The 100 (book)
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In 1978, Michael H. Hart published a book called The 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Persons in History. His book was a ranking of the 100 people who he felt had had the most impact on human history. His book was hotly debated and his book concept was widely copied. It is important to note that Dr. Hart is not ranking the greatest people. His criterion is influence.
The book was reprinted in 1992 with several noticeable revisions made to the original list of 100 people and their associated rankings. Chief among these revisions was the demotion of figures associated with Communism like Lenin and Joseph Stalin, and the introduction of Mikhail Gorbachev. This edition also substituted Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford for William Shakespeare. Hart also substituted Niels Bohr and Henri Becquerel with Ernest Rutherford, thus correcting an error in the first edition.
Rank | Name | Influence |
1 | Muhammad | founder of Islam, conqueror of Arabia |
2 | Isaac Newton | physicist, theory of universal gravitation, laws of motion, major developments in mathematics, optics |
3 | Jesus | founder of Christianity |
4 | Buddha | founder of Buddhism |
5 | Confucius | founder of Confucianism |
6 | St. Paul | proselytizer of Christianity |
7 | Cai Lun | inventor of paper |
8 | Johann Gutenberg | developed movable type and made great advances in printing |
9 | Christopher Columbus | explorer, led Europe to Americas |
10 | Albert Einstein | physicist, relativity, Einsteinian physics |
11 | Louis Pasteur | scientist, pasteurization |
12 | Galileo Galilei | astronomer, accurately described heliocentric solar system, led way to Newton's work |
13 | Aristotle | influential Greek philosopher |
14 | Euclid | mathematician, Euclidean geometry, author of a very influential study book |
15 | Moses | major prophet of Judaism |
16 | Charles Darwin | biologist, described evolution |
17 | Qin Shi Huang | emperor who united China |
18 | Augustus Caesar | Roman ruler |
19 | Nicolaus Copernicus | astronomer, taught heliocentricity |
20 | Antoine Laurent Lavoisier | father of modern chemistry, philosopher, economist |
21 | Constantine the Great | Roman emperor who made Christianity the state religion |
22 | James Watt | developed steam engine |
23 | Michael Faraday | physicist, chemist, discovery of Electromagnetic induction |
24 | James Clerk Maxwell | physicist, electromagnetic spectrum |
25 | Martin Luther | founder of Protestantism and Lutheranism |
26 | George Washington | first president of United States, general |
27 | Karl Marx | founder of Communism |
28 | Orville and Wilbur Wright | inventors of the airplane |
29 | Genghis Khan | Mongol conqueror |
30 | Adam Smith | economist, expositor of capitalism |
31 | Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford | Possibly wrote works attributed to William Shakespeare |
32 | John Dalton | chemist, physicist, atomic theory, law of partial pressures (Dalton's law) |
33 | Alexander the Great | conqueror |
34 | Napoleon Bonaparte | French conqueror |
35 | Thomas Edison | inventor of light bulb, phonograph, etc. |
36 | Antony van Leeuwenhoek | microscopes, studied microscopic life |
37 | William T.G. Morton | pioneer in anesthesiology |
38 | Guglielmo Marconi | inventor of radio |
39 | Adolf Hitler | conqueror, led Axis Powers in WWII |
40 | Plato | founder of Platonism |
41 | Oliver Cromwell | English political and military leader |
42 | Alexander Graham Bell | inventor of telephone |
43 | Alexander Fleming | penicillin, advances in bacteriology, immunology and chemotherapy |
44 | John Locke | philosopher and liberal theologian |
45 | Ludwig van Beethoven | composer |
46 | Werner Heisenberg | Codified the uncertainty principle |
47 | Louis Daguerre | an inventor/pioneer of photography |
48 | Simon Bolivar | National hero of Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia |
49 | René Descartes | Rationalist philosopher and mathematician |
50 | Michelangelo | painter, sculptor, architect |
51 | Pope Urban II | called for First Crusade |
