List of empires
This is an alphabetical list of empires. The table may be resorted by other columns if your browser supports this function.
Empires and dynasties
Empire | Origin | Capital | From | To | Duration
(Years) |
Note | First Leader | Last Leader | Flag |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Achaemenid Empire | Iran | Various, including Pasargadae, Ecbatana, Persepolis, Susa, Babylon | 550 BC | 330 BC | 220 | The first Persian empire, and the largest one in classical antiquity, founded by Cyrus the Great. | Cyrus the Great | Darius III | |
Afsharid Dynasty | Iran | Mashhad | 1736 | 1796 | 60 | Founded by Nader Shah, at its peak expanded Persia as far west as Baghdad, and as far east as Delhi. | |||
Abbasid Caliphate | Iraq | Baghdad, Raqqa, Kufa, Samarra, Anbar | 750 | 1258 | 508 | Successor of the Umayyad Caliphate. | As-Saffah | Al-Musta'sim | |
Ahom Dynasty | North East India | Charaideo, Garhgaon, Rangpur (Ahom capital), Jorhat | 1228 | 1838 | 610 | It is well known for maintaining its sovereignty for nearly 600 years and successfully resisting Mughal expansion in Northeast India. | |||
Akkadian Empire | Sumer | Akkad | 2300 BC | 2200 BC | 100 | The Second Empire On The Earth. | |||
Aksumite Empire | Ethiopia | Axum | 150 | 940 | 790 | Succeeded by the Ethiopian Empire. | |||
Akwamu | West Africa | Akwamufie, Nyanoase | 1505 | 1867 | 362 | ||||
Alaouite dynasty, Sultanate of Morocco (1665–1912) | Morocco | Fes, Meknes | 1631 | 1912 | 281 | Sharifian Empire of Morocco | |||
Almohad Caliphate | Morocco | Marrakech, Seville | 1121 | 1269 | 148 | Berber Empire | |||
Almoravid dynasty | Morocco | Aghmat (1040–1062), Marrakech (1062–1147) | 1040 | 1147 | 107 | Berber Empire | |||
Angevin Empire | England, France | No official capital. Court was generally held at Angers and Chinon | 1154 | 1242 | 88 | Henry II | Henry III | ||
Armenian Empire | Armenia | Tigranakert | 190 BC | 428 | 618 | Tigranes the Great took the title King of Kings. | |||
Assyria | Mesopotamia | Assur, later Nineveh | 2025 BC | 609 BC | 1416 | ||||
Ashanti Empire | West Africa | Kumasi | 1670 | 1902 | 232 | ||||
Austrian Empire | Austria | Vienna | 1804 | 1867 | 63 | Preceded by the Holy Roman Empire. | |||
Austria-Hungary | Austria, Hungary | Vienna, Budapest | 1867 | 1918 | 51 | Often referred to as the "Austro-Hungarian Empire". Formed out of the Austrian Empire as a result of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867. Officially a real union of the rump Austrian Empire (Cisleithania) and the Lands of the Crown of Saint Stephen/Transleithania. Ruler was therefore referred to as Kaiser und König ("Emperor-King", literally "Emperor and King"). | Franz Joseph I | Charles IV and I | |
Ayyubid dynasty | Middle East | Cairo, Damascus, Hama | 1171 | 1341 | 170 | Founded by Saladin, See also List of Muslim states and dynasties. | |||
Aztec Empire | Mesoamerica | Tenochtitlan | 1428 | 1521 | 93 | The capital of Mexico, Mexico City, is built on the ruins of Tenochtitlan. | |||
Aulikara Empire | India | Mandsaur, | 528 | 550 | 22 | Empire disintegrated after Shiladitya, the second king's death. | Yashodharman | Shiladitya (ruler of Malwa) | |
Babylonian Empire | Mesopotamia | Babylon | 1900 BC | 1600 BC | 300 | See also Neo-Babylonian Empire. | |||
Balhae | North Korea, Manchuria | Sanggyeong | 698 | 926 | 228 | Successor of Goguryeo. | |||
Bamana Empire | West Africa | Ségou | 1712 | 1861 | 149 | Also known as the Bambara Empire or Ségou Empire | |||
Belgian colonial empire | Belgium | Brussels | 1901 | 1962 | 61 | Overseas possessions were referred to as "the colonies" rather than an empire. | |||
Benin Empire | Nigeria | Benin City | 1440 | 1897 | 457 | ||||
Kadamba dynasty | Karnataka | Banavasi | 345 | 540 | 195 | The Kadambas (345–540 CE) were an ancient royal family of Karnataka, India, that ruled northern Karnataka and the Konkan from Banavasi in present-day Uttara Kannada district. The kingdom was founded by Mayurasharma in 345 CE. | |||
Bornu Empire | Nigeria | Ngazargamu | 1387 | 1893 | 506 | The continuation of the Kanem Empire. | |||
Empire of Brazil | Brazil | Rio de Janeiro | 1822 | 1889 | 67 | Established after Pedro I of Brazil declared the independence of Brazil from Portugal. | Pedro I | Pedro II | |
Britannic Empire | Britain | Londinium | 286 | 296 | 10 | Was a break-away state of the Roman Empire. See also the Carausian Revolt. | |||
British Empire | United Kingdom | London | 1603 | 1997 | 394 | The largest empire in world history. Precursor to the modern Commonwealth of Nations. Remnants of the empire include the British Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II remains as sovereign. For many the handover of Hong Kong to the People's Republic of China on 1 July 1997 marked the end of the British Empire.[1] | James I | Elizabeth II | |
