List of assassinated and executed heads of state and government

The following is a chronological list of notable heads of governments and heads of state whose deaths have resulted from assassination or execution.

This list considers only the incumbent head of state or government.

List

Target Title Date Place Country Assassin or other entity Ref
Rimush King of Akkad 2270 BCE Akkadian Empire His courtiers. [1]
Ashur-nadin-apli King of Assyria 1194 BCE Middle Assyrian Empire Ashur-nirari III [2]
Simbar-shipak King of Babylon 1008 BCE Babylonia Ea-mukin-zeri [3]
Ea-mukin-zeri 1008 BCE Kashshu-nadin-ahi [4]
Kashshu-nadin-ahi 1005 BCE Eulmash-shakin-shumi [5]
Titus Tatius King of the Sabines 748 BCE Rome Roman Kingdom Romulus [6]
Ashur-nirari V King of Assyria 745 BCE Neo-Assyrian Empire Tiglath-Pileser III [7]
Nabu-nadin-zeri King of Babylon 732 BCE Babylonia Killed in an insurrection by Nabu-suma-ukin II. [8]
Nabu-suma-ukin II 732 BCE Nabu-mukin-zeri [9]
Nabu-mukin-zeri 729 BCE Babylon Killed during the Assyrian conquest of Babylon by Tiglath-Pileser III. [10]
Shalmaneser V King of Assyria 722 BCE Neo-Assyrian Empire Sargon II [11]
Ashur-nadin-shumi King of Babylon 694 BCE Elam Elamites, who installed Nergal-ushezib as King. [12]
Mushezib-Marduk 689 BCE Babylon Murdered during Sennacherib's sack of Babylon.
Sennacherib King of Assyria 681 BCE Nineveh Arda-Mulissu [13]
Lucius Tarquinius Priscus King of Rome 579 BCE Rome Roman Kingdom The sons of Ancus Marcius
Labashi-Marduk King of Babylon 556 BCE Neo-Babylonian Empire Nabonidus and Belshazzar, in concert with the nobles of the court. [14]
Phalaris Tyrant of Agrigento 554 BCE Agrigento Acragas Telemachus
Servius Tullius King of Rome 535 BCE Rome Roman Kingdom Lucius Tarquinius Superbus [15]
Hipparchus Tyrant of Athens 514 BCE Athens Athens Harmodius and Aristogeiton [16]
Xerxes I Achaemenid King of Kings August 465 BCE Persia  Achaemenid Persia Artabanus, commander of the royal bodyguard [17]
Xerxes II 424 BCE Persepolis Sogdianus, Xerxes' half-brother [18]
Sogdianus 423 BCE Darius II, Sogdianus' half-brother [18]
Dion Tyrant of Syracuse 354 BCE Syracuse, Sicily Syracuse Calippus [19]
Calippus 352 BCE Leptines II [20]
Philip II King of Macedon 30 October 336 BCE Aigai Macedonia Pausanias of Orestis (personal bodyguard) [21]
Arses Achaemenid King of Kings 336 BCE  Achaemenid Persia Bagoas [22]
Seleucus I Nicator Seleucid Basileus September 281 BCE Lysimachia, Thrace Seleucid Empire Ptolemy Ceraunus [23]
Antiochus II Theos Seleucid Basileus July 246 BCE Anatolia Laodice I [24]
Lord Chunshen Prime Minister of Chu 238 BCE Shouchun Chu Li Yuan (李園) [25]
Seleucus III Ceraunus Seleucid Basileus June 223 BCE Anatolia Seleucid Empire Members of his army [26]
Nabis King of Sparta 192 BCE Sparta Sparta Aetolian League [27]
Brihadratha Maurya Mauryan Emperor 180 BCE Pataliputra Maurya Empire Pushyamitra Shunga [28]
Seleucus IV Philopator Seleucid Basileus 3 September 175 BCE Coele-Syria Seleucid Empire Heliodorus [29]
Alexander Balas August 145 BCE Afrin River Zabdiel [30]
Antiochus VI Dionysus 142 BCE Coele-Syria Diodotus Tryphon [31]
Hiempsal I King of Numidia 117 BCE Cirta Numidia Jugurtha [32][33]
Julius Caesar Dictator of Rome 15 March 44 BCE Rome  Roman Republic Liberatores [34]
Caligula Emperor of Rome 24 January 41  Roman Empire Praetorian Guard [35]
Claudius 13 October 54 Agrippina the Younger [36][37]
Galba 15 January 69 Praetorian Guard under orders from Otho [38]
Vitellius 22 December 69 Murdered by Vespasian's troops. [39]
Domitian 18 September 96 Stephanus, steward to Julia Flavia [40]
Commodus 31 December 192 Narcissus [41][42]
Pertinax 28 March 193 Praetorian Guard [43]
Didius Julianus 1 June 193 [44]
