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The Most Brilliant Strategists and Wartime Leaders in History

The Most Brilliant Strategists and Wartime Leaders in History

While Alexander the Great stands as perhaps the most undefeated military commander in history, shaping conquests that altered the course of nations, he is not alone in the pantheon of innovative wartime tacticians. Throughout the annals of history, visionary strategic thinkers have led forces to victory against seemingly impossible odds. Their battlefield brilliance and capacity to outmaneuver stronger enemies have defined them as some of the most gifted military minds of all time.

Though myths often eclipse their actual achievements, the greatest generals, from the courageous to the cunning, share an ability to transform the tide of warfare through strategy as decisive as it was unorthodox. Their inspired leadership and grasp of both the battlefield and the movements of history places them in an elite class of geniuses whose success leaves an enduring military legacy.

24/7 Tempo chose 60 of history’s most important military commanders using research conducted by history site Historynet. These leaders — who due to long-standing inequality in military eligibility are almost exclusively men — are listed in chronological order of the year or years during which they fought their most important battle or waged their most important campaign.

A number of the most celebrated military masterminds parlayed their wartime victories into leadership over vast civilizations. Genghis Khan, for example, stands out not only for his unparalleled generalship but also for his rule as expansive conqueror, radically expanding the frontiers of land under his empire. Beyond the battlefield, the fame and prestige many triumphant commanders won by outmaneuvering enemies smoothed their transition into politics and elected offices. (Click here to read about military strategies that changed the course of history.) 

Here are the greatest military geniuses and wartime leaders in history

1. Miltiades

Source: Mlenny / iStock via Getty Images

Source: Mlenny / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: Athens
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 490 B.C.

Miltiades led the heavily outnumbered Athenians to victory over the Persians at the Battle of Marathon.

2. Leonidas

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Sparta
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 480 B.C.

Made famous by a 2006 film, Leonidas fought the Battle of Thermopylae with 300 Spartans against a massive Persian army, ultimately losing but becoming legends.

3. Themistocles

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Athens
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 480 B.C.

Themistocles won the naval Battle of Salamis despite being heavily outnumbered by the Persian navy. He timed the battle in such a way that forced the Persians into narrow channels, and then the Greeks rammed and sank the tightly packed enemy fleet.

4. Philip II

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Macedonia
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 337 B.C.

The Macedonian King conquered Greece, which he then handed to his son, who would later be known as Alexander the Great.

5. Alexander the Great

Source: paulshark / iStock via Getty Images

Source: paulshark / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: Macedonia
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 336-323 B.C.

The famous leader overthrew the Persian Empire, establishing a vast empire of his own, spanning from Greece to Egypt and India.

6. Qin Shi Huang

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: China
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 221-210 B.C.

Qin Shi Huang unified China, became its first emperor, and built the Great Wall.

7. Hannibal

Buste Hannibal Barca by Youssefbensaad
Source: Youssefbensaad / Wikimedia Commons

  • Nation: Carthage
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 216 B.C.

Using cutting-edge tactics, the famous general won many battles, including the Battle of Cannae, one of the worst defeats in Rome’s history.

8. Scipio Africanus

Source: ergsart / Flickr

Source: ergsart / Flickr / Public Domain
  • Nation: Rome
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 202 B.C.

Scipio defeated Hannibal at Zana, securing the strength of the Roman Empire for centuries to come.

9. Julius Caesar

Source: ClaraNila / Getty Images

Source: ClaraNila / Getty Images
  • Nation: Rome
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 100-44 B.C.

The leader of Rome Conquered Gaul, earning him tremendous fame and support from the Roman people, enough so that he was able to declare himself dictator of Rome. The power he attained eventually cost him his life, as he was assassinated by the members of the Senate.

10. Marcus Agrippa

Agrippa Gabii Louvre Ma1208 by Borghese Collection
Source: Borghese Collection / Wikimedia Commons

  • Nation: Rome
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 31 B.C.

Marcus Agrippa won the Battle of Actium against Anthony and Cleopatra’s fleet, solidifying Octavian’s control of Rome.