British Raj | Indian Subcontinent | Calcutta (1858–1912), New Delhi (1912–1947) | 1858 | 1947 | 89 | Governed by the Crown and part of the British Empire. Queen Victoria was proclaimed Empress of India in 1876. | |||
Bruneian Empire | Borneo | Not specified, possibly Kota Batu | 1368 | 1888 | 520 | Lasted until it became a British protectorate in 1888. | |||
First Bulgarian Empire | Balkans, Eastern Europe and Central Europe | Pliska (680–893), Preslav (893–972), Skopie (972–992), Ohrid (992–1018) | 680 | 1018 | 338 | Founded by Khan Asparukh. Under Tsar Simeon I became the first powerful Slavic Empire. Falls to the Byzantine Empire under Emperor Basil II. | |||
Second Bulgarian Empire | Balkans | Tarnovo | 1185 | 1422 | 237 | Successor of the First Bulgarian Empire. Under the Tsars Kaloyan and Ivan Asen II became the most powerful state in the Balkans. | |||
Duchy of Burgundy | Western Europe | Dijon | 1364 | 1477 | 113 | Theorically vassal of France. Ruled a very large territory from Alps to North Sea. | |||
Buyid dynasty | Persia | Shiraz | 934 | 1055 | 121 | ||||
Byzantine Empire | Eastern Roman Empire (Greece, Anatolia, Africa, Israel, Syria, Italy) | Constantinople | 284 | 1460 | 1176 | The eastern half of the Roman Empire. Term conventionally used since the 19th century to describe the Greek-speaking Roman Empire during the Middle Ages. | |||
Caliphate of Córdoba | Iberian Peninsula | Córdoba | 756 | 1031 | 275 | See also Islamic Empire. | |||
Cao Wei | China | Luoyang | 220 | 265 | 45 | See also Three Kingdoms. | |||
Carthaginian Empire | North Africa | Carthage | 814 BC | 146 BC | 668 | ||||
Cebu Rajahnate | Philippines | Cebu City | 1279 | 1565 | 286 | An Indianized state founded by a minor Chola prince. | |||
Chagatai Khanate | Transoxania | Almaliq, Qarshi | 1225 | 1687 | 462 | Division of the Mongol Empire. | |||
Chalukya dynasty | India | Badami | 543 | 753 | 210 | ||||
Chauhan dynasty | Northern India | Delhi | 800 | 1200 | 400 | ||||
Chenla | Cambodia | Isanapura | 550 | 802 | 252 | Succeeded by the Khmer Empire. | |||
Chera dynasty | South India | Vanchi Muthur, Karur, Kodungallur, Kollam. | 400 BC | 1729 | 2129 | A Tamil (Later, Malayalam) dynasty which includes Early Cheras, Medieval Cheras, Kodungallur Cheras and Venadu Cheras. | |||
Chola empire | South India | Uraiyur, Pazhaiyaarai, Thanjavur, Gangaikonda Cholapuram | 400 BC | 1540 | 1940 | A Tamil dynasty which includes Early Cholas, Medieval Cholas and Later Cholas till the reign of Virasekhara Chola (opponent of Nagama Nayak). Ruled parts of India,Sri lanka,Malaysia,Singapore,Indonesia,Burma Maldives and Philippines. | |||
Commonwealth of England | British Isles | London | 1649 | 1660 | 11 | Short puritan and republican period in Britain. The Cromwell's army conquered Ireland and Jamaica. | Oliver Cromwell | Richard Cromwell | |
Congo Free State | actual Congo-Kinshasa | Vivi then Boma | 1885 | 1908 | 23 | Private kingdom of Leopold II. Annexed by Belgium after the revelation of committed atrocities in rubber plantations. | |||
Crimean Khanate | Black Sea | Bakhchysarai | 1441 | 1783 | 342 | One of the last Turkic kingdoms, annexed by Russia. | |||
Dacian Empire | Romania | Sarmizegetusa Regia | 168 BC | 106 | 274 | Reached its territorial expansion under King Burebista (82 BC – 44 BC) and also had the title of King of Kings. | |||
Danish colonial empire | Denmark (as Denmark–Norway 1536 – 1814) | Copenhagen | 1536 | 1953 | 417 | See also Danish overseas colonies. | |||
Delhi Sultanate | India | Delhi | 1206 | 1527 | 321 | ||||
Durrani Empire | Afghanistan | Kandahar, Kabul | 1747 | 1823 | 76 | ||||
Dutch Empire | Netherlands | Amsterdam | 1568 | 1975 | 407 | See also Dutch East India Company and Dutch West India Company. | |||
Egyptian Empire | Egypt | Various, including Thebes, Akhetaten, Pi-Ramesses, Memphis | 1550 BC | 1077 BC | 473 | See also 18th Dynasty, 19th Dynasty & 20th Dynasty. | |||
Elamite Empire | South West Iran | Susa | 2800 BC | 300 BC | 2500 | ||||
Abbasynia | Ethiopia | Addis Ababa | 1137 | 1974 | 837 | ||||
Fatimid Caliphate | Maghreb, Egypt | Mahdia (909–969), Cairo (969–1171) | 909 | 1171 | 262 | See also Islamic Empire. | |||
First French Empire | France | Paris | 1804 | 1814/1815 | 10/11 | ||||
Second French Empire | France | Paris | 1852 | 1870 | 18 | ||||
French colonial empire | France | Paris | 1534 | Either surviving until present or ended in 1980 | 487 as of 2021 or 446 as of 1980 | Some consider the Empire ending with the end of French presence in Vanuatu (see New Hebrides) France still maintains overseas possessions in the form of Overseas France. | |||