Geta 26 December 211 Centurions under orders of Caracalla [45]
Caracalla 8 April 217 Near Carrhae Justin Martialis, at instigation of Macrinus [46]
Macrinus and Diadumenian Co-Emperors of Rome 8 June 218 Cappadocia Forces of Elagabalus [47][48][49]
Elagabalus Emperor of Rome 11 March 222 Rome Praetorian Guard under orders of Julia Maesa and Julia Mamaea [50]
Severus Alexander 19 March 235 Mainz, Germania Superior Legio XXII Primigenia [51]
Maximinus Thrax May 238 Aquileia Soldiers of the Legio II Parthica [52]
Pupienus and Balbinus Co-Emperors of Rome 29 July 238 Rome Praetorian Guard
Gordian III Emperor of Rome 20 February 244 Circesium His own army [53]
Philip the Arab and Philip II Co-Emperors of Rome September 249 Verona and Rome respectively Philip I was betrayed by Decius and killed as a result of a Battle of Verona, Philip II was then murdered by the Praetorian guard. [54][55]
Volusianus and Trebonianus Gallus August 253 Terni Assassinated by their own centurions, in favour of Aemilian. [56]
Aemilianus Emperor of Rome September 253 Spoleto Assassinated by his own troops. [56]
Saloninus 260 Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium Revolting troops, led by Postumus
Gallienus September 268 Mediolanum Aurelius Heraclianus [57]
Postumus Emperor of Gall 269 Mainz Gallic Empire His own troops [58][59]
Marcus Aurelius Marius Mid 269 Trier Victorinus [60]
Victorinus Early 271 Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium Attitianus, one of his soldiers. [61]
Aurelian Emperor of Rome 25 September 275 Çorlu  Roman Empire Mucapor and members of the Praetorian Guard
Florianus September 276 Tarsus Centurions [62][63]
Probus September 282 Sirmium His own soldiers [64]
Numerian 20 November 284 Homs Lucius Flavius Aper [65]
Carinus July 285 River Margus, Moesia Titus Claudius Aurelius Aristobulus [66]
Carausius Emperor of Britannia 293 Britannia Allectus [67]
Bunseo King of Baekje 304 Lelang Commandery Baekje Hwang-Chang-Lang
Constans Emperor of Rome February 350 Elne, Gaul  Roman Empire Magnentius [68]
Gratian 25 August 383 Lyon Andragathius [69][70]
Magnus Maximus and Victor Co-Emperors of Rome 28 August 388 Aquileia and Trier respectively Theodosius I and Arbogast respectively [71][72]
Valentinian II Emperor of Rome 15 May 392 Vienne Arbogast [73]
Eugenius Western Roman Emperor 6 September 394 Frigidus River Western Roman Empire Theodosius I [74]
Constantine III and Constans II Co-Western Roman Emperors c. 18 September 411 Ravenna and Vienne respectively Constantius III and Gerontius respectively [75][76]
Joannes Western Roman Emperor June 425 Aquileia Ardabur [77]
Valentinian III 16 March 455 Rome Followers of Flavius Aetius [78]
Ankō Emperor of Japan 456 Kofun Japan Mayowa no Ōkimi [79]
Majorian Western Roman Emperor 7 August 461 Tortona Western Roman Empire Ricimer [80]
Libius Severus 15 August 465 Rome [81]
Anthemius 11 July 472 [82][83]
Julius Nepos 22 June 480 Salona Two retainers at the instigation of Glycerius [84]
Odoacer King of Italy 15 March 493 Ravenna Kingdom of Italy Theodoric [85][86]
Bahram Chobin Sasanian Shahanshah 591 Fergana Western Turkic Khaganate Assassinated under order of Khosrow II. [87]
Sushun Emperor of Japan 592 Asuka Japan Yamato no Aya no Ataikoma, under the orders of Soga no Umako
Yang Emperor of China April 11, 618 Danyang, Jiangsu Sui China Yuwen Huaji and other officials in a coup
Umar Caliph of the Rashidun Caliphate November 3, 644 Medina, Arabia Rashidun Caliphate Abu Lulu
Uthman June 17, 656 Egyptian rebels
Ali ibn Abi Talib January 29, 661 Kufa Abd-al-Rahman ibn Muljam
Wu Yuanheng Chancellor of the Tang dynasty July 13, 815 Chang'an Tang China Assassins sent by Li Shidao
