, which cracked the solidarity of Rome's federation. The pressure might have been too much for the Rome, whose sound body-politic was the overall reason for her ultimate triumph in the titanic struggle against Hannibal. We'll never know.

So, what makes a great general? Many things, of course, and no man is infallible. Adaptation? Improvisation? Panache? Implementing sound policy (a morale objective) etc.? Magnanimity in winning over allies? Non-hesitation? Flexibility? Decisiveness? Exerting discipline and iron will into his troops? A balance of skllful execution of strategy and tactics? When not to be rash? A political understanding to support one's war? Luck? Advancing one's state's cause for many generations to come? All great ideas are simple (at least to a genius). Perhaps the biggest, if one is most paramount, attribute to a great commander is his ability to identify a 'simple' solution to victory before his opponent in battle. Logistically, exploiting the terrain and weather is invaluable. The greats had them all. B.H. Liddell Hart, the renowned theorist (among many things he was), says the most important quality is to strike at an opponents' Achilles Heel. But one must find that weak point. A good soldier will conceal his weak point the best he can. For the most part, the great generals possessed the vision to identify the obvious and most viable situation to victory than his opponent.

With all things considered, such as the innovations (or improved reforms) of Epaminondas and Gustavus (Gustaf II), the tactical brilliance of Hannibal and Narses, the scope of the conquests of Chinggis Khan (he had others to directly carry out many of the conquests), the overral greatness in every facet of war of Marlborough etc., I consider Alexander the Great to be the towering figure of military history. His ability to successfully adapt strategy and tactics to virtually every branch of warfare sets him apart from every other great commander. He took his army some 20,000 miles in 13 years, not once suffering a major setback, let alone a defeat. His opponent always chose the battlefield and ususally heavily outnumbered him. For what it merits, no other has successfully 'linked' the East and West, thus he was an immense cultural reformer, which is what he wanted to do. He indeed commanded an army much superior than what he faced, but he was outnumbered considerably and his battle dispositions at Gaugamela were perfectly planned to accord with what Napoleon described as 'a well reasoned and extremely circumspect defensive followed by rapid and audacious attack'. Besides, to reiterate, the advantage of a superior force is merely potential. It is the commander that must effectively utilize what he/she has and lead it to victory. In this regard, Alexander shined as well as any other in military history (IMHO of course).

The military machine left to Alexander from his father Philip II was the world's first standing army, raised by the world's first universal military service. But Philip II's son took his machine and succeeded, perhaps, beyond the Macedonina king's wildest dreams. A brilliantly constructed army is just potential; it is the commander that must lead it to victory, and advantages in troop quality and technology only produce advantages if used effectively. Alexander innovated the efficacy of combined arms to a much further degree than his great father. He also introduced the use of reserves on the battlefield that could take advantage of any unforeseen opportunities or reverses against the front lines. He also was the first great commander to use catapults tactically on the battlefield (It may have actually been Onomarchus, the Phocian leader, who first used battlefield catapults against Alexander's father in 355 B.C., but he cannot be classified as one of the greats), and successfully undertook a counter-insurgency in the lands of Bactria and Sogdiana, where a nationalistic movement sprung up against him. In Illyria in 335 B.C., Alexander lined his machines hub-to-hub along the bank of the Apsus River to cover the crossing of his withdrawing troops against the attacks upon him by the Illyrian tribes under Cleitus and Glaucius. Contrarily, more than 2,000 miles away and six years later in 329 B.C., he effectively used catapults to drive the Scythians from the riverbank of the Jaxartes as he conducted an amphibious assault against them, and then created a sophisticated situation by which their steppe-style tactics were neutralized: under a brillaint commander, a brilliant instrument of combined arms could indeed defeat the best steppe horse archers at the time. There has perhaps been no greater practitioner of a great system than Alexander. Hannibal, Scipio Africanus, Chinggis Khan, Subotai, and Napoleon were certainly comparable in thier great works; Hannibal and Scipio implemented fine use of offensive reserves in their great victories, and the first 'true' reserve deployed may have been Hannibal's retention of his third line at the Battle of Zama.

Heinz Guderian was probably the greatest exponent of 'Blitzkrieg' at the start of WWII, which proved incredibly effective, at least initially. George Patton was a master of mobility and of armored warfare towards the end of WWII, albeit more in theory than practice.

When on top of his game, Napoleon was as able as any other in history. But his colossal ambition was ultimately beyond his, or any man's, reach. When he commanded relatively smaller armies, he was simply awesome, even in his later career. He denied being a greedy conqueror who was merely intoxicated with power; he argued that he was building a federation of 'free states' in Europe, to be united under a liberal government under the aegis of France. But if this was his goal, he intended to achieve it by taking power in his own hands. However, in the states he created, Napoleon granted constitutions, introduced law codes, abolished feudalism, created efficient governments and fostered education, science, literature and the arts. The last few years of his career saw his derriere handed to him. But it reached a point where his hands were extended to the moon, and he was extant in a time when no Alexander could completely thrive. Adolf Hitler, hardly in Napoleon's league, would also learn the world was too big to have. Man cannot be God. But like Cannae, Austerlitz was a lesson in the art of war. Whether one admires him, is indifferent about him, or hates him, Napoleon Bonaparte was a genius.

Chinggis Khan, who was born in a tent and began with less than nothing, impacted the world greatly; the truth is he was a visionary leader whose conquests joined a comparitively backward Europe with the flourishing cultures of Asia to trigger a global awakening, which resulted in an unprecedented explosion of technologies, trade, and ideas, all filtered via the Silk Road. He was as great a civil administrator as he was an organizer of arms, which was limited to cavalry and corps of engineers. Infantry was hardly ever used, which would not only hinder the Mongols' need for extreme celerity, but for the reason that a nomad fighter without a horse was unthinkable. Chinggis was also as adept as any commander in history at psychological warfare; many of his enemies were subdued without a shot being fired against them. He surpasses Alexander in the manner he organized his empire, and his command structure was based on ability, not any bloodline (even his own). That is the mark of a brilliant commander. His great general Subotai was probably history's greatest grand strategist, as he effectively used one army to screen another's flank, thus co-ordinating multiple armies across multiple mountain ranges. Under Subotai, the articulation of the steppe-style Mongol instrument was unbeatable, unless they were met in pitched fighting in terrain like Switzerland, or went up against an army possessed of brilliant commander of combined arms, including superior firepower to keep them at bay (as Alexander did against the Scythians) - both of which never occured.

Though Alexander's empire did not endure as Rome's did or was as vast as that of the Mongols, his legacy probably outlasts any other military figure, other than perhaps the Prophet Mohammed (and maybe Constantine I), and his work was one of near cosmogony. He was a genius. He was a madman. He was a visionary. He was a mass-murderer. He was a liberator. He was intoxicated with power. He was chivalrous when not opposed. Was he all of these? Was he any of these? Militarily, he could smash his enemy. Diplomatically, he could win over numerous peoples with his panache. Scipio Africanus, probably Rome's greatest field commander, also succeeded with these great attributes. It is probable he couldn't have known at the time the extent of his immenince, but the fact we speak of him today in the manner in which we do means he got exactly what he wanted.

