People
Historical Figures and Influential People in History
Explore rulers, generals, thinkers, scientists and reformers who shaped world history. Search for a specific person, or browse by era, region, country and AβZ.
Classical World Figures from Italy
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16 results
Augustus
-63β14Europe
He won Rome's civil wars by outmanoeuvring everyone who tried to destroy him β then spent the next forty years pretending he hadn't changed anything.
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Constantine the Great
272β337Europe
He converted to Christianity on the eve of battle, won the battle, and spent the rest of his reign trying to work out what that meant for an empire built on other gods.
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Fabius Maximus
280β203Europe
While Rome panicked after disaster, he refused to fight β shadowing Hannibal's army, cutting off supplies, wearing down the invader β and the Romans called him a coward for it.
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Gaius Marius
-157β-86Europe
He saved Rome from invasion, won seven consulships β more than anyone before him β and in doing so proved that the republic's rules meant nothing when a general had a loyal army.
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Hadrian
76β138Europe
He spent half his reign travelling the empire he governed, ordered a wall built across the north of Britain, and died designing a tomb that still stands in Rome.
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Julius Caesar
-100β-44Europe
He held all the power Rome could offer β then a group of senators decided that was the problem.
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Lucius Cornelius Sulla
-138β-78Europe
He marched his army on Rome twice β something no Roman general had ever done β became dictator, reformed the republic, and then walked away of his own free will.
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Marcus Aurelius
121β180Europe
He spent his reign doing the opposite of what he wrote β a philosopher king who believed in peace, presiding over almost constant war.
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Marcus Livius Drusus
-124β-91Europe
He proposed reforms that might have prevented the Social War, was assassinated before they could pass, and his death triggered the very conflict he had tried to avoid.
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Marcus Tullius Cicero
-106β-43Europe
He used his speeches to destroy Rome's most dangerous men β and when he ran out of enemies to expose, Rome's most dangerous men came for him.
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Mark Antony
-83β-30Europe
He was Rome's most powerful man after Caesar's death, threw in his lot with Cleopatra, and lost everything β though whether through love, miscalculation, or bad luck depends on who you ask.
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Nero
37β68Europe
He was blamed for burning Rome, killing his own mother, and destroying the Julio-Claudian dynasty β and historians have spent two thousand years arguing about how much of it is actually true.
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Pompey the Great
-106β-48Europe
He was the most celebrated Roman general of his age, until Caesar's victories in Gaul made his own look modest β a rivalry that helped end the republic.
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Scipio Africanus
-236β-183Europe
Rome had been losing to Hannibal for over a decade when Scipio proposed carrying the war to Africa β his own side thought he was reckless, and he won.
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Tiberius Gracchus
-163β-133Europe
He proposed giving land to Rome's dispossessed poor, was told it was unconstitutional, and pushed ahead anyway β setting a precedent that helped destroy the republic.
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Trajan
53β117Europe
He pushed Roman territory to its greatest extent, won wars the Senate called unwinnable, and built so much that the Romans chose him as the benchmark: emperors were wished to be 'luckier than Augustus and better than Trajan.'
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