The 100 Most Significant Figures in History

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
45
48
65
Who’s bigger: Washington or Lincoln? Hitler or Napoleon? Charles Dickens or Jane Austen? That depends on how you look at it.

When we set out to rank the significance of historical figures, we decided to not approach the project the way historians might, through a principled assessment of their individual achievements. Instead, we evaluated each person by aggregating millions of traces of opinions into a computational data-centric analysis. We ranked historical figures just as Google ranks web pages, by integrating a diverse set of measurements about their reputation into a single consensus value.

Significance is related to fame but measures something different. Forgotten U.S. President Chester A. Arthur (who we rank as the 499th most significant person in history) is more historically significant than young pop singer Justin Bieber (currently ranked 8633), even though he may have a less devoted following and lower contemporary name recognition. Historically significant figures leave statistical evidence of their presence behind, if one knows where to look for it, and we used several data sources to fuel our ranking algorithms, including Wikipedia, scanned books and Google n-grams.

To fairly compare contemporary figures like Britney Spears against the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle, we adjusted for the fact that today’s stars will fade from living memory over the next several generations. Intuitively it is clear that Britney Spears’ mindshare will decline substantially over the next 100 years, as people who grew up hearing her are replaced by new generations. But Aristotle’s reputation will be much more stable because this transition occurred long ago. The reputation he has now is presumably destined to endure. By analyzing traces left in millions of scanned books, we can measure just how fast this decay occurs, and correct for it.
We don’t expect you will agree with everyone chosen for the top 100, or exactly where they are placed. But we trust you will agree that most selections are reasonable: a quarter of them are philosophers or major religious figures, plus eight scientists/inventors, thirteen giants in literature and music, and three of the greatest artists of all time.

1 Jesus
2 Napoleon
3 Muhammad
4 William Shakespeare
5 Abraham Lincoln
6 George Washington
7 Adolf Hitler
8 Aristotle
9 Alexander the Great
10 Thomas Jefferson
11 Henry VIII of England
12 Charles Darwin
13 Elizabeth I of England
14 Karl Marx
15 Julius Caesar
16 Queen Victoria
17 Martin Luther
18 Joseph Stalin
19 Albert Einstein
20 Christopher Columbus
21 Isaac Newton
22 Charlemagne
23 Theodore Roosevelt
24 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
25 Plato
26 Louis XIV of France
27 Ludwig van Beethoven
28 Ulysses S. Grant
29 Leonardo da Vinci
30 Augustus
31 Carl Linnaeus
32 Ronald Reagan
33 Charles Dickens
34 Paul the Apostle
35 Benjamin Franklin
36 George W. Bush
37 Winston Churchill
38 Genghis Khan
39 Charles I of England
40 Thomas Edison
41 James I of England
42 Friedrich Nietzsche
43 Franklin D. Roosevelt
44 Sigmund Freud
45 Alexander Hamilton
46 Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
47 Woodrow Wilson
48 Johann Sebastian Bach
49 Galileo Galilei
50 Oliver Cromwell
51 James Madison
52 Gautama Buddha
53 Mark Twain
54 Edgar Allan Poe
55 Joseph Smith, Jr.
56 Adam Smith
57 David, King of Israel
58 George III of the United Kingdom
59 Immanuel Kant
60 James Cook
61 John Adams
62 Richard Wagner
63 Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
64 Voltaire
65 Saint Peter
66 Andrew Jackson
67 Constantine the Great
68 Socrates
69 Elvis Presley
70 William the Conqueror
71 John F. Kennedy
72 Augustine of Hippo
73 Vincent van Gogh
74 Nicolaus Copernicus
75 Vladimir Lenin
76 Robert E. Lee
77 Oscar Wilde
78 Charles II of England
79 Cicero
80 Jean-Jacques Rousseau
81 Francis Bacon
82 Richard Nixon
83 Louis XVI of France
84 Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
85 King Arthur
86 Michelangelo
87 Philip II of Spain
88 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
89 Ali, founder of Sufism
90 Thomas Aquinas
91 Pope John Paul II
92 René Descartes
93 Nikola Tesla
94 Harry S. Truman
95 Joan of Arc
96 Dante Alighieri
97 Otto von Bismarck
98 Grover Cleveland
99 John Calvin
100 John Locke

more mumbo jumbo

Who’s Biggest? The 100 Most Significant Figures in History | TIME.com
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
21
38
kelowna bc
To suggest the Ronnie Reagan was more important than Winston Churchill is nonsense,
That is one example. Who ranks this and how? I wonder how so many Americans came
to the top end of the scale while others who really did great things were so far down the
list. When it came to making tough decisions for example Harry Truman made one that
outstrips most he ok'd the dropping of the bomb.
I agree each of us would have our own list of 100 people and mine would not include GW Bush
period. Nice try though and a good subject of interest.
 