Frankish Empire | Western Europe | Various, including Soissons, Paris, Reims, Orléans, Metz & Aachen | 800 | 843 | 43 | Succeeded by Middle Francia, East Francia, and West Francia. | |||
Funan | Cambodia | Vyadhapura | 50 | 550 | 500 | Succeeded by the Chenla. | |||
Gallic Empire | Rhineland-Palatinate | Colonia Agrippina | 260 | 274 | 14 | Broke off from the Roman Empire during the Crisis of the Third Century. | |||
Gaza Empire | Southern Africa | Not specified | 1824 | 1895 | 71 | ||||
Republic of Genoa | Italy | Genoa | 1096 | 1797 | 701 | Major commercial power during the Late Middle Ages. Established colonies across the Mediterranean and Black Sea. | |||
Georgian Empire | Georgia | Kutaisi, Tbilisi | 1008 | 1490 | 482 | Established in 1008 as an unified kingdom. Georgian kings took title "King of Kings" and ruled over large territory consisting of Georgian, Armenian and Muslim areas, as well as numerous client states. Officially dissolved at 1490. | |||
German Empire | Germany | Berlin | 1871 | 1918 | 47 | See also German colonial empire/Also known as "The Second Reich". Otto Von Bismark as Prime minister of Prussia, uniter of Germany and then Chancellor of Germany(1871-1890) likely had far more political pull than Wilhelm I. | Wilhelm I | Wilhelm II | |
Ghana Empire | Mauritania, and Western Mali | Koumbi Saleh | 300 | 1240 | 940 | The empire became known in Europe and Arabia as the "Ghana Empire" by the title of its ruler (meaning "Warrior King"). Also known as Wagadou. | |||
Ghaznavid dynasty | Afghanistan | Ghazni later Lahore | 963 | 1187 | 224 | ||||
Ghurid dynasty | Afghanistan | Firuzkuh | 1148 | 1215 | 67 | ||||
Goguryeo | Korea[2] | Jolbon, Gungnae City, Pyongyang | 37 BC | 668 | 705 | Predecessor of Balhae and Goryeo. | |||
Goryeo | Korea | Gaegyeong, Ganghwa | 918 | 1392 | 474 | Successor of Goguryeo. Unification of the Korean Peninsula. State maintained as an empire between 918 and 1274. | |||
Gorkha Empire | Greater Nepal | 1600 | 1850 | 250 | Unification of Greater Nepal. State maintained as an empire between 1600 and 1840. | ||||
Göktürk Khaganate | Inner Asia | Ötüken | 552 | 747 | 195 | 552–603 First empire, 603–658 Double empire, 658–681 Dark age, 681–747 Second empire. | |||
Golden Horde | Central Asia | Sarai Batu | 1240 | 1502 | 262 | Successor state of the Mongol Empire. | |||
Empire of Great Fulo | Senegal | Tekrur | 1514 | 1776 | 262 | ||||
Great Moravian Empire | Central Europe | Mikulčice-Valy | 833 | 900 | 67 | The word "Moravia" did not refer only to present-day Moravia. | |||
Seljuq Empire | Aral Sea, Asia Minor, Persia | Nishapur and later on Rey | 1037 | 1194 | 157 | Turkish empire, predecessor of the Sultanate of Rum. | |||
Gurjara-Pratihara dynasty | India | Kannauj | 600 | 1136 | 536 | Founded by great king of Gujjars. | |||
Gupta Empire | India | Pataliputra | 320 | 550 | 230 | Founded by Sri Gupta. | |||
Han dynasty | China | Chang'an, Luoyang, Xuchang | 206 BC | 220 | 426 | Founded by Liu Bang the High Ancestor. | |||
Hanseatic League | North and Baltic Sea | Lübeck | 1356 | 1648 | 292 | Alliance of German and Baltic merchant city-states. | |||
Empire of Harsha | Northern India | Kannauj | 606 | 647 | 41 | Founded by Harshavardhana; collapsed after his death. | |||
Hephthalite Empire | Afghanistan | Kabul | 420 | 567 | 147 | ||||
Hittite Empire | Anatolia | Hattusa | 1460 BC | 1180 BC | 280 | See also Syro-Hittite states. | |||
Holy Roman Empire | Central Europe | Not specified | 962 | 1806 | 844 | Referred to simply as the Roman Empire (not to be confused with the actual Roman Empire) before 1157, when it became the Holy Empire. The Holy Roman Empire is attested from 1254. Was officially known as the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation after 1512, although this designation had fallen out of use again by the 18th century. See Holy Roman Empire § Name. | Otto I the Great | Francis II | |
Hotak dynasty | Persia, Afghanistan | Isfahan | 1709 | 1738 | 29 | ||||
Hoysala Empire | India | Belur, Halebidu | 1026 | 1343 | 317 | ||||
Hunnic Empire | Eurasia | Not specified | 370 | 469 | 99 | ||||
Idrisid dynasty | Morocco | Fes | 788 | 974 | 186 | Founders of the first Moroccan state. | |||
Ilkhanate | Persia | Maragheh, Tabriz, Soltaniyeh | 1256 | 1335 | 79 | Successor state of the Mongol Empire. | |||
Kingdom of Judah (united monarchy) | Israel | Jerusalem | 1050 BC | 586 BC | 464 | Considers the Start of Saul's reign, through the dual kingdoms of the Kingdom of Israel (Samaria) and the Kingdom of Judah, until the Babylonian conquest of Judah. | |||
