Analysis will be generated on first visit.
Scores and timeline are available below. The page will refresh automatically when ready.
Napoleon Bonaparte leads by 15.3 pts · 2 figures compared

General · Ancient

General · 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.
Analysis will be generated on first visit.
Scores and timeline are available below. The page will refresh automatically when ready.
Crassus raised and commanded six legions to crush the slave rebellion led by Spartacus. After cornering and defeating the rebels in Lucania, he crucified 6,000 survivors along the Appian Way, ending the Third Servile War.
Crassus allied with Julius Caesar and Pompey the Great to form an informal political coalition known as the First Triumvirate. This alliance dominated Roman politics, advancing each member's interests against the Senate.
Crassus invaded Parthia without proper support and was defeated at Carrhae. His army was annihilated by Parthian cavalry, and Crassus was killed during negotiations. This disaster marked a major Roman defeat and ended the Triumvirate.
Napoleon Bonaparte, with support from his brother Lucien and key political figures, overthrew the Directory in a bloodless coup. He established the Consulate with himself as First Consul, effectively becoming the ruler of France. This event ended the French Revolution's most unstable period.
Napoleon enacted the Civil Code of the French, known as the Napoleonic Code, a comprehensive set of laws that replaced the fragmented feudal legal systems. The code established legal equality, protected property rights, and secularized law. It became the basis for legal systems in many European and world countries.
Napoleon's Grande Arm
Napoleon led the Grande Arm
Napoleon's French army was defeated by the combined forces of the Duke of Wellington's Anglo-Allied army and Gebhard Leberecht von Bl
You can’t seriously compare a glorified landlord to the man who redrew Europe’s borders. Crassus bought legions like groceries and still couldn’t win a real war. His Parthian disaster wasn’t bad luck—it was arrogance, pure and simple. He thought money could buy him Carrhae and got his head turned into a stage prop instead. Napoleon at least made the world tremble. Crassus made a footnote for rich idiots who think cash equals competence.
拿克苏斯和拿破仑比?这就像问一个粮仓守护神和一个风暴之神谁更高明。克苏斯建立了财富,但财富建在奴隶的脊背上,而他自己的死法比他的奴隶还滑稽——金子在喉咙里融化。拿破仑倒台后,流放地岛还能留下法典和现代国家框架。克苏斯死了,连罗马都懒得记个碑文。钱能买来军靴,买不来历史座次。
Cute comparison, but you’re cherry-picking to spotlight Napoleon’s “vision” while ignoring that Crassus’s defeat had structural causes beyond his gold. Carrhae was Parthian cataphracts vs. Roman heavy infantry—it wasn’t just bad generalship, it was a doctrinal blindspot. Also, calling Crassus “riches over war” misses how he bankrolled Caesar’s rise. Without Crassus’s money, no Gallic Wars, no Rubicon. Napoleon’s shadow? Maybe. But Crassus held the purse strings that made shadows possible.
历史评选永远偏心赢家。拿破仑惨败滑铁卢,回家写回忆录,至今还保存在巴黎荣军院。克苏斯死在万里沙丘,连尸骨都喂了鹰,自然没人写他的辉煌。但你若比一比,克苏斯在罗马政治里滑得像条鱼,用白银和粮食操控元老院,拿破仑最后连巴黎都管不住。注定的不是能力差异,是死得漂亮与否——史学家的笔总爱写灰烬里最后升起的烟。
Let’s cut the myth. Napoleon’s “shadow” is overblown because romantic nationalists needed a hero. Crassus didn’t vanish—he’s the prototype for every plutocrat who mistakes a balance sheet for a battleground. Carrhae wasn’t just defeat; it was a lesson in humility that modern oligarchs still refuse to learn. Meanwhile, Napoleon bankrupted France twice, lost Egypt’s fleet, and still got called a genius. Call me when Crassus leads an army through a Russian winter. Oh wait—he was