John VIII Pope December 16, 882 Rome  Papal States Clerics
Wenceslaus I Duke of Bohemia September 28, 935 Brandýs nad Labem-Stará Boleslav  Bohemia Boleslaus I
Edmund I King of the English May 26, 946 Pucklechurch, Gloucestershire England Leofa, a convicted outlaw
Edward the Martyr March 18, 978 Wareham, Dorset Ælfthryth
Kenneth II King of Alba 995 Fettercairn Scotland Finella
Brian Boru High King of Ireland April 23, 1014 Clontarf, Dublin Ireland Brodir and Ospak of Man
Boniface III Margrave of Tuscany May 6, 1052 Oglio March of Tuscany Scarpetta Carnevari
Nizam al-Mulk Vizier of the Seljuk Empire October 14, 1092 Nahavand Seljuk Empire Order of Assassins
Conrad Bishop of Utrecht April 14, 1099 Utrecht Utrecht A Frisian
William II King of England August 2, 1100 The New Forest  England Henry I
Al-Afdal Shahanshah Vizier of the Fatimid Caliphate December 11, 1121 Fatimid Caliphate Order of Assassins
Charles I Count of Flanders March 2, 1127 Bruges  Flanders A group of knights answering to the Erembald family
Al-Amir bi-Ahkam Allah Caliph of the Fatimid Caliphate October 7, 1130 Cairo Fatimid Caliphate Order of Assassins
Al-Mustarshid Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate August 29, 1135 Hamadan Abbasid Caliphate Order of Assassins
Harald Gille King of Norway December 14, 1136 Bergen  Norway Sigurd Slembe
Eric the Memorable King of Denmark September 18, 1137 Urnohoved  Denmark Murdered by Sorte Plov during a Ting[88]
Ar-Rashid Caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate June 6, 1138 Isfahan Abbasid Caliphate Order of Assassins
Imad ad-Din Zengi Emir of the Zengid dynasty September 14, 1146 Qal'at Ja'bar Seljuk Empire Yarankash
Raymond II Count of Tripoli 1152 Tripoli County of Tripoli Order of Assassins
Sverker I King of Sweden December 25, 1156 Alvastra  Sweden A trusted servant
Canute IV Triachial King of Denmark August 9, 1157 Roskilde  Denmark Killed under the Roskilde Bloodbath[89]
Eric IX King of Sweden May 18, 1160 Uppsala  Sweden Magnus II
Charles VII April 12, 1167 Visingsö Supporters of Knut Eriksson
Alaungsithu King of Pagan 1167 Shwegugyi Temple Pagan Kingdom Narathu, his son
Conchobar Maenmaige Ua Conchobair King of Connacht 1189 Clanconway Kingdom of Connacht Assassins instigated by Conchobar ua nDiarmata
Conrad of Montferrat King of Jerusalem April 28, 1192 Acre  Kingdom of Jerusalem Order of Assassins
Han Tuozhou Grand Chancellor of the Song Dynasty 1207 Hangzhou Song Dynasty Shi Miyuan
Philip of Swabia King of Germany June 21, 1208 Bamburg, Franconia Kingdom of Germany Otto VIII, Count Palatine of Bavaria
Csépán Győr Palatine of Hungary 1209 Hungary Tiba Tomaj
Minamoto no Sanetomo Shōgun February 13, 1219 Tsurugaoka Hachimangū Kamakura shogunate Kugyō
Eric Ploughpenny King of Denmark August 10, 1250 Gottorf Castle  Denmark Abel of Denmark
Qutuz Sultan of Egypt October 24, 1260 Salihiyah Mamluk Sultanate Baibars
Eric Klipping King of Denmark November 22, 1286 Finderup, Viborg  Denmark unknown, believed to a conspiracy by Danish nobles
Ladislaus IV King of Hungary July 10, 1290 Körösszeg Hungary Three Cumans, named Árbóc, Törtel, and Kemence
Przemysł II King of Poland February 8, 1296 Rogoźno Kingdom of Poland Brandenburg assassins
Floris V Count of Holland June 27, 1296 Muiderberg Holland Gerard van Velsen
Wenceslaus III Duke of Bohemia August 4, 1306 Olomouc  Bohemia Unidentified assassin
Albert I King of Germany May 1, 1308 Windisch Further Austria John Parricida
Gegeen Khan Emperor of the Yuan Dynasty September 4, 1323 Nanpo Yuan dynasty Tegshi
Yagi Basti Ruler of Shiraz 1344 Tabriz Chobanid realm Malek Ashraf
Haidar Qassāb Head of the Sarbadars 1356 Sarbadar state Assassinated by a Turkish slave.