WLDB

Senate Member
Jun 24, 2011
6,182
0
36
Ottawa
I really dont see how they can have anyone still alive on the list. There is no way to know what affect they will have on history.
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
3
36
London, Ontario
Part II showed that the future is easily changed.

Yeah probably to just the way the contemporary people on the list want them changed.

On a side, and rather sad note, do you know how many people I've talked to over the years that were absolutely baffled by Back to the Future? Lol. A shockingly large number, let me tell you.
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
149
63
Where Confucius?

Confucius say man with long list have short pencil.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
Who’s bigger: Washington or Lincoln? Hitler or Napoleon? Charles Dickens or Jane Austen? That depends on how you look at it.

When we set out to rank the significance of historical figures, we decided to not approach the project the way historians might, through a principled assessment of their individual achievements. Instead, we evaluated each person by aggregating millions of traces of opinions into a computational data-centric analysis. We ranked historical figures just as Google ranks web pages, by integrating a diverse set of measurements about their reputation into a single consensus value.

Significance is related to fame but measures something different. Forgotten U.S. President Chester A. Arthur (who we rank as the 499th most significant person in history) is more historically significant than young pop singer Justin Bieber (currently ranked 8633), even though he may have a less devoted following and lower contemporary name recognition. Historically significant figures leave statistical evidence of their presence behind, if one knows where to look for it, and we used several data sources to fuel our ranking algorithms, including Wikipedia, scanned books and Google n-grams.

To fairly compare contemporary figures like Britney Spears against the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle, we adjusted for the fact that today’s stars will fade from living memory over the next several generations. Intuitively it is clear that Britney Spears’ mindshare will decline substantially over the next 100 years, as people who grew up hearing her are replaced by new generations. But Aristotle’s reputation will be much more stable because this transition occurred long ago. The reputation he has now is presumably destined to endure. By analyzing traces left in millions of scanned books, we can measure just how fast this decay occurs, and correct for it.
We don’t expect you will agree with everyone chosen for the top 100, or exactly where they are placed. But we trust you will agree that most selections are reasonable: a quarter of them are philosophers or major religious figures, plus eight scientists/inventors, thirteen giants in literature and music, and three of the greatest artists of all time.

1 Jesus
2 Napoleon
3 Muhammad
4 William Shakespeare
5 Abraham Lincoln
6 George Washington
7 Adolf Hitler
8 Aristotle
9 Alexander the Great
10 Thomas Jefferson
11 Henry VIII of England
12 Charles Darwin
13 Elizabeth I of England
14 Karl Marx
15 Julius Caesar
16 Queen Victoria
17 Martin Luther
18 Joseph Stalin
19 Albert Einstein
20 Christopher Columbus
21 Isaac Newton
22 Charlemagne
23 Theodore Roosevelt
24 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
25 Plato
26 Louis XIV of France
27 Ludwig van Beethoven
28 Ulysses S. Grant
29 Leonardo da Vinci
30 Augustus
31 Carl Linnaeus
32 Ronald Reagan
33 Charles Dickens
34 Paul the Apostle
35 Benjamin Franklin
36 George W. Bush
37 Winston Churchill
38 Genghis Khan
39 Charles I of England
40 Thomas Edison
41 James I of England
42 Friedrich Nietzsche
43 Franklin D. Roosevelt
44 Sigmund Freud
45 Alexander Hamilton
46 Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
47 Woodrow Wilson
48 Johann Sebastian Bach
49 Galileo Galilei
50 Oliver Cromwell
51 James Madison
52 Gautama Buddha
53 Mark Twain
54 Edgar Allan Poe
55 Joseph Smith, Jr.
56 Adam Smith
57 David, King of Israel
58 George III of the United Kingdom
59 Immanuel Kant
60 James Cook
61 John Adams
62 Richard Wagner
63 Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
64 Voltaire
65 Saint Peter
66 Andrew Jackson
67 Constantine the Great
68 Socrates
69 Elvis Presley
70 William the Conqueror
71 John F. Kennedy
72 Augustine of Hippo
73 Vincent van Gogh
74 Nicolaus Copernicus
75 Vladimir Lenin
76 Robert E. Lee
77 Oscar Wilde
78 Charles II of England
79 Cicero
80 Jean-Jacques Rousseau
81 Francis Bacon
82 Richard Nixon
83 Louis XVI of France
84 Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
85 King Arthur
86 Michelangelo
87 Philip II of Spain
88 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
89 Ali, founder of Sufism
90 Thomas Aquinas
91 Pope John Paul II
92 René Descartes
93 Nikola Tesla
94 Harry S. Truman
95 Joan of Arc
96 Dante Alighieri
97 Otto von Bismarck
98 Grover Cleveland
99 John Calvin
100 John Locke

