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Julius Caesar leads by 31.7 pts · 2 figures compared

Revolutionary · Modern

General · Ancient
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.
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Gulbuddin Hekmatyar founded the Hezb-e Islami political party, an Islamist faction that became one of the most powerful mujahideen groups during the Soviet-Afghan War. The party received significant support from Pakistan's ISI and foreign Islamist donors.
Hekmatyar served as Prime Minister of Afghanistan from 1993 to 1994 under President Burhanuddin Rabbani. His tenure was marked by intense factional fighting, including rocket attacks on Kabul that caused thousands of civilian casualties, contributing to the devastation of the city.
After the Taliban captured Kabul in 1996, Hekmatyar initially fled to Iran. He later aligned with the Taliban regime, though his influence waned. He remained in Afghanistan until the US-led invasion in 2001, after which he fled to Pakistan.
Hekmatyar signed a peace agreement with the Afghan government of President Ashraf Ghani in 2016. The deal allowed him to return to Afghanistan from exile, with his party recognized as a political entity and his fighters integrated into state security forces.
Caesar, as proconsul of Gaul, launched a series of campaigns that conquered all of Gaul (modern France, Belgium, and parts of Switzerland). He fought numerous battles, including against the Helvetii, the Belgae, and the Gallic chieftain Vercingetorix. The wars brought immense wealth and a loyal army to Caesar.
Caesar led Legio XIII across the Rubicon River into Italy, defying the Roman Senate's order to disband his army. This act triggered a civil war against Pompey and the Optimates, ultimately leading to Caesar's dictatorship and the end of the Roman Republic.
Caesar's outnumbered army defeated the larger forces of Pompey the Great at Pharsalus in Greece. Caesar's tactical use of a reserve line to counter Pompey's cavalry charge proved decisive. Pompey fled to Egypt, where he was assassinated, leaving Caesar as the undisputed master of the Roman world.
The Roman Senate appointed Caesar dictator perpetuo (dictator for life), granting him unprecedented personal power. This move concentrated military, legislative, and judicial authority in one person, effectively ending the Roman Republic's traditional system of checks and balances and alarming many senators.
A group of Roman senators, led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, stabbed Caesar to death at a meeting of the Senate in the Theatre of Pompey. The assassination was intended to restore the Republic, but instead triggered another civil war that led to the rise of the Roman Empire.
Caesar crossed the Rubicon with one legion — that's about 5,000 men. Hekmatyar commanded thousands of mujahideen, yet Caesar carved a path from Gaul to Egypt in a decade while Hekmatyar couldn't hold Kabul for a year. Military logistics don't lie: Caesar's speed and discipline eclipse any warlord's chaos. Hekmatyar's a footnote; Caesar rewrote history's spine.
拿凯撒跟希克马蒂亚尔比?凯撒写《高卢战记》时,字字句句都是宣传——把自己塑造成共和国的救星。希克马蒂亚尔连本自传都没留下,只有暗杀令和火箭弹。一个是经典作家,一个是恐怖分子的清单。学问上,凯撒甩他十条街。希克马蒂亚尔的历史价值,顶多是监狱档案里的名字。
Comparing body counts is grim but revealing. Caesar's Gallic Wars killed an estimated 1 million Gauls — systematic, efficient, empire-building. Hekmatyar's civil war killed perhaps 50,000 in Kabul alone, but it was indiscriminate shelling, not strategy. Statistically, Caesar's brutality had purpose; Hekmatyar's was just noise. One shaped demographics, the other shattered a city. Scale matters in history's ledger.
战略上,凯撒懂围城——阿莱西亚之战,双环工事饿死高卢人。希克马蒂亚尔只会炸喀布尔,连自己的总理府都守不住。凯撒的胜利靠纪律和工程,希克马蒂亚尔的失败靠冲动和缺粮。一个是大将,一个是地痞。阿富汗人叫他“屠夫”,罗马人叫凯撒“征服者”——这里面有质的差别。
Both men were power-hungry chaos agents, but let's stop romanticizing Caesar as a "genius." He plunged Rome into civil war for personal ambition, destroyed the Republic, and his "mercy" was just PR. Hekmatyar's brutality was honest — he never pretended to be a reformer. Caesar's legacy is a poisoned gift; Hekmatyar's is a straight-up bomb crater. At least the Afghan didn't write his own propaganda.