Emperor · 1859 – 1941
Kaiser Wilhelm II
If you're interested in Kaiser Wilhelm II, these historical figures share a similar impact, discipline, philosophy, or era. Each recommendation explains why the connection exists.
Similar Impact & Significance
Otto von Bismarck
89Otto von Bismarck was the Prussian statesman who unified the German states into the German Empire in 1871, serving as its first chancellor and reshaping the balance of power in Europe through ruthless realpolitik and diplomatic mastery.
Why The Iron Chancellor he dismissed in 1890, dismantling the alliance system that had kept European peace.
Napoleon III
79Napoleon III was the nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte who became the first elected president of France and then its last emperor, modernizing Paris and French industry before his empire collapsed with defeat in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870.
Why The French emperor his grandfather defeated at Sedan, creating the German Empire Wilhelm inherited.
Charles V
83Charles V was the Holy Roman Emperor and king of Spain who ruled the largest European empire since Charlemagne, struggling to hold together a vast realm against the rise of Protestantism, France, and the Ottoman Empire before abdicating his crowns.
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Charlemagne
89Charlemagne was the King of the Franks who united much of Western Europe and was crowned Emperor in 800 AD, reviving the idea of a Roman empire in the West and sparking a cultural revival.
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Darius the Great
84Darius the Great was the third king of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, who brought it to its greatest extent and organized it into an efficient system of provinces, becoming one of the most capable rulers of the ancient world.
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Peter the Great
85Peter the Great was the Russian tsar who transformed Russia into a major European power, modernizing its army, government and society along Western lines and founding the new capital of Saint Petersburg.
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Philip II of Spain
83Philip II was the king of Spain who ruled the first global empire "on which the sun never set", a devout and powerful monarch whose reign marked the height of Spanish power, the defense of Catholicism, and the famous defeat of the Spanish Armada.
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Xerxes I
80Xerxes I was the Achaemenid king of Persia who launched the massive second invasion of Greece, winning at Thermopylae but ultimately defeated at Salamis and Plataea, in one of the most famous conflicts of the ancient world.
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Abu'l-Fath Jalal-ud-din Muhammad Akbar
88Akbar was the third Mughal emperor, who expanded the empire across much of the Indian subcontinent and is remembered for his administrative reforms, religious tolerance and patronage of the arts during a long and powerful reign.
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Alfred the Great
80Alfred the Great was the king of Wessex who defended Anglo-Saxon England against the Vikings, reformed law, learning and defense, and is the only English monarch ever called "the Great".
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Ashoka the Great
90Ashoka was the third emperor of the Maurya Empire who, after a devastating war, embraced Buddhism and non-violence, becoming one of history's most remarkable rulers.
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Atahualpa
78Atahualpa was the last independent ruler of the Inca Empire, who had just won a civil war for the throne when he was captured and executed by the Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro, ending Inca rule over the Andes.
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Babur
81Babur was the Central Asian conqueror who founded the Mughal Empire, a descendant of Tamerlane and Genghis Khan who, after losing his ancestral lands, invaded India and established one of the greatest empires in its history.
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Chandragupta Maurya
85Chandragupta Maurya was the founder of the Maurya Empire, who united most of the Indian subcontinent for the first time and established one of the ancient world's great states.
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Clovis I
80Clovis I was the king who united the Frankish tribes into a single kingdom and converted to Catholic Christianity, founding the Merovingian dynasty and laying the foundations of medieval France.
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Constantine the Great
87Constantine the Great was the Roman emperor who became the first to embrace Christianity, ended its persecution, and founded Constantinople as a new capital — decisions that reshaped the Roman world and the future of Europe.
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Cyrus the Great
90Cyrus the Great was the founder of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, the largest empire the ancient world had yet seen, remembered for his military genius and his tolerance toward conquered peoples.
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Emperor Taizong of Tang
82Emperor Taizong of Tang was one of the greatest emperors in Chinese history, whose reign launched the golden age of the Tang dynasty, combining military conquest with wise, benevolent government that became a model for later rulers.
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Frederick Barbarossa
80Frederick Barbarossa was the Holy Roman Emperor who sought to restore imperial power over Germany and Italy, a towering figure of the 12th century whose long reign and legendary death on crusade made him a German national myth.
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Frederick the Great
83Frederick the Great was the king of Prussia who made it a major European power through brilliant generalship and enlightened reform, a warrior-king and patron of the arts who embodied the ideal of the "enlightened despot".
Why Also a king & ruler · Comparable historical impact
Hadrian
80Hadrian was a Roman emperor, one of the "Five Good Emperors", who consolidated rather than expanded the empire, traveled tirelessly through its provinces, and built the great frontier wall in Britain that still bears his name.
Why Also a emperor & ruler · Comparable historical impact
Same Field or Discipline
Haile Selassie I
85Haile Selassie was the Emperor of Ethiopia who modernized his country, became the symbol of African resistance to European colonialism after surviving Mussolini's invasion, championed African unity at the UN and as founder of the African Union, and is venerated as a messiah by the Rastafari movement.
Why Also a emperor & ruler · Active in the same era
Nicholas II
80Nicholas II was the last Tsar of Russia whose failures of leadership — autocratic rigidity, military catastrophe in World War I, and refusal to reform — led to his abdication in 1917, the Bolshevik seizure of power, and his execution with his family by the Soviets in 1918.
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Shaka Zulu
80Shaka Zulu was the founder and greatest king of the Zulu Kingdom, a military revolutionary whose new tactics and weapons transformed warfare in southern Africa and forged a small clan into a powerful nation.
Why Also a king & ruler · Active in the same era