"If anyone has the right to be judged by the standards of his time, and not by the standards of our time, it is Alexander".

-Hermann Bengtson

As a field general who sustained his army in enemy territory so adeptly, with that enemy assidiously dogging him, with only grudging support from his own state, who could have sent him troops in 215 B.C. from Africa or even Sicily (Syracuse had revolted from Roman rule), and as a great exponent of stratagem and bluff etc., Hannibal may have no equal. His great campaign against Republican Rome was the first in which strategic actions played the pivotal role, though this resulted in Rome's victory. Rome adapted brilliantly, and won with his concept, basically of breaking an enemy by detaching her allies. Moreover, their corporate heroism and sound body-politic ultimately matched his genius. He also provided the posterity of warfare with a textbook display of tactical perfection in a pitched battle at Cannae in 216 B.C. He did ultimately fail, but mostly because of circumstance and events which were simply out of his control. He was simply fantastic, but his subordinates in Iberia failed miserably. Carthaginian folly, particularly in Iberia, was more responsible for his ultimate failure than any major mistakes on his part. His grand strategy to overcome Rome was dependent on an encirclement of Italy from his allies in Greece, Africa, and Iberia; Rome simply checked or defeated Carthage's allies where Hannibal wasn't present. The Carthaginians were simply not the martial nation-state Rome was.

Chinese warlords of the steppes of Asia, such as Maodun (Mete Han) (late 3rd century to early 2nd century B.C.) and Ran Min (mid 4th century A.D.), carried out devastating campaigns of destruction with their indefatigable armies of horsemen. Cao Cao, a warlord who had been an important member of the previous Han Dynasty, had first established his power in northern China by defeating his rival, Yuan Shao, in the Battle of Guandu in 200 A.D. This made Cao Cao the most powerful ruler in northern China. Records seeem a little exiguous, but, in this battle, Cao Cao was outnumbered significantly. Wanyan Min, or Wanyan Aguda, the great Jurchen leader and founder of the Jin Dynasty, defeated 700,000 Liao (Qidan) troops with 20,000 (this is not a typo) of his superbly armored and skilled Jurchen cavalrymen at the Battle of Hubudagang in 1115. The Liao Dynasty by this time was very decadent, but those odds are ridiculous! The following year, Aguda completed the conquest of the entire Liaodong Peninsula (northeastern China). Between 1119 and 1122, Aguda's army repeatedly defeated Liao armies and captured all of Liao's five capitals. The Mongols destroyed the Jin in 1234. By this time, however, the Jin was seriously weakened by internal strife.

Xenophon was the originator, probably, of the rearguard action, exemplified in his legendary and disciplined retreat of the 10,000, in 401 B.C.

Julius Caesar was untouchable. He was both a man of the people and a demagogue. As a conquorer, reformer, writer (smart propagandist, too), and politician, Caesar stands out as one of the great men of all time. His genius was probably as versatile as any man in history, even taking into consideration that history has seemingly made him larger than life.

I have categorized my compilation into three TIERS.

TIER 1 - The very best generals in military history. I have added in parantheses each commander's great military victory. This gets difficult; I am steadfast about the top 4, but how can one discern that Marlborough was indisputably better than Gustavus Adolphus? It comes down to our own subjective preferences. Remember, too, history is written by the winners. But the losers don't exactly want their humiliations being accounted down the ages. Would you?

The quality of one's work is a little more important than the breadth (who am I to judge the 'quality', right?). This doesn't necessarily mean final victory for one's cause. For example, Epaminondas and Philip II of Macedon won just three major victories between them, smashing ones, which displayed tactical innovation and politcal objectives. But it seems to me they were military geniuses above others who may have conquered more people and territory, such as Tamerlane and Hernan Cortes (Tamerlane is arguably the greatest ever, if a criterion of a huge conquest while never being defeated is applied). Moreover, one can be superior to another without necessarily being the more innovative.

TIER 2 - The next level. These commanders could very well have possessed genius on par with the TIER 1 leaders, but something, from my view, precludes them from being ranked with the others. For example, Tamerlane, an amazing leader, was no fool, but basically a conqueror on a massive scale with no political foresight. He simply conquered, not settled; but that doesn't militate against his skill as a commander. Maybe indiscriminate conquest is all it takes to be considered a great military leader, particularly if that was one's goal (though Tamerlane clearly appreciated culture). I guess one might argue with "who cares?"; the breadth of Tamerlane's conquests rival that of Chinggis Khan and his successors. Superfluous to say, this is all debatable. I may have shown a little too much impressionability for the Christian Crusaders, who have been the subject of much romanticism. Let me know what you think. Needless to say, I feel the expected debates should not be contentious (at the risk of sounding like a moderator), but academic.

TIER 3 - These commanders, in some form or another, warrant attention more positively than negatively. I may have underrated some, such as Attila, Edward I, and Nathan Forrest, and the likes of Crassus and McClellan were moderate commanders at best. I include 'bandits', revolutionists, and operational commanders. I realize TIER 3 may be too broad, and many more could easily be included (and excluded) - ie, any commander who won a battle of some sort. Perhaps there should be a 4th? A 5th?

I do not include many monarchs, emperors, or presidents, such as Elizabeth I, Queen of England or Abraham Lincoln, as they cannot be given credit for the military successes, in battle, of their nation's armies. That credit goes to their subordinates. They certainly merit credit (or accountability) for their sanctioning of their generals' resources etc., and influence upon human history.

Despite what many probably feel, Adolf Hitler was a student of military history, and the supreme commander of one of the greatest military forces ever developed. Despite his failings and ideological perfidy, he was at times an enterprising commander, not to mention entirely Frederician in military outlook. His faith in fanaticism was not always completely misplaced, in terms of military success. But he barely makes this list, thus I am aware how incomprehensibly unrealistic he did become as WWII dragged on.

I hope I haven't expounded too much. By all means, I would love approvals, reprovals and suggestions etc., etc. Remember, this is all my opinion, and I am just an avocational amateur. This list is one of military leaders, not inclusive of great thinkers or engineeres, such as Alfred Mahan or Jean Baptiste Vaquette de Gribeauval. Sun Tzu was actually a general, but Carl von Clausewitz, though a fine soldier, did not hold a position of higher command. But Archimedes directly led the defense of Syracuse against the Romans' 1st assault on Syracuse with his brilliant machines (though he wasn't really a military commander). By all means, I would love approvals, reprovals, and suggestions etc., etc.