Peter the Cruel King of Castile March 23, 1369 Montiel Toledo Henry II
Murad I Sultan of The Ottoman Empire June 28, 1389 Kosovo Field  Serbia (Branković) Lazar Hrebeljanović
Louis I Duke of Orléans November 23, 1407 Le Marais  Orléans 15 masked assassins under the orders of John the Fearless
Gian Maria Visconti Duke of Milan May 16, 1412 Milan Milan Guelphs and Ghibellines
John the Fearless Duke of Burgundy September 10, 1419 Montereau-Fault-Yonne  Burgundy Tanneguy du Chastel
Ashikaga Yoshinori Shōgun July 12, 1441 Muromachi Japan Ashikaga shogunate Akamatsu Mitsusuke
Henry VI King of England May 21, 1471 Tower of London  England Edward IV
Giuliano de' Medici Lord of Florence April 26, 1478 Florence Cathedral  Florence Francesco de' Pazzi
James III King of Scotland June 11, 1488 Sauchieburn Scotland Rebels, led by James IV
Alessandro de' Medici Lord of Florence January 6, 1537 Florence  Florence Lorenzino de' Medici
Francisco Pizarro Governor of New Castile June 26, 1541 Lima Spanish New Castile Diego de Almagro II
Worawongsathirat King of Siam November 11, 1548 Lopburi Ayutthaya Kingdom Maha Thammaracha
Tabinshwehti King of Burma April 30, 1550 Pantanaw Toungoo dynasty Smim Sawhtut
Ashikaga Yoshiteru Shōgun June 17, 1565 Nijō Castle Ashikaga shogunate Miyoshi Yoshitsugu
Eric XIV King of Sweden February 26, 1577 Örbyhus Castle  Sweden Guards poisoned him on the orders of John III
Sokollu Mehmed Pasha Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire October 11, 1579 Istanbul  Ottoman Empire Order of Assassins
William the Silent Stadtholder of Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht and Friesland July 10, 1584 Delft  Dutch Republic Balthasar Gérard
Henry III King of France August 1, 1589 Saint-Cloud France Jacques Clément
Michael the Brave Prince of Wallachia August 9, 1601 Turda  Wallachia Giorgio Basta
Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak Grand Vizier of the Mughal empire August 12, 1602 Deccan Mughal Empire Vir Singh Deo
Henry IV King of France May 14, 1610 Paris France François Ravaillac
Concino Concini Chief minister of France April 24, 1617 Guards under orders of Louis XIII
Osman II Sultan of the Ottoman Empire May 20, 1622 Yedikule Fortress, Istanbul  Ottoman Empire Janissaries
Anaukpetlun King of Burma July 9, 1628 Bago, Myanmar Toungoo dynasty Minyedeippa, his son
Charles I King of England January 30, 1649 London  England Rump Parliament
Daniel Parke Governor of the Leeward Islands December 7, 1710 Antigua  British Leeward Islands Angry mob
Fernando Manuel de Bustillo Bustamante y Rueda Governor-General of the Philippines October 11, 1719 Palacio del Gobernador, Manila Spanish Philippines Francisco de la Cuesta
Nader Shah Shah of Iran June 20, 1747 Quchan Persia Salah Bey
Peter III Czar of Russia July 17, 1762 Ropsha  Russian Empire Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov
Gustav III King of Sweden March 16, 1792 Stockholm  Sweden Jacob Johan Anckarström
Louis XVI King of France January 21, 1793 Paris  France French Revolution
Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar Shahanshah of Iran June 17, 1797 Shusha Qajar Empire A Georgian servant named Sadeq and a valet called Khodadad-e Esfahani, both of whom were due to be executed.
Paul I Czar of Russia March 23, 1801 St. Petersburg  Russia Peter Ludwig von der Pahlen, Nikita Petrovich Panin, José de Ribas, Vladimir Mikhailovich Yashvil and Nikolay Zubov
Jean-Jacques Dessalines Emperor of Haiti October 17, 1806 Pont Rouge  Haiti unknown
Spencer Perceval Prime Minister of the United Kingdom May 11, 1812 Westminster  United Kingdom John Bellingham
Shaka kaSenzangakhona King of the Zulus September 22, 1828 KwaDukuza Zulu Kingdom Dingane and Mhlangana, Shaka's younger brothers
Pedro Blanco Soto President of Bolivia January 1, 1829 Sucre  Bolivia unknown
Ioannis Kapodistrias Governor of the Hellenic State October 9, 1831 Nafplion  Greece Konstantis and Georgios Mavromichalis
Felipe Santiago Salaverry President of Peru February 18, 1836 Arequipa  Peru Andrés de Santa Cruz
João Maria Ferreira do Amaral Governor of Macau August 22, 1849 Macau Portuguese Macau Seven Chinese men
Charles III Duke of Parma March 26, 1854 Parma  Parma unknown
Danilo I Prince of Montenegro August 13, 1860 Kotor  Montenegro Todor Kadić
