Peter the Great leads by 11.1 pts · 2 figures compared

Emperor · Modern

Emperor · Modern
Each figure is scored on 6 dimensions (0—100 scale) based on structured historical data: Military (10%), Political (20%), Influence (20%), Legacy (20%), Leadership (15%), Strategy (15%). The weighted total produces the final ranking.
Scores are computed from structured sub-indicators in the database. Scale factors adjust for era (Ancient ×0.85, Modern ×1.0) and civilization size (Eastern ×1.05, Other ×0.80) to account for differences in population and military scale.
Comparisons are limited to 2—3 figures to ensure readability and statistical meaningfulness.
±5 points per dimension — Sub-scores are derived from historical records with inherent uncertainty. Two figures within 5 points on a dimension should be considered roughly equivalent in that area.
±3 points overall — The weighted combination of 6 dimensions produces a total score with approximately ±3 points of uncertainty. Differences of less than 3 points are not statistically significant— the figures are effectively tied.
Our six-dimension data-driven scoring system compares Military, Political, Influence, Legacy, Leadership, and Strategy to determine the ranking among Peter the Great, Louis XIV. See the full score breakdown on this page.
Scores are computed from structured historical sub-indicators with era and civilization scale factors. The system has approximately ±3 points of uncertainty per dimension. Differences under 3 points are not statistically significant.
The Fronde, a series of civil wars in France against royal authority, ended with Louis XIV's victory. The rebellion, which occurred during his minority, convinced him to centralize power and never allow nobles to challenge the monarchy again.
Louis XIV began transforming his father's hunting lodge at Versailles into a vast palace complex. The project, which took decades, became the symbol of absolute monarchy and housed the royal court, centralizing French nobility under his control.
Louis XIV invaded the Dutch Republic in 1672, aiming to break Dutch commercial power. The war initially saw French successes but ended with the Treaty of Nijmegen in 1678, which expanded French territory but failed to destroy the Dutch.
Louis XIV revoked the Edict of Nantes, which had granted religious tolerance to French Protestants (Huguenots). This forced many Huguenots to flee France, weakening the economy and leading to persecution, while reinforcing Catholic orthodoxy.
Louis XIV's attempt to secure the Spanish throne for his grandson, Philip of Anjou, triggered the War of the Spanish Succession. The conflict pitted France against a European coalition, ending with the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, which limited French expansion.
Peter the Great traveled incognito to Western Europe as part of a diplomatic mission. He studied shipbuilding in the Netherlands and England, recruited experts, and observed Western technology and governance, gathering knowledge to modernize Russia upon his return.
While Peter was abroad, the Streltsy (elite musketeers) rebelled in Moscow, seeking to place his half-sister Sophia on the throne. Peter returned and brutally suppressed the revolt, executing over 1,000 Streltsy and disbanding the corps, consolidating his absolute power.
As part of his Westernization campaign, Peter the Great imposed a tax on beards, requiring nobles and merchants to pay a fee to keep their facial hair. Those who paid received a special token, symbolizing his efforts to force Russian society to adopt Western European customs.
Peter the Great led Russia into a war against Sweden for access to the Baltic Sea. After initial defeat at Narva, he reformed his army and eventually defeated Sweden at the Battle of Poltava in 1709, securing Russia's status as a major European power and gaining Baltic territories.
Peter the Great founded the city of Saint Petersburg on the Neva River after capturing the area from Sweden. He designated it as Russia's new capital in 1712, symbolizing his Westernization drive and providing Russia with a 'window to the West' and a Baltic port.
Peter the Great introduced the Table of Ranks, a system of civil, military, and court ranks based on merit rather than birth. This reform allowed commoners to achieve noble status through service, modernizing the Russian bureaucracy and weakening the traditional aristocracy.
Peter the Great actually built *hundreds* of ships, while Louis never constructed a single warship with his own hands. The Sun King's Versailles required 36,000 laborers and 6,000 horses to build, but its purpose was spectacle, not industry. Peter sailed in storms off the White Sea coast; Louis only rode in gilded carriages. One redefined national power by touching raw timber, the other by polishing mirrors. That’s the difference between building a nation and building a stage.
路易十四的凡尔赛宫有700个房间,但只有8个厕所——这不是文明的高度,而是表演的密度。彼得大帝在涅瓦河畔建圣彼得堡时,亲自用斧头砍下第一棵树,而路易的贵族却在镜厅里为谁坐得更靠近国王而争吵。一个在泥泞中创造未来,一个在缎子里腐烂现在。选彼得吧,他至少知道木头和血的味道。
Let’s not romanticize the shipwright act. Peter’s “incognito” visit to Zaandam was a diplomatic stunt widely known to Dutch merchants, who made him pay full price for everything. Meanwhile, Louis XIV standardized French artillery and created the first permanent standing army of 400,000 men—no other power in Europe even came close. Peter built ships; Louis built a war machine that dominated Europe for decades. Efficiency in killing beats enthusiasm in carpentry every time.
说彼得化名学造船?笑话。他在荷兰根本没学会设计一艘完整的船,后来还得雇英国人来监督他的舰队建造。而路易十四让沃邦修建了160座堡垒,从敦刻尔克到佩皮尼昂,每座都是几何美学和军事工程的杰作。彼得学的是舢板手艺,路易教的是帝国标准。一个在船厂砍木屑,一个在地图画边界。真正的改革者不满足于钉钉子。
The Sun King’s palace wasn’t just a monument to vanity—it was a cage with golden bars. He forced 10,000 nobles to live there under his constant gaze, stripping them of local power. Peter grabbed his nobles by the beard and literally cut it off. Both destroyed old aristocracies, but Louis did it with carpet and choreography, Peter with scissors and vodka. Brutal versus bureaucratic—which is crueler? I’d argue one humiliates your soul, the other merely your chin.