One more thing: because a commander left a 'legacy' that shaped history because of his military success is not necessarily an important criterion to adopt. There is no way William the Conqueror, Francisco Pizarro, and Julius Caesar, to name a few, could have known their successes were going to affect Western civilization to the degree they did. I judge a commander by his/her actions, both on and off the battlefield, more than any enduring legacy left behind by a leader.

Continued...
 
TIER 1
This is my 'top 10' list (17, actually).

Alexander III (Alexandros III Philippou Makedonon) King of Macedon 'the Great' (Gaugamela, 331 B.C.)

Hannibal (Hannibal Barca) (Cannae, 216 B.C.)

Napoleon I (Napoleone Buonaparte) Emperor of France (Austerlitz, 1805 A.D.)

Chinggis (Genghis) Khan (b. Temujin) Mongol Conqueror 'Universal Ruler' (Indus River, 1221 A.D.)

Publius Cornelius Scipio Scipio Africanus Major (Ilipa, 206 B.C.)

John Churchill 1st Duke of Marlborough 'Corporal John' (Blenheim, 1704 A.D.)

Gustaf II Adolf (Gustavus Adolphus) King of Sweden 'the Lion of the North' (Breitenfeld, 1631 A.D.)

Belisarius (Flavius Belisarius) (Daraa, 530 A.D.)

Arthur Wellesley 1st Duke of Wellington 'the Iron Duke' (Salamanca, 1812 A.D.)

Subotai (Subedei Ba'adur) the Valiant (Kalka River, 1223 A.D.)

Gaius Julius Caesar (Pharsalus, 48 B.C.)

Han Xin (Jingxing, 205 B.C.)

Frederick II King of Prussia 'the Great' (Leuthen, 1757 A.D.)

Epaminondas (Leuctra, 371 B.C.)

Philip II King of Macedon (Chaeronea, 338 B.C.)

Timur-i Leng Turco-Mongol Conqueror 'Tamerlane' (Ankara, 1402 A.D.)

Khalid ibn al-Walid the Sword of Allah (Yarmuk River, 636 A.D.)

Probably the greatest admirals:

Themistocles (Salamis, 480 B.C.)

Yi Sun-shin (Yi Soon-shin) (Myeongnyang, 1597 A.D.)

Michiel Adriaenszoon de Ruyter (Texel 1673, A.D.)

Horatio Nelson Viscount Nelson (Trafalgar, 1805 A.D)

Chester Nimitz (Midway, 1942 A.D.)

TIER 2

These commanders are the next level. I do not rank these; they are listed chronologically by their deaths.

Tuthmosis (Thutmose) III Pharaoh of Egypt

Cyrus Achaemenid King of Persia 'the Great'

Seleucus I Diadochi and Seleucid Founder 'Nicator'

Pyrrhus Molossian King of Epirus

Gaius Marius

Trajan (Marcus Ulpius Trajanus) Roman Emperor 'Optimus Princeps'

Cao Cao (Cao Mengde) Emperor of the Later (Eastern) Han Dynasty and King of Wei

Aurelian (Lucius Domitius Aurelianus) Roman Emperor 'Restitutor Orbis'

Constantine I (Flavius Valerius Constantinus) Roman Emperor 'the Great'

Narses (Narseus)

Heraclius (Flavius Heraclius Augustus) Byzantine Emperor

Charles Martel (Carolus Martellus) Frankish Mayor of the Palace 'the Hammer'

Charlemagne (Carolus Magnus, Charles I) King of the Franks 'the Great'

Alfred King of Wessex 'the Great'

Wanyan Aguda Jurchen Chieftain and Jin Founder 'Taizu'

Yue Fei

Saladin (Salah al-Din Yusuf bin Ayyub) Kurdish Muslim Leader

Richard I King of England 'Coeur de Lion'

Tran Hung Dao (Hung Dao Dai Vuong)

Edward III King of England

Henry V King of England

Jan Zizka

Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba El Gran Capitan

Selim I Ottoman Sultan 'the Grim

Babur (Zahiruddin Muhammed Babur) Moghul Founder 'the Tiger'

Suleiman (Suleymaniye) I Ottoman Sultan 'the Magnificent'

Takeda Shingen (Kai-Shugo) Japanese Daimyo

Oda Nobunaga Japanese Daimyo

Jan Karol Chodkiewicz Grand Hetman of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

Stanislaw Koniecpolski Grand Crown Hetman of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

Mauritz van Nassau (Maurice of Nassau) Prince of Orange

Ambrogio Spinola Marques de Balbases

Albrecht von Wallenstein Duke of Friedland and Mecklenburg

Oliver Cromwell Lord Protector of the Commonwealth

Henri de La Tour d'Auvergne Vicomte Turenne

Louis II de Bourbon Duc d'Enghien and Prince de Conde 'the Great Conde'

John III (Jan Sobieski) King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania

Karl (Charles) XII King of Sweden

Eugene Prinz Francois-Eugen of Savoy-Carignan

Nadir Shah (Nadir Qoli Beg) Shah of Persia

Maurice de Saxe (Hermann Moritz)

George Washington

Aleksandr Vasilevich Suvorov Generalissimus of Russia

Louis Nicolas Davout Duc d'Auerstadt and Prince d'Eckmuhl 'the Iron Marshal'

Charles (Karl Ludwig Johann Josef Lorenz) Archduke of Austria, Duke of Teschen

Johann Josef Wenzel Radetzky Graf von Radetz 'Vater Radetzky'

Thomas Jonathan Jackson Stonewall Jackson

Robert E(dward) Lee

Helmuth Karl Bernhard von Moltke Count von Moltke 'the Elder'

Mustafa Kemal Founder of the Republic of Turkey 'Kemal Ataturk'

Erwin (Johannes Eugen) Rommel the Desert Fox

George Smith Patton Old Blood and Guts

Carl Gustav Emil Mannerheim Baron

Heinz Wilhelm Guderian

Paul Emil von Lettow-Vorbeck

William (Joseph) Slim 1st Viscount of Yarralumla and Bishopston

Erich von Manstein (Fritz Erich von Lewinski)

Georgi Konstantinovich Zhukov

Moshe Dayan

Vo Nguyen Giap

TIER 3

If titles of monarchy etc. are not specified, the commanders were merely generals of their respected states. Again, the captains are listed in chrononlogical order by their deaths.

