Home

 › 

Uncategorized

 › 

22 Final Rulers of Previously Powerful Empires

22 Final Rulers of Previously Powerful Empires

22 Final Rulers of Previously Powerful Empires
General Photographic Agency / Hulton Royals Collection via Getty Images
Romulus Augustulus
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Gongyang of Goryeo
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Cuauhtémoc
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Atahualpa
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Askia Ishaq II
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Frederick I
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Francis II
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Bahadur Shah Zafar II
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Alfonso XIII
General Photographic Agency / Hulton Royals Collection via Getty Images
Puyi
Hulton Archive / Hulton Royals Collection via Getty Images
Tsar Nicholas II
Hulton Archive / Hulton Royals Collection via Getty Images
Charles I
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Kaiser Wilhelm II
General Photographic Agency / Getty Images
Mehmed VI
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
Benito Mussolini
Photos.com / PHOTOS.com>> / Getty Images Plus
Hirohito
Central Press / Hulton Royals Collection via Getty Images
Queen Juliana
Keystone / Hulton Royals Collection via Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II
Hulton Archive / Hulton Archive via Getty Images
Jorge Sampaio
Mark Renders / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images
22 Final Rulers of Previously Powerful Empires
Cleopatra VII Philopator
Romulus Augustulus
Gongyang of Goryeo
Constantine XI Palaiologos
Cuauhtémoc
Atahualpa
Askia Ishaq II
Mahmud Keita IV
Frederick I
Francis II
Bahadur Shah Zafar II
Alfonso XIII
Puyi
Tsar Nicholas II
Charles I
Kaiser Wilhelm II
Mehmed VI
Benito Mussolini
Hirohito
Queen Juliana
Queen Elizabeth II
Jorge Sampaio

22 Final Rulers of Previously Powerful Empires

Has the sun finally set on the British Empire? King Charles thinks so. When Great Britain handed over Hong Kong to China in 1997, the heir to the British throne called it the "end of the Empire." His mother, Queen Elizabeth II, the longest-serving sovereign in British history, had thus presided over the end of an empire that once ruled a quarter of the world. (These are the most famous female rulers in history.)

At the start of the 20th century, some empires still dominated the world, with colonies in much of Africa and Asia as well as some in the Americas. The imperial quest for power and influence contributed to the start of World War I, a conflict that led to the end of imperial systems in Germany, Russia, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire, while boosting the ambitions of the Japanese Empire. Other empires that had their roots in the Age of Discovery, those of Portugal and Spain, vanished into the mist of history in something close to our own times.

The British Empire began during the Age of Discovery as well, and its demise likely closes the final chapter of the age of empires, a legacy of international trade and ethnic interaction, but also of slavery, internal conflicts, cultural suppression, and environmental degradation.

To top