José Santos Guardiola President of Honduras January 11, 1862 Comayagua  Honduras personal body guard
Barbu Catargiu Prime Minister of Romania June 20, 1862 Bucharest  Romania unknown
Radama II King of Madagascar May 12, 1863 Rova of Antananarivo Merina Kingdom Soldiers under orders of Rainivoninahitriniony
Abraham Lincoln President of the United States April 14, 1865
(d. April 15, 1865)
Washington, D.C.  United States John Wilkes Booth
Maximilian I Emperor of Mexico June 19, 1867 Santiago de Querétaro  Mexico Republicans and anti-monarchy forces
Venancio Flores President of Uruguay February 19, 1868 Montevideo  Uruguay unknown assailants, presumably of Blanco political faction
Mihailo III Prince of Serbia June 10, 1868 Belgrade  Serbia Pavle Radovanović, Kosta Radovanović
Juan Prim Prime Minister of Spain December 30, 1870 Madrid  Spain unknown
Richard Bourke Governor-General of India February 8, 1872 Port Blair, Andaman Islands  British India Sher Ali Afridi
José Balta President of Peru July 22, 1872 Lima  Peru Tomás Gutiérrez
Tomás Gutiérrez July 26, 1872 Military coup d'état
Gabriel García Moreno President of Ecuador August 6, 1875 Quito  Ecuador Faustino Rayo
Juan Bautista Gill President of Paraguay April 12, 1877 Villarrica  Paraguay Nicanor Silvano Godoi
Alexander II Czar of Russia March 13, 1881 St. Petersburg  Russia Narodnaya Volya
James A. Garfield President of the United States July 2, 1881
(d. September 19, 1881)
Washington, D.C.  United States Charles J. Guiteau
Ranodip Singh Kunwar Prime Minister of Nepal November 22, 1885 Kathmandu  Nepal Khadga Shumsher, Chandra Shumsher, and Dambar Shumsher
Marie François Sadi Carnot President of France June 24, 1894 Lyon  France Sante Geronimo Caserio
Naser al-Din Shah Qajar Shah of Iran May 1, 1896 Tehran  Iran Mirza Reza Kermani
Antonio Cánovas del Castillo Prime Minister of Spain August 8, 1897 Mondragón  Spain Michele Angiolillo
Juan Idiarte Borda President of Uruguay August 25, 1897 Montevideo  Uruguay Avelino Arredondo
José María Reina Barrios President of Guatemala February 8, 1898 Ciudad de Guatemala  Guatemala Edgar Zollinger
Ulises Heureaux President of the Dominican Republic July 26, 1899 Moca  Dominican Republic Ramón Cáceres
Umberto I King of Italy July 29, 1900 Monza  Italy Gaetano Bresci
William McKinley President of the United States September 6, 1901
(d. September 14, 1901)
Buffalo, New York  United States Leon Czolgosz
Alexander I King of Serbia June 11, 1903 Belgrade  Serbia May Overthrow
Dimitrije Cincar-Marković Prime Minister of Serbia
Nikolay Bobrikov Governor-General of Finland June 16, 1904 Helsinki Grand Duchy of Finland Eugen Schauman
Xavier Coppolani Governor of Mauritania May 12, 1905 Adrar French Mauritania Gudfiyya brotherhood
Dimitar Petkov Prime Minister of Bulgaria March 11, 1907 Sofia  Bulgaria anarchist
Carlos I King of Portugal February 1, 1908 Lisbon  Portugal Alfredo Luís da Costa and Manuel Buíça
Itō Hirobumi Prime Minister of Japan October 26, 1909 Harbin  Qing China An Jung-geun
Boutros Ghali Prime Minister of Egypt February 21, 1910 Cairo  Egypt Watani Party member
Pyotr Stolypin Prime Minister of Russia September 18, 1911 Kiev  Russia Dmitry Bogrov
Ramón Cáceres President of the Dominican Republic November 19, 1911 Santo Domingo  Dominican Republic rebels
José Canalejas Prime Minister of Spain November 12, 1912 Madrid  Spain Manuel Pardiñas
Manuel Enrique Araujo President of El Salvador February 9, 1913 San Salvador  El Salvador Mulatilo Virgilio, Fermin Perez and Fabian Graciano
Francisco I. Madero President of Mexico February 22, 1913 Mexico City  Mexico Francisco Cárdenas
George I King of Greece March 18, 1913 Thessaloniki  Greece Alexandros Schinas
Mahmud Shevket Pasha Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire June 11, 1913 Istanbul  Ottoman Empire Relative of Nazım Pasha
Vilbrun Guillaume Sam President of Haiti July 27, 1915 Port-au-Prince  Haiti Numerous assailants
Karl von Stürgkh Minister-President of Cisleithania October 21, 1916 Vienna  Austria-Hungary Friedrich Adler
Nicholas II Czar of Russia July 17, 1918 Yekaterinburg  Russian SFSR Yakov Yurovsky
Sidónio Pais President of Portugal December 14, 1918 Lisbon  Portugal José Júlio da Costa