Inca Empire (Tawantinsuyo) | Andes (Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, parts of Chile, Argentina and Colombia) | Cusco | 1438 | 1533 | 95 | The largest empire in pre-Columbian America. | |||
Italian Empire | Italy | Rome | 1885 | 1943 | 58 | See also Italian imperialism under Fascism. | Umberto I | Victor Emmanuel III | |
Empire of Japan | Japan | Tokyo | 1868 | 1947 | 79 | Emperor's government took control of the country in 1868. Regional hegemony in East Asia ended in 1945. The new constitution of 1947 formally abolished the empire.[3] | Meiji | Hirohito | |
Jin dynasty (265–420) | China | Luoyang (265–311), Chang'an (312–316), Jiankang (317–420) | 265 | 420 | 155 | Subdivided into two dynasties. Western Jìn dynasty (265–316), Eastern Jìn dynasty (317–420). | |||
Jin dynasty (1115–1234) | Northern China, Manchuria | Huining, Zhongdu, Kaifeng | 1115 | 1234 | 119 | Also known as the Jurchens, were the ancestors of the Manchus who established the Qing dynasty. | |||
Jolof Empire | West Africa | Linguère | 1350 | 1549 | 199 | Also known as the Wollof Empire. Succeeded by the Kingdom of Jolof (1549–1875). | |||
Kaabu Empire | West Africa | Kansala | 1537 | 1867 | 330 | Also written Gabu, Ngabou, and N’Gabu'. | |||
Kalmar Union | Scandinavia | Roskilde then Copenhagen | 1397 | 1523 | 126 | Personal union of Denmark, Pomerania, Norway and Sweden. | Margaret I | Christian II | |
Kanem Empire | Chad | Njimi | 700 | 1387 | 687 | ||||
Kanva dynasty | India | Pataliputra, Vidisha | 75 BC | 30 BC | 45 | Replaced the Shunga Empire. | |||
Kara-Khanid Khanate | Turkistan | Kashgar | 840 | 1212 | 372 | First Turkic dynasty to embrace Islam. | |||
Khazar Khaganate | Pontic steppe, North Caucasus | Balanjar, later Atil | 700 | 1000 | 300 | Founded by Western Turks, the members of the royal family embraced Judaism. | |||
Khmer Empire | Cambodia | Hariharalaya (802–889), Angkor (889–1431) | 802 | 1431 | 629 | Succeeded from the kingdom of Chenla. | |||
Khilji dynasty | Afghanistan | Kabul, Delhi | 1290 | 1320 | 30 | ||||
Khwarazmian dynasty | Persia | Urgench | 1077 | 1221 | 144 | ||||
Konbaung dynasty | Myanmar | Mandalay | 1752 | 1885 | 133 | ||||
Kong Empire | West Africa | Kong | 1710 | 1898 | 188 | Also known as the Wattara Empire or Ouattara Empire. | |||
Korean Empire | Korean Peninsula | Hanseong | 1897 | 1910 | 13 | Was the last ruling Korean dynasties. | |||
Kushan Empire | Afghanistan | Various, including Mathura, Peshawar, Begram, Taxila | 30 | 345 | 315 | ||||
Kingdom of Kush | Northeast Africa, Nubia | Napata, Meroe | 1070 BC | 350 | 1420 | ||||
Lakota people | Great Plains | Great winter camps | 1700 | 1877 | 177 | Main Native power in North America until Black Hills annexation by United States. | |||
Latin Empire | Thrace, Asia Minor | Constantinople | 1204 | 1261 | 57 | See also Latinokratia. | |||
Later Lê dynasty | Vietnam | Đông Kinh | 1428 | 1789 | 361 | ||||
Liao dynasty | China | Shangjing | 915 | 1125 | 210 | ||||
Lodi Sultanate | Afghanistan | Delhi | 1451 | 1526 | 75 | ||||
Macedonian Empire | Macedonian Kingdom | Pella | 334 BC | 323 BC | 11 | Founded by Alexander the Great. | |||
Madurai Nayak dynasty | South India | Madurai, | 1529 | 1736 | 207 | Branched out from the Vijayanagara Empire by Viswanatha Nayak. | |||
Majapahit Empire | Indonesian Archipelago | Majapahit, Wilwatikta | 1293 | 1527 | 234 | Founded by Raden Wijaya. | |||
Mali Empire | West Africa | Niani, later Ka-ba | 1235 | 1610 | 375 | A Mandinka empire founded by Sundiata Keita. | |||
Mamluk Sultanate | Egypt, Syria | Cairo | 1250 | 1517 | 267 | See also Islamic Empire. | |||
Manchukuo | Manchuria | Hsinking | 1932 | 1945 | 13 | Created as a puppet state of the Japanese Empire, with Emperor Puyi (the last emperor of the Qing dynasty) installed as nominal regent and emperor. | |||
Maratha Empire | India | Raigad, later Satara | 1674 | 1818 | 144 | Founded by Shivaji Maharaj, also known as the Maratha Confederacy. | |||
Marinid dynasty | Morocco | Fes | 1244 | 1465 | 221 | ||||
Massina Empire | West Africa | Hamdullahi | 1820 | 1862 | 42 | ||||
Mauryan Empire | Ancient India | Pataliputra | 321 BC | 185 BC | 136 | Founded by Chandragupta Maurya. The Mauryan Empire became the largest ever Indian empire under Ashoka. | |||
Median Empire | Persia | Ecbatana | 625 BC | 549 BC | 76 | First Iranian empire, Founded by Deioces. | |||
First Mexican Empire | Mexico | Mexico City | 1821 | 1823 | 2 | Preceded the Second Mexican Empire which was short lived (1864–1867). See also Mexican Imperial Orders. | |||
Second Mexican Empire | Mexico | Mexico City | 1864 | 1867 | 3 | Succeeded the First Mexican Empire which was short lived (1821–1823). See also Mexican Imperial Orders. | |||