BEFORE CHRIST

Lugalzagesi Sumerian King of Umma, Sargon King of Akkad 'the Great', Naram (Haram)-Sin King of Akkad, Hattusili I (Labarna) Hittite Founder, Mursilis I Hittite King, Tuthmosis (Thutmose) I Pharaoh of Egypt, Tuthmosis (Tuthmose) IV Pharaoh of Egypt, Tudhaliya I Hittite King, Suppiluliumas Hittite King, Mursilis II Hittite King, Muwatallis Hittite King, Rameses II Pharaoh of Egypt, Merneptah Pharaoh of Egypt, Gideon (Jerub-baal) Judge of the Israelites, Wu Wang (Chi Fa) Founder of the Chou Dynasty 'the Martial King', Tiglath Pileser I King of Assyria, Chou Kung (Chi Tan) Duke of Chou, David King of the Kingdom of Israel, Ashurnasirpal II King of Assyria, Shalmaneser III King of Assyria, Tiglath-Pileser III King of Assyria, Sargon II King of Assyria, Sennacherib King of Assyria, Esarhaddon King of Assyria, Ashurbanipal King of Assyria, Ji Zhonger Duke Wen of Jin, Nabopolasser King of Babylonia, Cyaxeres (Hvakhshathra) King of Media, Nebuchadnezzar II King of Babylonia, Harpagus (Arbaku), Wu Zixu (Wu Yun), Sun Tzu (Sun Wu) Honorable Sun, Cleomenes I King of Sparta, Darius I Achaemenid King of Persia 'the Great', Callimachus, Miltiades the Younger, Artaphrenes the Elder, Leonidas I King of Sparta, Gelon Tyrant of Syracuse, Myronides, Pausanius, Leotychides, Xerxes I Achaemenid King of Persia, Cimon, Teres I 1st Odrysian King, Cincinnatus (Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus), Pericles (Perikles), Gaius Servilius Ahala, Phormio, Sitalkes Odrysian King 'the Great', Pagondas, Brasidas, Demosthenes Son of Alcisthenes, Hannibal Son of Gisgo, Gylippus, Alcibiades, Agis II King of Sparta, Himilco, Lysander, Wu Qi (Wu Ch'i), Agesilaus II King of Sparta, Iphicrates, Conon, Dionysius I Tyrant of Syracuse, Marcus Furius Camillus, Pelopidas, Datames, Artaxerxes II King of Persia 'Memnon', Xenophon, Philomelus, Onomarchus, Dionysius II Tyrant of Syracuse, Sun Bin, Marcus Valerius Corvus, Titus Manlius Torquatus Imperiosus, Timoleon, Memnon of Rhodes, Parmenio the Old General, Coenus, Leosthenes, Craterus Diadochi of Alexander, Perdiccas, Sun Bin, Antipitar Diadochi of Alexander, Antigonus I Diadochi of Alexander 'Monophthalmos', Chandragupta Maurya Mauryan Founder 'Sandracottus', Quintus Fabius Maximus Rullianus, Agathocles Tyrant of Syracuse, Ptolemy I Diadochi of Alexander 'Soter', Demetrius I (Demetrius Poliorcetes) Diadochi of Alexander, Publius Cornelius Dolabella, Lysimachus Diadochi of Alexander, Olympiodorus, Ptolemy King of Macedon 'Ceraunus', Spurius Carvilius Maximus, Appius Claudius Caudex, Manius Curius Dentatus, Antiochus I King of Syria 'Soter', Bai Qi, Wang Jian, Li Mu, Lian Po, Xanthippus, Marcus Atilius Regulus, Asoka Mauryan Emperor, Adherbal, Gaius Lutatius Catalus, Hamilcar Barca Lightning, Gaius Duilius, Wang Jian, Ming T'ien, Chou T'o, Lucius Aemilius Papus, Gaius Atilius Regulus, Lucius Caecilius Metellus, Cleomenes III King of Sparta, Publius Cornelius Scipio the Elder, Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus, Gaius Flaminius, Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, Titus Otacilius Crassus, Marcus Claudius Marcellus, Hasdrubal Barca, Gaius Claudius Nero, Quintus Fabius Maximus Cunctator, Mago Barca, Syphax King of the Masaesylii, Titus Manlius Torquatus, Marcus Valerius Laevinus, Marcus Livius Salinator, Attalus I King of Pergamum 'Soter', Hsiang Yu (Xiang Yu), Liu Bang (Gaozu) Han Founder, Manius Acilius Glabrio, Muttines (Mottones), Lucius Cornelius Scipio Asiagenes, Manius Acilius Glabrio, Antiochus III King of Syria 'the Great', Prusias I King of Bithynia 'Cholos', Philopoemen the Last of the Greeks, Marcus Fulvius Nobilior, Mete Han Shanyu of the Xiongnu 'Maodun', Lucius Valerius Flaccus, Titus Quinctius Flamininus, Philip V King of Macedon, Antiochus IV King of Syria 'Epiphanes', Judas Maccabaeus the Hammer, Lucius Aemilius Paullus Macedonicus, Gaius Laelius, Eumenes II King of Pergamum 'Soter', Masinissa King of the Massylii, Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus Africanus Minor, Viriathus, Aristonicus, Lucius Caecilius Metellus Dalmaticus, Wei Qing, Ho Qu-bing, Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus, Decimus Junius Brutus (Callaicus), Gaius Tuditanus Sempronius, Liu Che (Wu Di) Han Emperor, Jugurtha King of Numidia, Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus, Sulla (Lucius Cornelius Sulla) Felix, Quintus Sertorius, Spartacus, Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius, Mithridates VI (Eupator Dionysus) King of Pontus 'the Great', Ariovistus King of the Suebi 'Friend', Lucius Licinius Lucullus Ponticus, Ambiorix Chief of the Eburones, Tigranes II King of Armenia 'the Great', Cassivellaunus (Cassibelanus) King of the Catuvellauni, Pompey (Gnaeus Pompeius) Magnus, Gaius Scribonius Curio, Publius Licinius Crassus, Marcus Licinius Crassus Dives, Surena (Rustaham Suren-Pahlev) Eran Spahbodh, , Vercingetorix King of the Arverni, Juba I King of Numidia, Pharnaces II King of Pontus, Orodes II (Hyrodes) King of Parthia, Publius Cornelius Dolabella, Pacorus I King of Parthia, Mark Antony (Marcus Antonius), Publius Ventidius Brassus, Titus Statilius Taurus, Marcus Aemilius Lepidus and Nero Claudius Drusus (Decimus Claudius Nero).