11. Attila the Hun

Source: Kean Collection / Archive Photos via Getty Images

Source: Kean Collection / Archive Photos via Getty Images
  • Nation: Hun Empire
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 450

The famous conqueror hastened the fall of the Western Roman Empire.

12. Flavius Belisarius

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Byzantine Empire
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 536

Flavius Belisarius retook much of the Mediterranean territory that had been lost by the disintegrated Western Roman Empire.

13. Khalid ibn al-Walid

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Muhammad
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 625-638

The general was undefeated in more than 100 battles against the Byzantines, the Persians, and others.

14. Charlemagne

Source: marialba.italia / iStock via Getty Images

Source: marialba.italia / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: The Franks
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 742- 814

Charlemagne conquered much of Europe and established what would become the Holy Roman Empire.

15. William the Conqueror

Source: Hulton Archive / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

Source: Hulton Archive / Hulton Archive via Getty Images
  • Nation: England
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1066

The Norman king won the Battle of Hastings against the Anglo-Saxons, which led to the Norman conquest of England.

16. Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar

Source: fdctsevilla / Flickr

Source: fdctsevilla / Flickr / Public Domain
  • Nation: Spain
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1044-1099

Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar used innovative tactics to defeat Moorish and Christian armies.

17. Saladin

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Egypt and Syria
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1187

The legendary sultan defeated multiple crusader armies and ruled a kingdom spanning close to 800,000 square miles at its peak.

18. Genghis Khan

Source: Streluk / iStock via Getty Images

Source: Streluk / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: Mongolia
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1227

Genghis Khan built the largest contiguous empire in history. Geneticists discovered that one in every 200 males alive today is the Mongol leader’s descendant.

19. Alexander Nevsky

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Russia
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1242

Alexander Nevsky defeated the invading Teutonics at the Battle of Ice.

20. Edward I

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: England
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1298

The English king conquered Wales and defeated Scotland’s William Wallace at the Battle of Falkirk.

21. Joan of Arc

Source: Flory / iStock via Getty Images

Source: Flory / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: France
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1430

Arguably the most famous woman to take up arms for her country, Joan’s vision compelled her to fight the English in the Hundred Years War, commanding forces in more than a dozen engagements, winning many.

22. Mehmed II

Source: A follower of Gentile Bellini / Wikimedia Commons

Source: A follower of Gentile Bellini / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
  • Nation: Ottoman Empire
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1453

The “father of conquest” conquered Constantinople and dismantled the Byzantine Empire.

23. Fernan Cortes

Source: Esteban Martinena Guerrero / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

Source: Esteban Martinena Guerrero / iStock Editorial via Getty Images
  • Nation: Spain
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1521

Cortes and conquistadors numbering in the hundreds (with the advantage of superior weaponry and a smallpox outbreak) decimated the Aztec empire with warriors in the hundreds of thousands and conquered Mexico.

24. Suleiman I

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images
  • Nation: Ottoman Empire
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1529

Suleiman the Magnificent expanded the borders of the Ottoman Empire to North Africa.

25. Francis Drake

Source: ianwool / iStock via Getty Images

Source: ianwool / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: Great Britain
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1588

Francis Drake helped defeat the Spanish Armada by launching an early attack at Cadiz in 1587 and then participating as second in command in the decisive battle a year later.

26. Ieyasu Tokugawa

徳川家康 by Kanesue
Source: kanesue / Flickr

  • Nation: Japan
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1600

The leader won the battle of Sekigahara and unified Japan, becoming the first shogun of the Tokugawa era that would last more than 250 years.

27. Gustavus Adolphus

Source: thomasmales / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

Source: thomasmales / iStock Editorial via Getty Images
  • Nation: Sweden
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1611-1632

The Swede is credited as a key innovator in the development of the modern army.

28. Oliver Cromwell

Source: stu99 / iStock via Getty Images

Source: stu99 / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: England
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1645

Cromwell defeated royalist forces with his “Ironsides” cavalry, ensuring the existence of England’s parliament.