Habibullah Khan Emir of Afghanistan February 20, 1919 Laghman  Afghanistan Mustafa Seghir
Venustiano Carranza President of Mexico May 21, 1920 Tlaxcalantongo  Mexico Rodolfo Herrero
Eduardo Dato Prime Minister of Spain March 8, 1921 Madrid  Spain Lluís Nicolau, Pere Mateu, Ramon Casanelles
António Granjo Prime Minister of Portugal October 19, 1921 Lisbon  Portugal Bloody Night
Hara Takashi Prime Minister of Japan November 4, 1921 Tokyo  Japan Nakaoka Kon'ichi
Michael Collins Chairman of the Provisional Government August 22, 1922 County Cork  Ireland Anti-Treaty forces
Nikolaos Stratos Prime Minister of Greece November 15, 1922 Athens  Greece Coup
Petros Protopapadakis
Gabriel Narutowicz President of Poland December 16, 1922 Warsaw  Poland Eligiusz Niewiadomski
Aleksandar Stamboliyski Prime Minister of Bulgaria June 14, 1923 Slavovitsa  Bulgaria Military coup d'état
Lee Stack Governor of Sudan November 19, 1924 Cairo  Egypt Egyptian students
Symon Petlyura President of Ukraine May 25, 1926 Paris  France Sholom Schwartzbard
Zhang Zuolin President of the Republic of China June 4, 1928 Shenyang  China Kwantung Army
Paul Doumer President of France May 7, 1932 Paris  France Paul Gorguloff
Inukai Tsuyoshi Prime Minister of Japan May 15, 1932 Tokyo  Japan May 15 Incident
Luis Miguel Sánchez Cerro President of Peru April 30, 1933 Lima  Peru Abelardo de Mendoza
Mohammed Nadir Shah King of Afghanistan November 8, 1933 Kabul  Afghanistan Abdul Khaliq Hazara
Ion G. Duca Prime Minister of Romania December 30, 1933 Sinaia  Romania Nicolae Constantinescu
Engelbert Dollfuss Chancellor of Austria July 25, 1934 Vienna  Austria July Putsch
Alexander I King of Yugoslavia October 9, 1934 Marseille  France Vlado Chernozemski
Louis Barthou Prime Minister of France
Armand Călinescu Prime Minister of Romania September 21, 1939 Bucharest  Romania Iron Guard members
Ahmad Maher Pasha Prime Minister of Egypt February 24, 1945 Cairo  Egypt Mahmoud El Essawy
Benito Mussolini Prime Minister of Italy April 28, 1945 Giulino di Mezzegra  Italy Italian resistance movement
Ananda Mahidol King of Siam June 9, 1946 Grand Palace, Bangkok  Thailand Unknown
Gualberto Villarroel President of Bolivia July 21, 1946 La Paz  Bolivia organized mob
Aung San Premier of Burma July 19, 1947 Rangoon British Burma U Saw
Yahya Muhammad Hamid ed-Din Imam of Yemen February 17, 1948 Sanaa  Yemen Al-Qardaei
Mahmoud El Nokrashy Pasha Prime Minister of Egypt December 28, 1948 Cairo  Egypt Abdel Meguid Ahmed Hassan
Husni al-Za'im President of Syria August 14, 1949 Damascus  Syria Coup
Muhsin al-Barazi Prime Minister of Syria
Abdolhossein Hazhir Prime Minister of Iran November 5, 1949 Tehran  Iran Fada'iyan-e Islam
Duncan Stewart Governor of Sarawak December 10, 1949 Sibu British Sarawak Rukun 13
Sami al-Hinnawi President of Syria October 31, 1950 Beirut  Lebanon Hersho al-Barazi
Carlos Delgado Chalbaud President of Venezuela November 13, 1950 Caracas  Venezuela Rafael Simon Urbina and Domingo Urbina.
Haj Ali Razmara Prime Minister of Iran March 7, 1951 Tehran  Iran Fada'iyan-e Islam
Riad Al Solh Prime Minister of Lebanon July 17, 1951 Amman  Jordan member of the Syrian Social Nationalist Party
Abdullah I King of Jordan July 20, 1951 East Jerusalem (occupied) Mustapha Shukari Usho
Henry Gurney High Commissioner for Malaya October 6, 1951 Fraser's Hill Malaya Malayan Communist Party
Liaquat Ali Khan Prime Minister of Pakistan October 16, 1951 Rawalpindi  Pakistan Saad Akbar Babrak
José Antonio Remón Cantera President of Panama January 2, 1955 Panama City  Panama unknown
Anastasio Somoza García President of Nicaragua September 21, 1956 León  Nicaragua Rigoberto López Pérez
Carlos Castillo Armas President of Guatemala July 26, 1957 Guatemala City  Guatemala Romeo Vásquez Sánchez
Ibrahim Hashem Prime Minister of Jordan June 14, 1958 Baghdad  Iraq Revolutionaries
Faisal II King of Iraq July 14, 1958 Baghdad  Arab Federation Military coup d'état
Nuri al-Said Prime Minister of Iraq July 15, 1958 Baghdad  Iraq 14 July Revolution
S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike Prime Minister of Ceylon September 26, 1959 Colombo  Ceylon Talduwe Somarama
Abebe Aregai Prime Minister of Ethiopia December 17, 1960 Addis Ababa  Ethiopia Failed military coup d'état
Hazza' al-Majali Prime Minister of Jordan August 29, 1960 Amman  Jordan bomb explosion