ANNO DOMINI, 1-1500

Marcus Plautius Silvanus, Germanicus Julius Caesar (Nero Claudius Germanicus), Publius Sulpicius Quirinius, Arminius (Hermann der Cherusker) Chief of the Cherusci, Gaius Silius, Juba II King of Numidia and Maueritania, Publius Cornelius Dolabella, Tiberius (Tiberius Claudius Nero) Roman Emperor, Cunobelinus (Cynfelyn) King of the Catuvellauni, Caratacus (Caradoc) King of the Catuvellauni, Publius Ostorius Scapula, Liu Xiu (Han-Guang Wu Di) Han Emperor, Aulus Plautius, Boudicca (Boadicea) Queen of the Iceni, Gaius Paulinus Suetonius, Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo, Vespasian (Titus Flavius Vespasianus) Roman Emperor, Eleazar ben Yair, Cerialis (Quintus Petillius Cerialis Caesius Rufus), Gnaeus Julius Agricola, Flavius Josephus (Joseph ben Matthias), Decebalus Dacian King, Bar Kochba (Simon bar Kochba), Marcus Aurelius, Sun Jian (Wentai) the Tiger of Jiang Dong, Yuan Shao Benchu, Severus (Lucius Septimius Severus) Roman Emperor, Zhang Liao (Wenyuan), Zhuge Liang (Chu-ko Liang) Founder of the Shu Kingdom 'the Hidden Dragon', Liu Bei Shu Emperor, Maximinus I (Gaius Julius Verus Maximinus) Roman Emperor 'Thrax', Ardashir I Sassanid Founder of Persia, Lu Xun (Boyan), Sun Quan (Zhongmou) Founder of the Wu Kingdom, Gallienus (Publius Licinius Egnatius Gallienus) Roman Emperor, Publius Septimius Odaenathus Prince of the Roman Colony of Palmyra, Postumus (Marcus Cassianius Latinius Postumus) Emperor of Gaul, Iberia, and Britian, Claudius II (Marcus Aurelius Claudius) Roman Emperor 'Gothicus', Shapur I Sassanid King of Persia, Zenobia Queen of Palmyra, Liu Cong (Zhaowu) Emperor of the Han Zhao State, Constantius II (Flavius Julius Constantius) Roman Emperor, Shi Le Founder of the Jie State (Later Zhao), Ran Min (Shi Min) Daowu, Julian (Flavius Claudius Julianus) Roman Emperor 'the Apostate', Shapur II Sassanid King of Persia, Maximianus (Magnus Maximus)[/b], Fritigern (Frithugairns) King of the Visigoths, Theodosius I (Flavius Theodosius) Roman Emperor 'the Great', Flavius Stilicho, Alaric I King of the Visigoths, Ataulf (Atawulf) King of the Visigoths 'Father Wolf', Wallia (Valia) King of the Visigoths, Coel Hen Duc Brittanniarum 'Old King Cole', Rua (Rugila) the Hun, Breda the Hun, Attila the Hun 'the Scourge of God', Flavius Aetius, Cunedda ap Edern Wledig, Majorian (Julius Valerius Maiorianus) Western Roman Emperor, Ricimer, Geiseric King of the Vandals, Childeric I King of the Salian Franks, Odoacar (Odavacer) King of the Heruli 'Rex Italiae', Ambrosius Aurelianus (Aurelius Ambrosius), Riothamus (Riotimus) King of the Brittones, Clovis I King and Unifier of the Franks, Theodoric King of the Ostrogoths 'the Great', Arthur 'Dex Bellorum' (legendary; yes, the legendary figure we know so well, and perhaps the same leader known as Owain Ddantgwyn (Owain Danwyn)), Cadwallon I (Cadwallon ap Einion King of Gwynedd 'Long Hand', Azarethes, Eran Spahbodh, Mundus, Priscus General Priscus, Totila (Baduila) King of the Ostrogoths, Ceawlin Saxon Bretwalda of Wessex, Bayan Avar khagan, Rhydderch Hael Brythonic hero 'the Generous', AEthilfrith King of Northumbria, Raedwald King of East Anglia, Muhammed the Prophet of Islam 'the Praised One', Pulakesi II (Ereya) Ruler of the Chalukya Dynasty, Umar ibn al-Khattab Caliph of Islam, Amr-ibn-al-As, Rustam Farokhzad, Sa'ad ibn abu-Wakkas, T'ai tsung (Li Shih-min) T'ang Emperor, Asparukh (Isperikh) Founder of the 1st Bulgarian Empire, Pippin (Pepin) II of Heristal Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia 'the Middle', Tariq ibn Zayid, Mohammed ibn-Kasim, Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi (Abdderrahman) Muslim Governor of Al-Andalus, Eudes (Odo) Duke of Aquitaine, Pelayo (Pelagio) Founder and Nobleman of the Kingdom of Asturias, Maslamah ibn Abd al-Malik, Leo III Byzantine Emperor 'the Isaurian', An Lu-shan, Hsuan-tsung T'ang Emperor, Guo Ziyi (Kuo Tzu-i), Harun al-Rashid Abbasid Caliph, Egbert King of Wessex, AEthelwulf King of Wessex, Ivar Ragnarsson the Boneless, Halfdan Ragnarsson, Rhodri (Roderick) Mawr Ruler of Wales 'the Great', Mihira Bhoja I Pratihara King of Northern India, Basil I Byzantine Emperor 'the Macedonian', Arpad Chief of the Magyars, Edward King of Wessex 'the Elder', Simeon I Tsar of Bulgaria, Harold I (Harald Haarfager) King of Norway, Henry I (Heinrich der Finkler) German King 'the Fowler', Ngo Quyen Founder of the first National Dynasty of Nam Viet, Ramiro II King of Leon, John Kurkuas, Chai Rong (later Guo Rong) Zhou Emperor 'Shizong', Nicephorus II Byzantine Emperor 'Phocas', Sviatoslav I Prince of Kievan Rus', Otto I Holy Roman Emperor 'the Great', John I (John