Ming dynasty | China | Nanjing (1368–1421), Beijing (1421–1644) | 1368 | 1644 | 276 | Founded by Zhu Yuanzhang the Great Marshal. | |||
Mitanni Empire | Syria, Iran, Iraq, Turkey | Washukanni | 1500 BC | 1300 BC | 200 | ||||
Mongol Empire | Mongolia | Karakorum | 1206 | 1368 | 162 | Split into four empires (Yuan dynasty, Ilkhanate, Chagatai Khanate and Golden Horde). Largest contiguous land empire. | |||
Mughal Empire | India | Agra, Delhi | 1526 | 1758 | 232 | Founded by Babur. "Mughal" is a Persian word for the Mongols. | |||
Nanda Empire | India | Pataliputra | 450 BC | 350 BC | 100 | ||||
Neo-Babylonian Empire | Mesopotamia | Babylon | 626 BC | 539 BC | 87 | See also Babylonia. | |||
Nguyễn dynasty | Vietnam | Phú Xuân | 1802 | 1945 | 143 | Was the last ruling Vietnamese dynasty. | |||
North Sea Empire | Denmark | Ribe | 1016 | 1035 | 19 | As one historian put it: "When the 11th century began its fourth decade, Canute was, with the single exception of the Emperor, the most imposing ruler in Latin Christendom. ... [H]e was lord of four important realms and the overlord of other kingdoms. Though technically Canute was counted among the kings, his position among his fellow-monarchs was truly imperial. Apparently he held in his hands the destinies of two great regions: the British Isles and the Scandinavian peninsulas. His fleet all but controlled two important seas, the North and the Baltic. He had built an Empire."[4] | |||
Empire of Nicaea | Bithynia | Nicaea | 1204 | 1261 | 57 | Successor state of the Byzantine Empire. | |||
Northern Yuan dynasty | Mongolia, North China | Shangdu, Yingchang, Karakorum | 1368 | 1635 | 267 | Created after the expulsion of the Yuan dynasty from China proper in 1368. | |||
Omani Empire | Oman | Muscat | 1698 | 1856 | 158 | See Oman. | |||
Ottoman Empire | Anatolia | Söğüt, Bursa, Edirne, İstanbul | 1299 | 1922 | 623 | Predecessor of the Republic of Turkey. | Osman I | Mehmed VI | |
Oyo Empire | Southwestern Nigeria | Oyo-Ile | 1400 | 1905 | 505 | ||||
Pagan Empire | Myanmar | Bagan | 849 | 1297 | 448 | ||||
Pahlavi dynasty | Persia | Tehran | 1925 | 1979 | 54 | The last Imperial dynasty of the Persian Empire. | |||
Pala Empire | India | Pataliputra | 750 | 1174 | 424 | ||||
Palmyrene Empire | Syria | Palmyra | 270 | 273 | 3 | Broke off from the Roman Empire during the Crisis of the Third Century. | |||
Pandyan dynasty | South India | Madurai, Korkai, Tenkasi, Tirunelveli | 500 BC | 1759[5] | 2259 | A Tamil dynasty which includes Early Pandyas(possible sunken continent,Kumari Kandam), First Empire, Second Empire and Later Pandyas of Tenkasi and Tirunelveli. | |||
Parthian Empire | Persia | Various, including Asaak, Hecatompylos, Ecbatana, Ctesiphon, Nisa | 247 BC | 224 | 471 | Third Iranian empire, Founded by Arsaces I. | |||
Pontic Empire | Pontus | Amaseia, Sinope | 120 BC | 47 BC | 73 | Mithridates VI had the title: King of Kings. | |||
Portuguese Empire | Portugal | Lisbon, Rio de Janeiro (1815–1821) | 1415 | 1999 | 584 | It was one of the first global empires and one of the longest lived of the colonial Western European empires. See also United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves. | João I | Maunel II | |
Kingdom of Prussia | Germany | Berlin | 1701 | 1871 | 170 | Was a great power during the 18th century. Unificated Germany after the War of 1870 against France. | Frederick III | Wilhelm II | |
Ptolemaic Empire | Egypt | Alexandria | 305 BC | 30 BC | 275 | See also Diadochi. | |||
Qajar dynasty | Persia | Tehran | 1794 | 1925 | 131 | ||||
Qin dynasty | China | Xianyang | 221 BC | 206 BC | 15 | First dynasty of the imperial period. | |||
Qing dynasty | China | Shenyang, Beijing | 1644 | 1912 | 268 | Last dynasty of the imperial period. | |||
Ramnad Sethupathis | India | Ramanathapuram | 1590 | 1979 | 389 | ||||
Rashidun Caliphate | Saudi Arabia | Medina, Kufa | 632 | 661 | 29 | Predecessor of the Umayyad Caliphate, See also Islamic Empire. | Abu Bakr | Hassan | |
Rashtrakuta dynasty | India | Manyakheta | 753 | 982 | 229 | ||||
Roman Empire | Italy | Rome, Milan, Ravenna | 27 BC | 395 | 422 | Together with the Roman Kingdom, the Roman Republic, direct Roman states lasted from 753 BC until 1453 AD, 1229 years. Formed from the Roman Republic as a consequence of the dictatorship and political assassination of Julius Caesar. The Empire was divided into the Western Roman Empire and the Eastern Roman/Byzantine Empire in 395 AD, although the latter is usually considered to have become a sort of distinct civilization. However, given that this half of the Empire fell only in 1453 AD, this extends the whole year count to 2206 years. | Octavianus Augustus | Theodosius I (undivided) Romulus Augustus (Western) |
|