29. Maurice de Saxe

Source: ubleipzig / Flickr

Source: ubleipzig / Flickr / Public Domain
  • Nation: France
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1745

The Count of Saxony won the Battle of Fontenoy and is credited with innovating a variety of military training and tactics.

30. George Washington

Source: TonyBaggett / iStock via Getty Images

Source: TonyBaggett / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: The United States
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1781

His guerrilla warfare and key victories, such as at Yorktown, ensured independence and the formation of the country, which eventually named him as its first president.

31. Frederick the Great

Source: wongkaer / iStock via Getty Images

Source: wongkaer / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: Prussia
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1740-1786

Another tactical innovator of the era, Frederick the Great expanded Prussia’s borders.

32. Napoleon

Napoleon by Francisco Anzola
Source: fran001 / Flickr

  • Nation: France
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1799-1815

The famous short-statured military genius came as close as any to conquering the whole of Europe — twice.

33. Horatio Nelson

Source: kyrien / iStock via Getty Images

Source: kyrien / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: Britain
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1805

In a battle that cost him his life, the British naval legend defeated the Napoleon-aligned French and Spanish forces at the Battle of Trafalgar

34. Mikhail Kutuzov

Source: Remains / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

Source: Remains / iStock Editorial via Getty Images
  • Nation: Russia
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1812

The Russian field marshal’s victory at the Battle of Borodino decimated Napoleon’s forces.

35. Arthur Wellesley

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Great Britain
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1815

The Duke of Wellington handed Napoleon his most famous defeat, at Waterloo.

36. Simon Bolivar

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images
  • Nation: South America
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1821

Simon Bolivar freed vast lands by way of revolution from Spanish rule. These lands would become more than half a dozen South American countries.

37. Shaka Zulu

Shaka Zulu - Camden by Mark Kent
Source: flamesworddragon / Flickr

  • Nation: Zulu Empire
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1828

A military genius whose innovations in army mobility, training, and weapons made the Zulu army a formidable force.

38. Robert E. Lee

Source: KenKPhoto / iStock via Getty Images

Source: KenKPhoto / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: Confederate States of America
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1863

The brilliant commander who gave the outnumbered Confederacy a chance is still an icon throughout the South

39. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson

Stonewall Jackson by Shannon McGee
Source: shan213 / Flickr

  • Nation: Confederate States of America
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1863

Jackson was responsible for one of the most decisive Confederate victories at Chancellorsville. His death just two years into the war, believed to be the result of accidental friendly fire, dealt the Confederacy a grievous blow.

40. William T. Sherman

Source: anakin13 / iStock via Getty Images

Source: anakin13 / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: The United States
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1864

In his famed march to the sea, Sherman led a campaign of “total war,” capturing Atlanta and dealing a series of catastrophic blows to the Confederacy.

41. Ulysses S. Grant

Source: ra3rn / iStock via Getty Images

Source: ra3rn / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: The United States
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1862-1865

Grant’s success at Chattanooga, Shiloh, Vicksburg, and other places solidified him as the right choice to lead the Union army and eventually led to his election as the 18th U.S. president.

42. Geronimo

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Chiricahua Apache
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1886

Geronimo’s use of guerrilla tactics helped the legendary leader stay one step ahead of the U.S. army for more than two decades.

43. Louis Botha

Source: library_of_congress / Flickr

Source: library_of_congress / Flickr
  • Nation: Boer Republic
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1900

Despite being heavily outnumbered, Louis Botha won upset victories against the British at Colenso and Spion Kop.

44. Heihachiro Togo

Source: library_of_congress / Flickr

Source: library_of_congress / Flickr
  • Nation: Japan
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1905

Togo defeated the Russian fleet at the Battle of Tsushima during the Russo-Japanese War.

45. Mustafa Ataturk

Source: dumanyasin / iStock via Getty Images

Source: dumanyasin / iStock via Getty Images
  • Nation: Ottoman Empire
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1915

The founder of modern Turkey repelled the British invasion of Gallipoli and went on to lead the fight for Turkish independence, becoming its first president.