Tzimisces) Byzantine Emperor, Muhammed Almansour Abi emir 'the Victorious', Boleslav I (Boleslav Chobri) King of Poland 'the Brave', Rajaraja Chola Emperor of Tamil Nadu, Brian Boru, Basil II Byzantine Emperor 'Bulgaroktonos', Mahmud (Yamin ad-Dawlah Mahmud) Sultan of Ghazni, Malcolm II (Mael Coluim mac Cinaeda) King of Scotland, Canute II (Knut) Danish King of Denmark, England, and Norway, Fulk III (Fulk Nerra) Count of Anjou 'the Black', Rajendra Chola Emperor of Tamil Nadu, Harold II (Harold Godwinsson) Earl of Wessex, Tughril Beg Seljuk Turk Founder, Alp Arslan (Muhammed ben Da'ud) Seljuk Sultan of Persia 'the Valiant Lion', Sviatoslav II (Sviatoslav Yaroslavich) Prince of Chernigov and Grand Prince of Kiev, Robert Guiscard the Resourceful, William I Duke of Normandy and King of England 'the Conqueror', Sancho Ramirez King of Aragon and Navarre, Adhemar Bishop of Le Puy-en-Velay, Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar El Cid Campeador, Godefroy (Godfrey) de Bouillon Duke of Lower Lorraine 'Defender of the Holy Sepulcher', Minamoto no Yoshiie Japanese Daimyo 'Hachiman-Taro', Bohemond I (Mark Guiscard) Prince of Taranto and Antioch, Wanyan Wuyashu Jurchen Chief 'Kangzong', Baldwin (of Boulogne) I Count of Edessa and Latin King of Jerusalem, Alexius I Byzantine Emperor 'Comnenus', Vladimir II (Volodymyr Monomakh) Grand Prince and Grand Duke of Kiev, Sigurd I (Sigurd Magnusson) King of Norway 'the Crusader', Baldwin (of Le Bourg) II Latin King of Jerusalem, Zengi (Imad ad-Din Atabeg Zengi) Atabeg of Mosul and Aleppo, Alfonso I King of Aragon and Navarre, Boleslav III (Boleslav Krzywousty) King of Poland 'Wrymouth', Valdemar I King of Denmark 'the Great', Richard de Clare 2nd Earl of Pembroke 'Strongbow', Taira no Kiyomori Japanese Dajo-Daijin, Baldwin IV Latin King of Jerusalem 'the Leper', Alfonso I King of Portugal 'Henriques the Conqueror', Minamoto no Yohorsehockeysune Japanese Samurai, Frederick I (Frederick Hohenstauffen) Holy Roman Emperor 'Barbarossa', Kilij Arslan II (Izz ad-Din Kilij Arslan) Seljuk Sultan of Rum, Enrico Dandolo Doge of Venice, Muhammed of Ghor (Muizz al Din Muhammed) Muslim Sultan of Ghazni, Kaloyen Asen (Johannizza) 'the Roman Killer', Minamoto no Yoritomo 1st Japanese Shogun, Alfonso VIII King of Castile 'the Noble', Hojo Tokimasa Japanese Shikken, Simon de Montfort IV Lord of Montfort, Chepe (Jebe Noyan), Philip II (Phillippe Auguste) King of France, Alfonso II King of Portugal 'the Fat', Muqali, Jalal ad-Din Mingburnu Khwarezm Sultan, Hermann von Salza, Chormaqan Noyan, Llywelyn I of Wales (Llywelyn ab Iorwerth) Prince of Gwynedd 'the Great', Valdemar II King of Denmark 'the Victorious', Ogotai Khan Mongol Khagan, Guyuk Khan Mongol Khagan, Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor, Batu Khan Khan of the Blue Horde, Mongke Khan Mongol Khagan, Baiju, Hulagu Khan, Kaidu Khan, Kadan, Alexander Nevsky (Alexander Vsevolodovich) Prince of Novgorad, Simon V de Montfort 6th Earl of Leicester, Baybars I Mamluk Sultan, Bayan, Pedro III King of Aragon, Rudolf I German King 'Rudolf of Hapsburg', Kublai Khan Mongol Khagan, Jan I Duke of Brabant 'the Victorious', Nogai Khan, Andrew of Moray, William Wallace, Edward I King of England 'Longshanks', Hojo Tokimune, Werner Stauffacher, Robert I King of Scotland 'the Bruce', Alfonso XI King of Castile and Leon, Rudolf von Erlach Bernese Ritter, Stefan Uros IV Dusan King of Serbia and Emperor of the Serbs and Greeks 'the Mighty', Orhan I (Orhan Gazi) Ottoman Sultan, Edward de Baliol King of Scotland, John Chandos, Edward Prince of Wales 'the Black Prince', Bertrand du Guesclin, Louis I King of Hungary, Croatia, Dalmatia, and Poland 'the Great', Pedro IV King of Aragon, Dmitri Donskoy Grand Prince of Moscow and Grand Duke of Vladimir 'the Don', Murad I Ottoman Sultan, John Hawkwood, Zhu Yuan Zhang (Tai Zu) Founder of the Ming Dynasty 'the Hongwu Emperor', Bayezid (Beyazit) I Ottoman Sultan 'the Thunderbolt', Tokhtamysh Khan of the White Horde, Olivier de Clisson the Butcher, Owen Glendower (Owain Glyn Dwr), Zhu Di (Cheng Zu) Ming Emperor 'the Yongle Emperor', Jeanne d'Arc (Joan of Arc), Nun'Alvares Pereira the Great Constable, Ladislaus II (Ladislaus Jagiello) King of Poland, Andrew Prokop Procopius the Great, Giovanni Giustiniani, Janos Hunyadi Viovode of Transylvania 'the White Knight', Alfonso V King of Aragon and Alfonso I King of Naples 'the Magnanimous', Gjergj Kastrioti Prince of Albania 'Skanderbeg', Hosokawa Katsumoto Japanese Kanrei, Vlad III (Vlad Dracula) Voivode of Wallachia 'the Impaler', Muhammed II (Mehmed II) Ottoman Sultan 'the Conqueror', and Matthias Corvinus King of Hungary 'the Just'.

