ENVER, TALAT & JEMAL: THE THREE PASHAS
ATATÜRK
PICASSO
ROOSEVELT
MUSSOLINI
TOJO
BEN-GURION
HITLER
NEHRU
BULGAKOV
FRANCO
MAO ZEDONG
ISAAC BABEL
YEZHOV
ZHUKOV
CAPONE
BERIA
HEMINGWAY
HIMMLER & HEYDRICH
KHOMEINI
ORWELL
DENG XIAOPING
DUVALIER
SCHINDLER
HOXHA OF ALBANIA
KIM IL SUNG & KIM JONG IL
ODETTE SANSOM
JFK
NASSER, SADAT, MUBARAK
THE CEAUŞESCUS OF ROMANIA
MANDELA
THE SHAH OF IRAN
JOHN PAUL II
SAKHAROV
NGUEMA
POL POT
IDI AMIN
THATCHER
ANNE FRANK
GORBACHEV & YELTSIN
ELVIS
SADDAM HUSSEIN
KADAFFI
MUHAMMAD ALI
AUNG SAN SUU KYI
ESCOBAR
OSAMA BIN LADEN
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thank you to David North, Mark Smith, Patrick Carpenter and my editor, Josh Ireland, at Quercus; to my fellow contributors Dan Jones, Claudia Renton, John Bew and Martyn Frampton, all gifted historians; my agent Georgina Capel, Anthony Cheetham, Slav Todorov, Richard Milbank, Mark Hawkins-Dady; Professor F. M. Eloischari; Robert Hardman, Jonathan Foreman. And, above all, my darling children Lily and Sasha and my wife Santa.
INTRODUCTION
When I was a child, I read a short article—like one of those contained in this book—about the sinister world of Josef Stalin. It fascinated me enough to make me read more on the subject. Many years later, I found myself working in the Russian archives to research my first book on Stalin. My aim is that these short biographies will encourage and inspire readers to find out more about these extraordinary individuals—the men and women who created the world we live in today.
But history is not just the drama of the terrible and thrilling events of times gone by: we must understand our past to understand our present and future. “Who controls the past controls the future,” wrote George Orwell, author of
At the time that Hitler came to order the slaughter of European Jewry in the Holocaust, he was encouraged by the Ottoman massacres of the Armenians during the First World War: “Who now remembers the Armenians?” he mused. The Armenian massacres feature in this book. When Stalin ordered the Great Terror, he looked back to the atrocities of his hero, Ivan the Terrible: “Who now remembers the nobles killed by Ivan the Terrible?” he asked his henchmen. Ivan the Terrible too is in this book. And Mao Zedong, as he unleashed waves of mass killings on China, was inspired by the First Emperor, another character who can be found in this book’s pages.
This is a collection of biographies of individuals who have each somehow changed the course of world events. This list can never be either complete or quite satisfactory: I have chosen the names; thus the list is totally subjective. There may be names you think are missing and others whose very inclusion you question: that is the fun and frustration of lists. You will find familiar names here—Elvis Presley, Jack Kennedy, Jesus Christ, Bismarck and Winston Churchill for example—but also many you may not know. Our modern world is dominated by the Near and Far East so that in this book you will not just find “traditional” leaders such as Henry VIII or George Washington but also the creators of the rising powers of today: Ayatollah Khomeini, Supreme Leader of Islamic Iran, Deng, who forged modern China, King Ibn Saud, founder of Saudi Arabia.