Rouran Khaganate | Inner China | Not specified | 330 | 555 | 225 | ||||
Rozwi Empire | Southern Africa | Danangombe | 1660 | 1866 | 206 | ||||
Russian Empire (Romanov) | Russia | Saint Petersburg | 1721 | 1917 | 196 | Successor state of the Tsardom of Russia. | Peter The Great | Nicolas II | |
Saadi dynasty | Morocco | Marrakech | 1554 | 1659 | 105 | Sharifian Empire of Morocco who destroyed the Songhai Empire. | |||
Safavid dynasty | Persia | Tabriz, Qazvin, Esfahan | 1501 | 1736 | 235 | ||||
Saffarid dynasty | Persia | Zaranj | 867 | 1002 | 135 | ||||
Sassanid dynasty | Persia | Ctesiphon | 224 | 651 | 427 | Fourth Iranian Empire. | |||
Satavahana dynasty | India | Amaravathi village, Guntur district Dharanikota | 230 BC | 220 | 450 | An Andhra dynasty which preceded the Vengi dynasty of Andhra. | |||
Samanid Empire | Persia | Balkh, Bukhara | 819 | 999 | 180 | ||||
Duchy of Savoy | Savoy | Chambéry then Turin | 1416 | 1713 | 297 | Theorically member state of Holy Roman Empire then vassal of France. Ruled a territory from Romandy to Nice. | |||
Seleucid Empire | Persia, Mesopotamia, Syria | Seleucia, Antioch | 312 BC | 63 BC | 249 | See also Diadochi. | |||
Serbian Empire | Balkans (Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, Epirus, Thessaly, Albania) | Skopje, Prizren | 1346 | 1371 | 25 | Founded by Stephen Uroš IV (Dušan the Mighty), fell into feudal disarray after his death. | |||
Shu Han | China | Chengdu | 221 | 263 | 42 | See also Three Kingdoms. | |||
Siam Empire | Thailand | Bangkok | 1782 | 1932 | 150 | ||||
Sikh Empire | Punjab region | Lahore | 1733 | 1849 | 116 | Preceded the Punjab Province of British India in the Indian subcontinent. | |||
Sokoto Caliphate | West Africa | Sokoto (1804–1850), (1851–1902), Gudu (1804), Birnin Konni (1850, 1903) | 1804 | 1903 | 99 | ||||
Song dynasty | China | Bianjing (960–1127), Lin'an (1127–1279) | 960 | 1279 | 319 | Founded by Zhao Kuangyin. | |||
Songhai Empire | West Africa | Gao | 1340 | 1591 | 251 | Former vassal of the Mali Empire which became one of the largest African empires in history. | |||
Spanish Empire | Iberian Peninsula | Madrid | 1479 | 1975 | 496 | Was founded with Columbus’s funding, by the Catholic monarchs of Castille and Aragon, to his first voyage (that would land in America). | Ferdinand V & Isabella I | Fransisco Franco | |
Srivijaya Empire | Indonesian Archipelago | Palembang, Mataram | 683 | 1293 | 610 | It was a powerful ancient thalassocratic Malay empire based on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia, then based on Mataram (Medang Kingdom) under Sailendra's dynasty. | |||
Sui dynasty | China | Chang'an | 581 | 618 | 37 | ||||
Wadiyar dynasty (Kingdom of Mysore) | Mysuru, Karnataka | Yaduraya Wodeyar | 1399 | 1950 | 551 | ||||
Shunga Empire | India | Pataliputra, Vidisa | 185 BC | 73 BC | 112 | Magadha dynasty that controlled North-central and Eastern India. | |||
Swedish Empire | Sweden | Stockholm | 1611 | 1721 | 110 | See also Swedish overseas colonies. | |||
Tahirid dynasty | Persia | Nishapur | 821 | 873 | 52 | ||||
Tang dynasty | China | Chang'an (618–904), Luoyang (904–907) | 618 | 907 | 289 | Founded By Li Yuan (aka. Emperor Gaozu of Tang). | |||
Thanjavur Nayak dynasty | South India | Thanjavur | 1532 | 1673 | 141 | Founded by Sevappa Nayak. | |||
Tây Sơn dynasty | Vietnam | Phú Xuân | 1778 | 1802 | 24 | ||||
Empire of Thessalonica | Epirus, Kingdom of Thessalonica | Thessaloniki | 1224 | 1246 | 22 | Evolved from the Despotate of Epirus. | |||
Third Reich | Germany | Berlin, Hamburg (1933–1945), Flensburg (1945) | 1933 | 1945 | 12 | Nazi Germany signed a treaty (Tripartite Pact) with the Japanese and Italian Empire. Only lasted at its height from winter 1941-42 when the Soviet Union started counterattacks. | Adolf Hitler | General Alfred Jodl (Signed surrender terms on May 7, 1945)[6] | |
Tibetan Empire | Tibet | Lhasa | 755 | 842 | 87 | Expansion of Tibet started ~626. The death of the last leader lead to a civil war which destroyed the empire.[7] | Trisong Dretsen | Tsenpo Langadarma | |
Tondo dynasty | Philippines | Tondo | 900 | 1587 | 687 | ||||
Timurid Empire | Uzbekistan, Persia and Central Asia | Samarkand, Herat | 1370 | 1526 | 156 | Persianized form of the Mongolian word kürügän, Turko-Mongol Empire. | |||
Tlemcen | Algeria | Tlemcen | 1235 | 1556 | 321 | Zayyanid dynasty | |||
Empire of Trebizond | Pontus | Trebizond | 1204 | 1461 | 257 | Successor state of the Byzantine Empire and a client state of the Kingdom of Georgia. | |||
Toltec Empire | Mesoamerica | Tollan-Xicocotitlan | 496 | 1122 | 626 | Ce Técpatl Mixcoatl or Huémac (Unsure/potentially mythical) | Topiltzin or Huemac (Accounts differ) | ||