Continued...
 
1500-present

Stefan III (Stefan Musat) Voivode of Moldovia 'the Great', Isabella I Queen of Aragon, Castile and Leon 'the Catholic', Bernard Stuart 3rd Seigneur d'Aubigny, Henry VII (Henry Tudor) King of England, Francisco de Almeida, Gaston de Foix Duc de Nemours, Ferdinand V King of Castile and Leon and Ferdinand II King of Aragon and Ferdinand III King of Naples 'the Catholic', Baba Aruj Barbarossa or Redbeard, Ismail I Shah of Persia and Safavid Founder, Huayna Capac (Wayna Qhapaq) Sapa (God Emperor) of the Incas, Georg von Frundsberg, Wolter (Walter) von Plettenberg Master of the Livonian Order, Francisco Pizarro Spanish Conquistador, Pedro (Don Pedro) de Alvarado y Contreras Spanish Conquistador, Lapu-Lapu (Caliph Pulaka) Filipino Chieftain of Mactan Island, Khizr (Khair ad-Din) Beylerbey of Northern Africa 'Barbarossa' or 'Redbeard', Hernan Cortes (Hernando Cortez) Spanish Conquistador and 1st Marques del Valle de Oaxaca, Lautaro Toqui (Wartime Chief) of the Mapuche, Jan Tarnowski Polish Szlachcic, Charles V Holy Roman Emperor, Yamamoto Haruyuki Japanese Takeda General 'Kansuke', Don Juan de Austria, Shimazu Tadayoshi Japanese Daimyo, Mori Motonari (Shojumaru) Japanese Daimyo, Fernando Alvarez de Toledo y Pimentel 3rd Duque de Alba (Alva), Ivan IV Tsar of Russia 'the Terrible', William I Prince of Orange 'the Silent', Stefan Batory King of Poland, Prince of Transylvania, and Grand Duke of Lithuania, Qi Jiguang, Don Alvaro de Bazan Marques de Santa Cruz de Mudela, Alessandro Farnese Duke of Parma and Piacenza, Francis Drake, Toyotomi Hideyoshi Japanese Daimyo, Michael (Mihai Viteazul) Romanian Ban 'the Brave', Krzysztof Mikolaj Radziwill Polish Szlachcic and Reichsfurst of the Holy Roman Empire 'Piorun', Akbar Mughal Emperor 'the Great', Jan Zamoyski Polish Szlachcic, Stephen Bocskay Voivode of Transylvania, Henri IV King of France, Tokugawa Ieyasu Japanese Shogun, Stanislaw Zolkiewski Polish Hetman, Iskanderpasha, Charles Howard 1st Earl of Nottingham, Nurhaci Founder of the Manchu State 'Tianming', Peter Ernst Graf von Mansfeld, Abbas I Shah of Persia 'the Great', Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim, Yuan Chonghuan, Johann Tserclaes Graf von Tilly, Johan Baner, Ferdinand von Osterreich Governor of the Hapsburg Netherlands, Cardinal and Infante of Spain, Archbishop of Toledo, Li Tzu-cheng, Bernhard Duke of Saxe-Weimar, Duo'ergun (Dorgon), Franz Freiherr Baron von Mercy, Hargobind Ji Sikh Guru, Matthias Gallas Graf von Campo und Herzog von Lucera, Frederick Henry Prince of Orange, James Graham Marquess of Montrose, Lennart Torstensson, Ralph Hopton 1st Baron Hopton, Maarten Tromp, Robert Blake, Ottavio Piccolomini Duke of Almafi, Bohdan Chmielnicki, Tugay Bey (Tuhaj- bej), Zheng Zhilong, Koxinga (Zheng Cheng Gong), Jinga (Nzingha) Queen of Ndonga and Matamba, George Monck 1st Duke of Albemarle, Thomas Fairfax 3rd Baron of Cameron, John Maurice Prince of Nassau-Siegen, William Cavendish Marquis of Newcastle, Raimondo Montecuccoli, Shivaji Bhonsle Shri Shivaji Maharaj, Rupert Prince of the Rhine, David Leslie, Henry Morgan Morgan the Pirate, Abraham Duquesne Marquis Duquesne, Francois Henri de Montmorency-Bouteville Duc de Luxembourg, Niels Juel, Menno van Coehoorn Baron, William III King of England 'William of Orange', Godert de Ginkell (Godart van Ginkel) 1st Earl of Athlone, Sebastien Le Prestre Marquis de Vauban, Louis William Margrave of Baden-Baden, Aurangzeb (Mohi ud-din Muhammed) Mughal Emperor, Louis de Duras 2nd Earl of Feversham, Louis Joseph Duc de Vendome, Kangxi (Hsiian-yeh) Ch'ing Emperor, Peder Tordenskjold Thundershield, Peter I (Pyotr Alekseyevich Romanov) Tsar of Russia 'the Great', James FitzJames Duke of Berwick, Claude-Louis Hector Duc de Villars, Robert MacGregor Rob Roy, Charles Mordaunt 3rd Earl of Peterborough and Monmouth, Mirza Mahmud Siraj ad Dawla (Siraj-ud-Daulah) Nawab of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa, Baji Rao I (Shrimant Baji Rao Vishwanath Bhatt) Maratha Peshwa, James Wolfe, Louis-Joseph de Montcalm Marquis de Saint Veran, George Anson 1st Baron of Soberton, William Augustus Duke of Cumberland, Leopold Joseph Maria Count von Daun, Robert Clive 1st Baron of Plassey, Emelian Pugachev, Casimir Pulaski, Charles (Karl Alexander) Prince of Lorraine, Haidar Ali, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Sardar, Nathanael Greene, Ethan Allen, Francois-Joseph Paul Comte de Grasse, Jacques Hippolyte Comte de Guibert, Grigoriy Potemkin, Tippu Sultan the Tiger of Mysore, Ferdinand Duke of Brunswick, George Rodney 1st Baron Rodney, John Burgoyne Gentleman Johnny, John Paul Jones, Francis Marion the Swamp Fox, Anthony Wayne, Louis Lazare Hoche, Richard Howe 1st Earl Howe, Benedict Arnold, Ralph Abercrombie, Daniel Morgan, Francois Toussant-L'Ouverture, Charles Cornwallis Lord, Horatio Gates, Jean Dessalines, Aleksei Orlov, Hyde Parker Admiral Sir, Gerard Lake 1st Viscount, Jean Lannes Duc de Montebello, John Moore, Isaac Brock, Pyotr Bagration, Gerhardt von Scharnhorst Graf, Tecumseh, Mikhail Kutuzov, Josef Poniatowski, Hugh Robert Rollo (Rollo Gillespie), William Howe 5th Viscount Howe, Joachim Murat King of Naples, Louis Berthier Prince of Wagram and Neufchatel, Michel Ney Duc d'Elchingen and Prince de la Moscowa 'le Brave des Braves', Pierre Augereau Duc de Castiglione, Karadjordje (Djordje Petrovich), Andre Massena Duc de Rivoli, Thaddeus Kosciuszko, Mikhail Barclay de Tolly, Gerbhard von Blucher Prince of Wahlstadt, Oliver Perry, Manuel Belgrano, Stephen Decatur, Charles Dumouriez, Lazare Carnot the Organizer of Victory, Francis Rawdon 1st Marquess of Hastings, Shaka Zulu Chieftain 'Shaka Zulu', Simon Bolivar, Antonio Jose de Sucre, Thomas Sydney Beckwith, Marie Jean Paul Joseph Roche Yves Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Tomas Zumalacarregui, Andrew Jackson, Hari Singh Nalwa Sikh Sardar, Ranjit Singh Maharajah of India, William Harrison, Rowland Hill 1st Viscount Hill 'Daddy Hill', Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte Prince of Ponte Corvo (later became Charles XIV King of Sweden), Robert Stopford, Thomas Bugeaud Marquis de la Piconnerie and Duc d'Isly, Muhammed Ali Pasha of Egypt, Jose Francisco de San Martin Matorras, Juan Martin de Pueyrredon y O'Dogan, Hone Wiremu Heke Pokai Maori Chief, Zachary Taylor, Nicolas Soult Duc de Dalmatie, Francisco Castanos 1st Duke of