Rafael Trujillo President of the Dominican Republic May 30, 1961 Ciudad Trujillo  Dominican Republic Juan Tomás Díaz, Antonio de la Maza, Amado García Guerrero, Antonio Imbert Barrera
Prince Louis Rwagasore Prime Minister of Burundi October 13, 1961 Bujumbura Ruanda-Urundi Jean (Ioannis) Kageorgis
Sylvanus Olympio President of Togo January 13, 1963 Lomé  Togo Military coup d'état
Abd al-Karim Qasim Prime Minister of Iraq February 9, 1963 Baghdad  Iraq Military coup d'état
Ngo Dinh Diem President of the Republic of Vietnam November 2, 1963 Saigon  South Vietnam Military coup d'état
John F. Kennedy President of the United States November 22, 1963 Dallas  United States Lee Harvey Oswald
Jigme Palden Dorji Prime Minister of Bhutan April 6, 1964 Phuntsoling  Bhutan Royal Bhutan Army
Hassan Ali Mansur Prime Minister of Iran January 27, 1965 Tehran  Iran Fada'iyan-e Islam
Abubakar Tafawa Balewa Prime Minister of Nigeria January 15, 1966 Lagos  Nigeria Military coup d'état
Hendrik Verwoerd Prime Minister of South Africa September 6, 1966 Cape Town  South Africa Dimitri Tsafendas
Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi Head of State of Nigeria July 29, 1966 Lalupon  Nigeria Military coup d'état
Abdirashid Ali Shermarke President of Somalia October 15, 1969 Las Anod  Somalia personal bodyguards
Wasfi al-Tal Prime Minister of Jordan November 28, 1971 Cairo  Egypt Black September
Abeid Karume President of Zanzibar April 7, 1972 Zanzibar City  Zanzibar Four gunmen
Luis Carrero Blanco Prime Minister of Spain December 20, 1973 Madrid  Spain ETA
Richard Ratsimandrava President of Madagascar February 11, 1975 Antananarivo  Madagascar Republican Security Forces
Faisal I King of Saudi Arabia March 25, 1975 Riyadh  Saudi Arabia Faisal bin Musaid
François Tombalbaye President of Chad April 13, 1975 N'Djamena  Chad Military coup d'état
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman President of Bangladesh August 15, 1975 Dhaka  Bangladesh Bangladesh Army
Long Boret Prime Minister of Cambodia April 17, 1975 Phnom Penh  Cambodia Execution by shooting
Muhammad Mansur Ali Prime Minister of Bangladesh November 3, 1975 Dhaka  Bangladesh Bangladesh Army
Murtala Mohammed Head of State of Nigeria February 13, 1976 Lagos  Nigeria Buka Suka Dimka
Marien Ngouabi President of the Republic of Congo March 18, 1977 Brazzaville  Congo-Brazzaville suicide commando
Ibrahim al-Hamdi President of North Yemen October 11, 1977 Sana'a  North Yemen unknown
Mohammed Daoud Khan President of Afghanistan April 28, 1978 Kabul  Afghanistan Saur Revolution
Ali Soilih President of the Comoros May 29, 1978 Moroni  Comoros French Colonel Bob Denard
Ahmad al-Ghashmi President of North Yemen June 24, 1978 Sana'a  North Yemen Military coup d'état
Salim Rubai Ali Chairman of the Presidential Council June 26, 1978 Aden  South Yemen Coup
Francisco Mendes Prime Minister of Guinea-Bissau July 7, 1978 Bissau  Guinea-Bissau PAIGC dissidents
Nur Muhammad Taraki Prime Minister of Afghanistan September 14, 1979 Kabul  Afghanistan Military coup d'état
Park Chung-hee President of South Korea October 26, 1979 Seoul  South Korea Kim Jae-gyu (president's security chief)
Hafizullah Amin President of Afghanistan December 27, 1979 Kabul  Afghanistan Operation Storm-333
William R. Tolbert Jr. President of Liberia April 12, 1980 Monrovia  Liberia Military coup d'état
Sultan Ibraimov Prime Ministers of Kyrgyzstan December 4, 1980 Cholpon Ata  Kirghiz SSR KGB (suspected)
Ziaur Rahman President of Bangladesh May 30, 1981 Chittagong  Bangladesh faction of officers of Bangladesh Army
Mohammad-Javad Bahonar Prime Minister of Iran August 30, 1981 Tehran  Iran People's Mujahedin of Iran
Mohammad-Ali Rajai President of Iran
Anwar Sadat President of Egypt October 6, 1981 Cairo  Egypt Khalid Islambouli
Maurice Bishop Prime Minister of Grenada October 19, 1983 St. George's  Grenada coup
Indira Gandhi Prime Minister of India October 31, 1984 New Delhi  India Satwant Singh and Beant Singh (personal bodyguards)
Haruo Remeliik President of Palau June 30, 1985 Koror  Palau unknown
Olof Palme Prime Minister of Sweden February 28, 1986 Stockholm  Sweden Official suspect: Stig Engström
Rashid Karami Prime Minister of Lebanon June 1, 1987 Beirut  Lebanon Car bomb planted by unidentified militant