52 | Umar ibn al-Khattab | Second Caliph, expanded Muslim empire |
53 | Ashoka | king of India who converted to and spread Buddhism |
54 | St. Augustine | Early Christian theologian |
55 | William Harvey | discovered the circulation of the blood |
56 | The Lord Rutherford of Nelson | physicist, pioneer of Particle physics |
57 | John Calvin | Protestant reformer, founder of Calvinism |
58 | Gregor Mendel | Mendelian genetics |
59 | Max Planck | physicist, thermodynamics |
60 | Joseph Lister | principal discoverer of antiseptics which greatly reduced surgical mortality |
61 | Nikolaus August Otto | built first four-stroke internal combustion engine |
62 | Francisco Pizarro | Spanish conqueror in South America, brought down Tahuantinsuyu (Inca empire). |
63 | Hernando Cortes | conquered Mexico for Spain |
64 | Thomas Jefferson | 3rd president of United States, central author of the Declaration of Independence |
65 | Isabella of Castile | united Spain, patron of Cristopher Colombus |
66 | Joseph Stalin | revolutionary and ruler of the USSR |
67 | Julius Caesar | Roman general and politician |
68 | William the Conqueror | laid foundation of modern England |
69 | Sigmund Freud | founder of Freudian school of psychology, psychoanalysis |
70 | Edward Jenner | discoverer of the vaccination for smallpox |
71 | Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen | discovered X-rays |
72 | Johann Sebastian Bach | composer |
73 | Lao Tzu | founder of Taoism |
74 | Voltaire | writer and philosopher |
75 | Johannes Kepler | astronomer, planetary motions |
76 | Enrico Fermi | initiated the atomic age, father of atom bomb |
77 | Leonhard Euler | physicist, mathematician, differential and integral calculus and algebra |
78 | Jean-Jacques Rousseau | French deistic philosopher and author |
79 | Niccolò Machiavelli | author of The Prince (influential political treatise) |
80 | Thomas Malthus | economist, wrote Essay on the Principle of Population |
81 | John F. Kennedy | president of United States, guiding force behind the US Space/Moon Program |
82 | Gregory Pincus | endocrinologist, developed birth control pill |
83 | Mani | founder of Manicheanism |
84 | Lenin | Russian revolutionary and ruler |
85 | Emperor Wen of Sui China | Unified China, founder of the Sui dynasty |
86 | Vasco da Gama | navigator, discovered route from Europe to India |
87 | Cyrus the Great | founder of Persian empire |
88 | Peter the Great | forged Russia into a great European nation |
89 | Mao Zedong | founder of Maoism, Chinese form of Communism |
90 | Francis Bacon | philosopher, delineated inductive scientific method |
91 | Henry Ford | developed modern assembly line |
92 | Mencius | philosopher, founder of a school of Confucianism |
93 | Zoroaster | founder of Zoroastrianism |
94 | Queen Elizabeth I | British monarch, restored Church of England to power after Queen Mary |
95 | Mikhail Gorbachev | Russian premier who was instrumental to the collapse of Communism in the USSR and Eastern Europe |
96 | Menes | unified Upper and Lower Egypt |
97 | Charlemagne | Holy Roman Empire created with his baptism in 800 AD |
98 | Homer | epic poet |
99 | Justinian I | Roman emperor, reconquered Mediterranean empire, made great advances in law |
100 | Mahavira | founder of Jainism |
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Honorary mentions | (Hart makes it clear that these are not the 101-110 on the list) | |
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St. Thomas Aquinas | influential early Christian philosopher | |
Archimedes | father of experimental science | |
Charles Babbage | mathematician and inventor of forerunner of computer | |
Cheops | builder of Great Pyramids | |
Marie Curie | physicist, radioactivity | |
Benjamin Franklin | American politician and inventor | |
Mohandas Gandhi | Indian leader and Hindu religious reformer | |
Abraham Lincoln | 16th president of U.S., led during United States Civil War | |
Ferdinand Magellan | navigator, named Pacific Ocean, first circumnavigation of globe | |
Leonardo da Vinci | artist, inventor |
Further reading
- The 100, Michael H. Hart, Carol Publishing Group, July 1992, paperback, 576 pages, ISBN 0806513500