more mumbo jumbo

Who’s Biggest? The 100 Most Significant Figures in History | TIME.com


I see a couple of flaws................I'm not on it. How the hell can Adolph Hitler beat out Christopher Columbus? Columbus found half the world, Hitler tried to destroy it.

I don't see my mother's name so this list is bogus.


Yeah, I expected to see her name directly below mine! -:) (Oops I better watch it or Cannuck will accuse me of lying) -:)

To suggest the Ronnie Reagan was more important than Winston Churchill is nonsense,
That is one example. Who ranks this and how? I wonder how so many Americans came
to the top end of the scale while others who really did great things were so far down the
list. When it came to making tough decisions for example Harry Truman made one that
outstrips most he ok'd the dropping of the bomb.
I agree each of us would have our own list of 100 people and mine would not include GW Bush
period. Nice try though and a good subject of interest.


Yeah, I'd rate Winston a notch above Ronnie, BUT Ronnie was possibly known in more fields of endeavour. The Yanks rate actors quite highly. What about Pasteur, Salk, Banting and Fleming?
 

WLDB

Senate Member
Jun 24, 2011
6,182
0
36
Ottawa
I see a couple of flaws................I'm not on it. How the hell can Adolph Hitler beat out Christopher Columbus? Columbus found half the world, Hitler tried to destroy it.

He didnt find it. If he had there wouldnt have been any people there. :p


As for Hitler, it didnt say most significant in a positive way. If not for him and what he did the world would probably be a very different place. The map of Europe would be quite different, the British Empire probably would have lasted longer, Israel might not exist (a huge irony, too bad he didnt live long enough to see that happen. The look on his face no doubt would have been priceless), nuclear weapons would have come later if at all.

Yeah, I'd rate Winston a notch above Ronnie, BUT Ronnie was possibly known in more fields of endeavour.

Like acting? He wasnt that good at it. :p

Didn't see Rodney Dangerfield on that list.

He cant get no respect.
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
113
63
Vancouver Island
I see a couple of flaws................I'm not on it. How the hell can Adolph Hitler beat out Christopher Columbus? Columbus found half the world, Hitler tried to destroy it.

maybe hitler should be right at the top along with a few other 'low lifes' who made a huge negative
impact in the world, and none of us should ever forget him, there were more who tried and there will
be even more, they are not great leaders in the world, they are and will be 'destroyers', as you said.

columbus is very overrated, just a song we sang when we skipped rope, but there were others before
him.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
maybe hitler should be right at the top along with a few other 'low lifes' who made a huge negative
impact in the world, and none of us should ever forget him, there were more who tried and there will
be even more, they are not great leaders in the world, they are and will be 'destroyers', as you said.

columbus is very overrated, just a song we sang when we skipped rope, but there were others before
him.


WHAT???????????? Chris would turn in his grave if he heard you! -:)


I do have to give Chris (or at least his crew credit for something) They introduced syphilis to the Old World! And then Fleming (not mentioned) came along 400 years later to beat it.
 

WLDB

Senate Member
Jun 24, 2011
6,182
0
36
Ottawa
I do have to give Chris (or at least his crew credit for something) They introduced syphilis to the Old World! And then Fleming (not mentioned) came along 400 years later to beat it.

ha. Imagine that. Going down in history for spreading syphilis to a new continent.