Toungoo dynasty | Toungoo | Myanmar | 1510 | 1752 | 242 | The largest empire ever formed in South East Asia’s history. | |||
Toucouleur Empire | West Africa | Ségou | 1848 | 1893 | 45 | ||||
Tu'i Tonga Empire | Tonga, Pacific Ocean | Mu'a | 950 | 1865 | 915 | See History of Tonga. | |||
Turgesh Khaganate | Turkistan | Balasagun | 699 | 766 | 67 | Founded as a successor of West Turkish empire. | |||
Umayyad Caliphate | Syria | Damascus, Córdoba (capital-in-exile) | 661 | 750 | 89 | Successor of the Rashidun Caliphate, See also Islamic Empire. | |||
Uyunid Emirate | Arabian | Al-Hasa, Qatif | 1076 | 1253 | 177 | The Uyunids were a Sunni Arab dynasty that ruled Bahrain for 163 years, from the 11th to the 13th centuries. | |||
Uyghur Khaganate | Central Asia | Ordubaliq | 742 | 848 | 106 | 742–848 Founded as a successor of Göktürk Khaganate, 848–1036 Gansu state, 856–1209 Turfan state. | |||
Vijayanagara Empire | Karnataka, India | Vijayanagara | 1336 | 1646 | 310 | A Kannada kingdown, where Gold use to be traded in streets, most richest kingdom in the world. | |||
Republic of Venice | Italy | Venice | 697 | 1797 | 1100 | Major great power during the Middle Ages and the Early modern period. | |||
Wari Empire | Peru, Bolivia | Huari/Tiwanaku | 500 | 1100 | 600 | It is a matter of conflict as to whether it was a real organized state that could be called an empire. If so, it would be considered the first empire in the Americas. | |||
Wassoulou Empire | West Africa | Bissandugu | 1878 | 1895 | 17 | Also known as the Mandinka Empire. | |||
Western Chalukya Empire | South India | Manyakheta, Basavakalyan | 973 | 1189 | 216 | ||||
Western Roman Empire | Italy | Mediolanum, Ravenna | 395 | 476 | 81 | The western half of the Roman Empire. | |||
Eastern Wu | China | Wuchang, Jianye | 229 | 280 | 51 | See also Three Kingdoms. | |||
Western Xia dynasty | China | Xingqing | 1038 | 1227 | 189 | Also called the Tangut dynasty. | |||
Xin dynasty | China | Chang'an | 9 | 23 | 14 | The Xin dynasty had only one ruling emperor. | |||
Yuan dynasty | China, Mongolia | Dadu | 1271 | 1368 | 97 | Division of the Mongol Empire. The Yuan emperors had nominal supremacy over western khanates. | |||
Zand dynasty | Persia | Shiraz | 1750 | 1794 | 44 | ||||
Zhou dynasty | China | Fenghao, Wangcheng, Chengzhou | 1046 BC | 256 BC | 790 | Zenith of bronze age in China. | |||
Zulu Empire | South Africa | KwaBulawayo, Ulundi | 1818 | 1897 | 79 |
Possible and informal empires
These governments, confederations and other entities have sometimes been informally referred to as "empires". Some did not fit the modern definition of empire (e.g. the Delian League), some were self-proclaimed by their first and often last ruler, others were short-lived attempts to turn an existing government into an empire, and there are also instances of the word "empire" being used to refer to unofficial spheres of influence which do not consider themselves empires.
"Empire" | Origin | Capital | From | To | Duration | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
American Empire | United States | Washington, D.C. | 1776 | Present | 244 | The concept of an American Empire was first popularized during the presidency of James K. Polk who led the United States into the Mexican–American War of 1846. In recent times the concept has been revived to refer to the sphere of influence of the United States by its critics. |
Athenian Empire (Delian League) | Ancient Greece | Delos island | 478 BC | 404 BC | 74 | Also known as the Delian League. It was an association of Greek city-states. |
Second Athenian League | Ancient Greece | Athens | 378 BC | 355 BC | 23 | Second Athenian League, headed by Athens primarily for self-defense against the growth of Sparta and the Persian Empire. |
Central African Empire | Central African Republic | Bangui | 1976 | 1979 | 3 | President Jean-Bédel Bokassa declared himself Emperor Bokassa I in 1976. Along he proclaiming the empire as a constitutional monarchy. The Central African Empire was a hypothetical empire in Africa. |
United Arab Emirates | Emirates of the United Arab Emirates | Abu Dhabi | 1971 | Present | 48 | |
Empire of China | China | Beijing | 1915 | 1916 | 1 | Was a short-lived attempt by Yuan Shikai to reinstate the Imperial Monarchy. |
First Empire of Haiti | Haiti | Port-au-Prince | 1804 | 1806 | 2 |
First Haitian Empire, Jean-Jacques Dessalines declared himself Emperor Jacques I. |
Second Empire of Haiti | Haiti | Port-au-Prince | 1849 | 1859 | 10 |
Second Haitian Empire, Faustin Soulouque is proclaimed Emperor Faustin I. |
European Union (EU) | Various member nations | No capital as it is a political, economic, and military alliance between the member nations.
