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  • History's Monsters

    HISTORY'S MONSTERS
    By Simon Sebag Montefiore

    BBC News
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_7 664000/7664547.stm
    Tuesday, 14 October 2008 07:24 UK
    UK

    Author of Monsters: History's Most Evil Men and Women

    There is a special fascination in diabolical wickedness.

    That is why in Paradise Lost, we identify with Satan despite all
    Milton's efforts. Or why we so enjoy the Godfather movies.

    Adolf Hitler is the embodiment of a historical monster But when I
    decided to write a book about the most evil characters in history,
    it was not merely to entertain.

    As a historian, I believe that history is the best way to teach
    particularly younger generations about the values that our society
    needs such as responsibility, tolerance, decency, courage, freedom
    itself.

    The best way to introduce these ideas is the excitement of character
    and biography.

    These are characters we should all know, stories we should tell our
    children about.

    One man's monster

    My choice of monsters is naturally a subjective one. In many cases,
    they chose themselves: Hitler or Pol Pot for example.

    In other cases, one man's monster is another man's hero: Mao killed
    70 million but is still the reigning genius of the Peoples Republic
    of China today.

    Stalin killed 20 million but in the Kremlin's new textbook, he is
    hailed as "the most successful Russian ruler of the 20th Century".

    Many cases are interlinked. Hitler was encouraged to slaughter the
    Jews because he mused "who now remembers the Armenian massacres?"

    Pol Pot's regime killed one fifth of the Cambodian population Some of
    these monsters may be included unjustly: Queen Jezebel of Israel or
    the Empress Livia, wife of Augustus, were probably not as murderous
    as their reputations suggest.

    Some were just plain insane like Caligula or Ivan the Terrible.

    Some are obvious - such as Nero, Torqemarda, Robespierre, Idi Amin,
    Papa Doc Duvalier or Kim Il-Sung.

    Others will be less well-known - such as Nadir Shah of Persia, Enver
    Hoxha of Albania, Barbarossa and his brother Silver Arm the Ottoman
    pirate-admirals, Justinian Slitnose, or President Lopes of Paraguy.

    Lastly some could almost be heroes: Genghis Khan, Tamurlane, Emperor
    Basil the Bulgar-Slayer, Nadir Shah, even Peter the Great of Russia,
    were brilliant generals and politicians yet monsters too.

    In the end, I hoped to remind people of forgotten crimes and monstrous
    individuals so we can judge them again and remember their victims -
    and hopefully make history exciting again.

    While the atrocities perpetrated by Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot and Mao
    are well known, some tyrants have slipped through history with far
    less attention given to their monstrous regimes. Here are five of the
    worst - but let us know who you think should be included on the list
    using the form below.

    VLAD THE IMPALER (1431-76)

    Vlad was rumoured to drink his victims blood and eat their flesh The
    inspiration for Bram Stoker's Dracula was in reality a bloodthirsty
    ruler of Wallachia (modern-day Romania) in the 15th Century.

    Vlad's name comes from his preferred method of execution - victims
    were impaled on wooden stakes arranged in concentric circles around
    his castles, leading to a slow and excruciatingly painful death.

    Thirty thousand merchants and noblemen met this and other gruesome
    fates on St Bartholomew's Day 1459, and another 10,000 a year later.

    He was eventually deposed by the Ottoman army and imprisoned, but
    regained the throne 10 years later - only to be deposed again and
    beheaded.

    MAXIMILIEN ROBESPIERRE (1758-94)

    The springs of popular government in revolution are at once virtue
    and terror

    Robespierre Although considered by some a founding father of modern
    democracy, Robespierre - a senior politician during the French
    revolution - was responsible for countless deaths during the Reign
    of Terror (5 September 1793 - 28 July 1794).

    Robespierre was a young lawyer at the start of the revolution, but
    quickly rose through the political ranks until finally playing a
    prominent role on the Committee of Public Safety, a body which had
    the power to order the execution of absolutely anyone without need
    for a trial.

    Thousands of "enemies of the state" were sent to their deaths on
    Robespierre's orders, many to secure his own political position. In one
    horrific chapter of the revolution over 100,000 men, women and children
    were slaughtered in Lyon and Marseilles on Robespierre's orders.

    Robespierre's grip on the revolutionary government eventually waned
    and he met the same fate as so many of his victims at the blade of
    the guillotine.

    LEOPOLD II (1835-1909)

    I do not want to miss a good chance of getting us a slice of this
    magnificent African cake

    Leopold II The King of Belgium from 1865-1909 acquired large tracts
    of land along the Congo in central Africa for his own personally-owned
    colony.

    A group of mercenaries, known as the Force Publique, brutally enforced
    law and order on Leopold's behalf and levied tax through forced labour.

    Soldiers were ordered to cut off the right hand of anyone they had
    killed - so their superiors could check they were not wasting valuable
    ammunition on game shooting. But mercenaries circumvented the ban - and
    thousands of innocent Congolese had their hands cut off as a result.

    The violent oppression led to the deaths of as many as 10 million
    people, half the population of the Congo.

    BARON UNGERN VON STERNBERG (1886-1921)

    After being captured by the Bolsheviks, Ungern was transported back
    to Russia in a cage and shot by firing squad Von Sternberg was a
    warlord during the the Russian civil war (1918-1921) who invaded
    Mongolia and imposed a ruthless tyranny, under the delusion that he
    was the reincarnation of Genghis Khan.

    The Bloody Baron's victims were mainly Communists and Jews,
    sadistically tortured and humiliated before meeting their death.

    Execution methods included dismemberment, disembowelment, being torn
    apart by wild animals and being hunted through the streets by Cossacks.

    Between 10 and 20 million people died as a result of the Russian
    civil war.

    ANTE PAVELIC (1889-1959)

    Pavelic's regime murdered over 80% of the Jewish population in Croatia
    Croatian Nationalist Ante Pavelic was the leader of a terrorist group
    known as the Ustase that campaigned for an independent and racially
    pure Croatia in the 1930s.

    When World War II came to the Balkans, Yugoslavia collapsed and in
    1941 Pavelic became the leader of a nominally independent Croatia,
    in reality a Nazi puppet state.

    Pavelic set about realizing his dream of a racially pure Croatia,
    and under his four-year fascist regimem an estimated 700,000 Jews,
    Gypsies and Serbs were butchered.

    MENGISTU HAILE MARIAM (1937-)

    Mengistu's regime failed to react to the devastating famine of 1984-5,
    putting it down to 'enemy propoganda' Mengistu Haile Mariam was a
    member of the Dergue, the group of Ethiopian army officers that in
    1974 ousted president Haile Selassie in a bloody coup and took control
    of Ethiopia.

    The Dergue ruled by violence and paranoia. During the "red terror",
    they murdered thousands of intellectuals, professionals and political
    opponents in an attempt to create a Soviet-style socialist utopia.

    By 1977, Mengistu had seized complete control of the Dergue, ruthlessly
    suppressing opposition to his expansionist military plans - in one case
    killing political opponents in the Dergue himself with a machine gun.

    Mengistu's regime held power until 1991 by which time bloody wars
    with neighbouring countries and a failure to deal with the drought
    of 1984-5 had cost the country millions of lives.

    Simon Sebag Montefiore is the author of Monsters - History's Most
    Evil Men and Women
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