Bailen, Jose Ballivian, Auguste Marmont Duc de Ragusa, Charles Napier General Sir, William Carr Beresford 1st Viscount Beresford, FitzRoy Somerset 1st Baron Raglan, Pavel Nakhimov, Yang Xiuqing, Thomas Cochrane 10th Earl of Dundonald, Harry Smith Sir Harry, Ignacio Zaragoza, Frederick Townsend Ward, Colin Campbell 1st Baron Clyde, Samuel Houston, John Buford, Jr., John Hunt Morgan, James Stuart Jeb Stuart, Hong Xiuquan (Hong Renkun) Heavenly King, Ambrose Hill, Winfield Scott, Francesco Serrano, Antoine-Henri Baron Jomini, Justo Jose de Urquiza, David Farragut, George Thomas, Shamyl Imam Shamyl of Dagestan, George Meade, Henry Halleck Old Brains, Cochise (A-da-tli-chi ) Apache (Chiricahua) Leader, Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, Gordon Granger, George Custer, Braxton Bragg, Nathan Forrest, Crazy Horse (Tashunca-uitco) Sioux (Oglala) Leader, Saigo Takamori the Last Samurai, Albrecht Theodor Emil Graf von Roon Graf, Giuseppe Garibaldi, Mikhail Skobelev, Abd al-Qadir Emir of Algeria, Cetshwayo kaMpande King of the Zulu Nation, Charles Gordon Chinese Gordon, Muhammad Ahmad the Mahdi, George McClellan, Ulysses S(impson) Grant, Philip Sheridan, Sitting Bull (Tatanka-ioytanka) Sioux (Hunkpapa) Leader, William Sherman Uncle Billy, John Pope, Pierre Beauregard, Chief Gall (Pizi) Sioux (Hunkpapa) Leader, Francois Canrobert, John Chard, William Rosencrans, Piet Joubert, James Longstreet, Chief Joseph (In-mut-too-yah-lat-lat) Nez Perce Leader, Bartolome Mitre, Gevork Chavoush, Maximo Gomez, Geronimo (Goyathlay) Apache (Chiricahua) Leader, Red Cloud (Makhpiya-luta) Sioux (Oglala) Leader, Marasuke Nogi, Menilek II Emperor of Ethiopia, Garnet Wolseley Viscount Wolseley, Alfred von Schlieffen Graf, Koos (Jacobus Herculaas) de la Rey, Frederick Roberts 1st Earl of Kandahar, Pretoria and Waterford, Joshua Chamberlain, Porfirio Diaz (Jose de la Cruz Porfirio Diaz Mori), Iwao Oyama, Horatio Kitchener Earl of Khartoum and Broome, Yuan Shikai, George Dewey, Frederick Maude, Emiliano Zapata, Louis Botha, Theodore Roosevelt Teddy Roosevelt, John Fisher 1st Baron of Kilverstone, Herbert Plumer 1st Viscount, Christiaan de Wet, Michael Collins, Henry Wilson, Francisco Villa Pancho Villa, Vladimir Lenin (Vladimir Ulyanov), Sun Yat-sen, John French 1st Earl of Ypres, Mikhail Frunze, Aleksei Brusilov, Ferdinand King of Rumania, Max Hoffmann, Andranik Ozanian Pasha, Douglas Haig 1st Earl Haig, Alvaro Obregon, Georges Clemenceau, Ferdinand Foch, John Monash, Omar Al-Mukhtar, Alexander Cobbe, Joseph Joffre, Arthur Currie, Albert I King of the Belgians, Louis Lyautey, Heihachiro Togo, Paul von Hindenburg, Thomas Edward Lawrence Lawrence of Arabia, Jozef Pilsudski, Juan Vicente Gomez, Edmund Allenby 1st Viscount of Megiddo and Felixstowe, William Mitchell Billy Mitchell, Hans von Seeckt, Erich von Ludendorff, Leon Trotsky (Lev Bronstein), Smedley Butler the Fighting Quaker, John Lejeune the Greatest of all Leathernecks, Walter von Reichenau, Isoroku Yamamoto, Raizo Tanaka, Franc Stane, Nikolai Vatutin, Charles Wingate Orde Wingate, August von Mackensen, Walther Model, Adolf Hitler Chancellor and Fuhrer of Germany, John Basilone Manila John (heroic addition), Fedor von Bock, John Gort Lord Gort, Dragoljub (Draza) Mihajlovic, Masaharu Homma, Tomoyuki Yamahorsehockeya the Tiger of Malaya, Evans Carlson, Philippe Leclerc (Jacques-Philippe Leclerc) Vicomte de Hauteclocque, Louis Franchet, John Pershing Black Jack, Walther von Brauchitsch, Archibald Wavell 1st Earl Wavell, Panglima Besar Soedirman (Sudirman) Father of the Army, Petre Dumitrescu, Jan Christiaan Smuts, Thomas Blamey, Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, Gerd von Rundstedt, Abdulaziz ibn Saud (Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Rahman ibn Faisal Al Saud) Founder of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Merritt Edson Red Mike, Garegin Njdeh, Hugh Trenchard 1st Viscount Trenchard, George Marshall the Organizer of Victory, Henri Philippe, Leslie Morshead, Albert Kesselring, Alan Francis 1st Viscount Alanbrooke, Andrew Cunningham 1st Viscount of Hyndhope, Bernard Cyril Freyberg 1st Baron Freyberg, Douglas MacArthur, Alvin York Sergeant York (heroic addition), Renya Mutaguchi, Courtney Hodges, Chester Nimitz, Josef Dietrich (Sepp Dietrich), Ernesto Rafael Guevara de la Serna Che Guevera, Konstantin Rokossovsky, Li Zongren (Li Tsung-jen), Dwight Eisenhower Ike, Harold Alexander 1st Earl of Tunis, Raymond Spruance, Ho Chi Minh (Nguyen Sinh Cung) Founder of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam), Hugh Dowding 1st Baron, Semyon Timoshenko, Andrei Yeremenko, Charles de Gaulle, Lin Biao, Lewis Puller Chesty Puller, Chen Yi, Ivan Koniev, Frank Fletcher, David Ben-Gurion, Peng Dehuai, Chiang Kai-shek Jiang Jieshi, Keith Park, Francisco Franco, Otto Skorzeny, Anthony McAuliffe, Chu Teh Zhu De, Mao Tse-tung Mao Zedong, Bernard Montgomery 1st Viscount, Aleksandr Vasilevski, Kurt Student, Karl Donitz, Josip Tito, Gunichi Mikawa, Omar Bradley, Richard O'Connor, Claude Auchinleck the Auk, Mark Clark, Raoul Salan, Aksel Airo, Akhtar Abdur Rahman, Bekor Ghoulian, Shahen Meghrian, James Doolittle Jimmy Doolittle, Matthew Ridgway, Kim Il-Sung, Arthur Harris 1st Baronet 'Bomber Harris', Haim Bar-Lev (Haim Brotzlewsky) Haim Kidoni Bar-Lev, Deng Xiaoping, Garegin Nzhdeh (Garegin Ter-Haroutunyan), Ahmed Shah Massoud the Lion of Panjshir, Sam Bahadur (Sam Hormusji Framji Jamshedji Manekshaw), William Westmoreland, Abdul Haris Nasution (Kotanopan), David Hackworth (heroic addition), Haji Mohammad Soeharto (Suharto), Fidel Castro, Arkady Ter-Tadevossian, H. Norman Schwarzkopf Stormin' Norman, Charles Guthrie Baron Guthrie of Craigiebank, Wesley Clark, Tommy Franks, and Peter Cosgrove.

It may be too soon to add the last few. But perhaps not.

"War is all hell".

- William T. Sherman

"The Gauls were not conquered by the Roman legions, but by Caesar. It was not before the Carthaginian soldiers that Rome was made to tremble, but before Hannibal. It was not the Macedonian phalanx which reached India, but Alexander. It was not the French army that reached Weser and the Inn; it was Turenne. Prussia was not defended for seven years against the three most formidable European powers by the Prussian soldiers, but by Frederick the Great".

- Napoleon Bonaparte

Thanks and enjoy, James :)
 
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