If there were a capital it would be Brussels or Strasbourg. |
1993 | Present | 27 | The EU is a political, economic, and military alliance between the member nations which adhere to certain centralized law-sets and has its own governmental positions. While the EU isn't considered an empire, it still has a large amount of political and economic sway (GDP of $18.292 trillion in 2019) in the world such as bailing out member states in Bankruptcy (Greece) and standing as a militaristic unity to curb aggressive powers such as Russia
The EU is comparable to the US except far less centralized in government. The EU has often been referred to as "The Fourth Reich" to critics due to the large political and economic influence of Germany. |
Grand Duchy of Lithuania | Lithuania | Vilnius | 1200 | 1569 | 369 | It was the largest state in Europe in the 15th century. |
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth | Poland, Lithuania | Kraków | 1569 | 1795 | 226 | It was formed by the Union of Lublin in 1569, between the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. It was one of the largest and one of the most populous countries of 16th and 17th-century Europe, with some 390,000 square miles (1,000,000 km2) and a multi-ethnic population of 11 million at its peak in the early 17th century.[8][9][10][11][12][13] |
Roman Republic | Italy | Rome | 509 BC | 27 BC | 482 | Predecessor of the Roman Empire. Technically a Republic, had imperial holdings throughout its existence. |
Kingdom of Romania | Romania | Bucharest | 1920 | 1944 | 24 | Following the post–World War I treaties that ratified its borders (the last one being the 1920 Treaty of Trianon), the newly-enlarged Romanian monarchy was rated by the Comintern as a multi-national imperial state that subjugated ethnic minorities.[14][15] Indeed, according to the 1930 Romanian census, just over 28% of Romania's inhabitants were not ethnic Romanians. Non-Romanians formed the majority in 14 out of Romania's 71 counties. In 11 Romanian counties, Romanians formed less than 40% of the population: Caliacra (22.6% Romanians), Cernăuți (21.8% Romanians), Cetatea Albă (18.5% Romanians), Ciuc (14.4% Romanians), Durostor (19% Romanians), Hotin (35% Romanians), Ismail (31.9% Romanians), Odorhei (4.9% Romanians), Storojineț (33.9% Romanians), Timiș-Torontal (37.6% Romanians) and Trei Scaune (16% Romanians).
The issue of "Romanian imperialism" (as Romanian leading politician Iuliu Maniu put it) was further exacerbated by the 1941 creation of the Romanian Transnistria Governorate from parts of the Ukrainian SSR, under the rule of "Conducător" Ion Antonescu.[16] These new borders lasted until 1944. According to the 1941 Romanian census, 21 out of the now 73 Romanian counties were inhabited by a non-Romanian ethnic majority, including all of the 13 Transnistrian counties (the entire Transnistrian region was over 75% Ukrainian). Two of the 21 counties did have Romanian plurality (meaning that the Romanians were the largest ethnic group, but still less than half of the county population). |
Soviet Empire | Soviet Union (U.S.S.R: Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) | Moscow | 1922 | 1991 | 69 | A political term for the sphere of influence of the Soviet Union used by its critics. March 8, 1983 Ronald Reagan declared the Soviet Union to be an "Evil Empire" |
See also
References
- Friends Of The British Overseas Territories
- "Koguryŏ". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2019-07-26.
- "Chronological table 5 1 December 1946 – 23 June 1947". National Diet Library. Retrieved September 30, 2010.
- Larson, Laurence M (1912). Canute the Great, 995(Circ)–1035, and the Rise of Danish Imperialism During the Viking Age. Putnam.
- Sethuraman, N. (1993). The Later Pandyas (1371 - 1759 AD). Tiruchirapalli: The Epigraphical Society of India.
- https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/germany-surrenders-unconditionally-to-the-allies-at-reims#:~:text=On%20May%207%2C%201945%2C%20the,at%20Reims%2C%20in%20northeastern%20France. Missing or empty
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(help) - "The Rise and Fall of the Tibetan Empire".
- Davies, Norman (1996). Europe: A History. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 554. ISBN 978-0-19-820171-7.
Poland-Lithuania was another country which experienced its 'Golden Age' during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. The realm of the last Jagiellons was absolutely the largest state in Europe.
- Wandycz, Piotr Stefan (2001). The Price of Freedom: A History of East Central Europe from the Middle Ages to the Present (2nd ed.). London [u.a.]: Routledge. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-415-25491-5.
The multinational character of the Habsburg monarchy was comparable to that of the Commonwealth [...]
- McKenna, Amy, ed. (2014). Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland. The Britannica Guide to Countries of the European Union. Chicago: Britannica Educational Publishing. p. 203. ISBN 978-1-61530-991-7.
Lithuania was also a powerful empire and dominated much of eastern Europe in the 14th–16th centuries in close alignment with Poland; then, from 1569, it was part of a confederation with Poland [...]
- Lozny, Ludomir (2005). "Poland". In Skutsch, Carl (ed.). Encyclopedia of the World's Minorities. 3. New York [u.a.]: Routledge. p. 963. ISBN 978-1-135-19388-1.
It was indeed an Eastern European empire, a multiethnic and multicultural state with great economic strength and strong military power, controlling most of central and eastern European politics.
- Kupisz, Dariusz (2012). "The Polish-Lithuanian Army in the Reign of King Stefan Bathory (1576–1586)". In Davies, Brian L. (ed.). Warfare in Eastern Europe, 1500–1800. History of Warfare. 72. Boston: Brill. p. 63. ISBN 978-90-04-22196-3.
In terms of territorial expanse in Europe the Polish-Lithuanian state was surpassed only by Russia and the Ottoman Empire and in respect to population was behind only France, Spain, and the German Empire.
- Davies, Brian L. (2011). Empire and Military Revolution in Eastern Europe: Russia's Turkish Wars in the Eighteenth Century. Continuum Studies in Military History. London [u.a.]: Continuum. p. 29. ISBN 978-1-4411-7004-0.
Poland-Lithuania had entered the seventeenth century as one of the great powers in Eastern Europe.
- van de Grift, Liesbeth (2012). Securing the Communist State: The Reconstruction of Coercive Institutions in the Soviet Zone of Germany and Romania, 1944–1948. The Harvard Cold War Studies Book Series. Lanham: Lexington Books. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-7391-7178-3.
- Fehér, Ferenc; Arato, Andrew, eds. (1991). Crisis and Reform in Eastern Europe. Transaction Publishers. p. 162. ISBN 978-0-88738-311-3.
- Deletant, Dennis (2006). Hitler's Forgotten Ally: Ion Antonescu and his Regime, Romania 1940–1944. Springer. pp. 85, 267.
External links
- Pella, John & Erik Ringmar, History of International Relations Open Textbook Project, Cambridge: Open Book, forthcoming.