46. Paul von Hindenburg

  • Nation: Germany
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1918

The German commander of the Eastern Front during World War I, von Hindenburg won a decisive victory at the Battle of Tannenberg against a much larger Russian force

47. T.E. Lawrence

T.E. Lawrence by Andrew Bone
Source: andreboeni / Flickr

  • Nation: Great Britain
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1918

The subject of the film “Lawrence of Arabia,” T.E. Lawrence led the Arab revolt that was instrumental in the defeat of Turkey during World War I.

48. Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck

Source: wikimediacommons / Flickr

Source: wikimediacommons / Flickr / Public Domain
  • Nation: Germany
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1914-1918

In East Africa, the German commander used guerrilla tactics to frustrate an army of 100,000 with only 15,000 troops.

49. John Monash

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Australia
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1916-1918

Considered by many to be the best general on the Western Front during World War I and at the time of the cutting-edge of military strategy, he opted to abandon outdated British tactics, utilizing all of the weapons at his disposal.

50. Erich von Manstein

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Germany
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1940

Von Manstein was the architect of Germany’s stunningly quick takeover of France, which earned him a promotion to general. He did not fare quite so well at the battle of Stalingrad.

51. Isoruku Yamamoto

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Japan
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1941

Yamamoto was the mind behind the attack on Pearl Harbor. He recognized the fact that battleships were the way of the past and carrier-based aircraft the way of the future.

52. Raymond Spruance

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: The United States
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1942

Spruance led the American Navy to victory at the Battle of Midway, sinking four Japanese carriers and turning the tide of War in the Pacific.

53. Erwin Rommel

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Germany
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1941-1943

The “desert fox” proved one of the most formidable Nazi commanders, using tanks to hand the Allies numerous defeats in North Africa.

54. George S. Patton

Source: traveler1116 / iStock Unreleased via Getty Images

Source: traveler1116 / iStock Unreleased via Getty Images
  • Nation: The United States
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1944

The controversial leader who once slapped two of his men was also instrumental in the retaking of France.

55. Vasily Chuikov

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: The Soviet Union
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1942-1945

Vasily Chuikov’s unwavering defense of Stalingrad marked the turning point in the war. He would go on to assist in the capture of Berlin.

56. Dwight D. Eisenhower

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: The United States
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1943-1945

Another future president of the United States, Eisenhower commanded the Allied invasion of Normandy and oversaw the defeat of Germany’s Western Front.

57. Douglas MacArthur

Source: Fotosearch / Archive Photos via Getty Images

Source: Fotosearch / Archive Photos via Getty Images
  • Nation: The United States
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1941-1945

The newly-appointed Supreme Commander of the Pacific in the Southwest Pacific Area vowed to return to the Philippines in 1942 after Japan took over the islands. He was able to keep his promise two years later, winning the Medal of Honor in the process.

57. Moshe Dayan

Moshe Dayan, Chief of General Staff by IDF Spokespersons Unit
Source: IDF Spokespersons Unit / Wikimedia Commons

  • Nation: Israel
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1967

As chief of staff and later as defense minister during the Six-Day War, Moshe Dayan led Israel to victory over the combined strength of its neighbors Egypt, Jordan, and Syria, which also had additional support from other nations.

59. Mao Zedong

Source: FPG / Archive Photos via Getty Images

Source: FPG / Archive Photos via Getty Images
  • Nation: China
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1937-1949

Mao Zedong used guerrilla warfare to defeat the Japanese invaders and then the Chinese Nationalist army, which was four times the size of his own, establishing Communism in China and becoming the party’s first chairman.

60. Vo Nguyen Giap

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Source: Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Nation: Vietnam
  • Year(s) of peak military relevance: 1954, 1975

Vo Nguyen Giap defeated the French at Dien Bien Phu, and his brilliant strategy and logistics defeated the South Vietnamese and Americans two decades later.

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