Thomas Sankara President of Burkina Faso October 15, 1987 Ouagadougou  Burkina Faso Blaise Compaoré
Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq President of Pakistan August 17, 1988 Bahawalpur  Pakistan Unknown
René Moawad President of Lebanon November 22, 1989 Beirut  Lebanon car bomb
Ahmed Abdallah President of the Comoros November 26, 1989 Moroni  Comoros coup
Nicolae Ceaușescu President of Romania December 25, 1989 Târgoviște  Romania National Salvation Front
Samuel Doe President of Liberia September 9, 1990 Monrovia  Liberia Prince Y. Johnson
Rajiv Gandhi Prime Minister of India May 21, 1991 Sriperumbudur  India Thenmozhi Rajaratnam
Mohamed Boudiaf President of Algeria June 29, 1992 Annaba  Algeria Lambarek Boumaarafi
Ranasinghe Premadasa President of Sri Lanka May 1, 1993 Colombo  Sri Lanka LTTE
Melchior Ndadaye President of Burundi October 21, 1993 Bujumbura  Burundi Military coup d'état
Juvénal Habyarimana President of Rwanda April 6, 1994 Kigali  Rwanda Presidential aircraft shootdown
Cyprien Ntaryamira President of Burundi
Agathe Uwilingiyimana Prime Minister of Rwanda April 7, 1994 Rwandan Armed Forces
Yitzhak Rabin Prime Minister of Israel November 4, 1995 Tel Aviv  Israel Yigal Amir
Ibrahim Baré Maïnassara President of Niger April 9, 1999 Niamey  Niger Military coup d'état
Vazgen Sargsyan Prime Minister of Armenia October 27, 1999 Yerevan  Armenia Nairi Hunanyan
Laurent-Désiré Kabila President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo January 16, 2001 Kinshasa  Democratic Republic of the Congo Rashidi Muzele
Birendra King of Nepal June 1, 2001 Narayanhiti Palace, Kathmandu  Nepal Dipendra
Zoran Đinđić Prime Minister of Serbia March 12, 2003 Belgrade  Serbia and Montenegro Zvezdan Jovanović
João Bernardo Vieira President of Guinea-Bissau March 2, 2009 Bissau  Guinea-Bissau Armed Forces of Guinea-Bissau
Muammar Gaddafi Leader of Libya October 20, 2011 Sirte  Libya National Transitional Council forces

Statistics


See also

References

  1. Ulla Koch-Westenholz (2000). Babylonian Liver Omens: The Chapters Manzazu, Padanu, and Pan Takalti of the Babylonian Extispicy Series Mainly from Assurbanipal's Library. Museum Tusculanum. p. 394.
  2. Chronicle P, column 4, lines 10 to 11.
  3. GIŠ.TUKUL.TA BA.AN.SÌG.GI.IN, “by the sword.”
  4. Dynastic Chronicle v 5-6: mdÉ-a-mu-kin-NUMUN LUGAL IM.GI DUMU mḪaš-mar iti 3 in.ak, ina raq-qa-ti šá É-mḪaš-mar qí-bir.
  5. J. A. Brinkman (1982). "Babylonia, c. 1000 – 748 B.C.". In John Boardman; I. E. S. Edwards; N. G. L. Hammond; E. Sollberger (eds.). The Cambridge Ancient History (Volume 3, Part 1). Cambridge University Press. pp. 296–297.
  6. Dionysius of Halicarnassus. "Roman Antiquities vol II ch 51-52". doi:10.4159/DLCL.dionysius_halicarnassus-roman_antiquities.1937. Retrieved 13 November 2016.   via digital Loeb Classical Library (subscription required)
  7. Healy, Mark (1991). The Ancient Assyrians. London: Osprey. p. 17. ISBN 1-85532-163-7. OCLC 26351868.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  8. J. A. Brinkman (2001). "Nabû-nādin-zēri". In Erich Ebeling; Bruno Meissner; Dietz Otto Edzard (eds.). Reallexikon der Assyriologie und vorderasiatischen Archäologie: Nab-Nuzi. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 29–30.
  9. J. A. Brinkman (1984). Prelude to Empire: Babylonian Society and Politics, 747-626 B.C. 7. Philadelphia: Occasional Publications of the Babylonian Fund. p. 23.
  10. J. A. Brinkman (1984). Prelude to Empire: Babylonian Society and Politics, 747-626 B.C. 7. Philadelphia: Occasional Publications of the Babylonian Fund. pp. 42–43.
  11. Mark, Joshua J. (2014). "Sargon II". Ancient History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  12. Bertman, Stephen (2005). Handbook to Life in Ancient Mesopotamia. OUP USA. p. 79. ISBN 978-0195183641.
  13. Simo Parpola (1980). "The Murderer of Sennacherib". Gateways to Babylon.
  14. Albertz, R.; Israel in exile: The history and literature of the sixth century BC; Society of Biblical Literature, Atlanta 2003, p.63 ISBN 1-58983-055-5.
  15. Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.42, 1.46, 1.47.
  16. Herodotus 1920, Book V. 55
  17. Iran-e-Bastan/Pirnia book 1 p. 873
  18. S. Zawadzki, "The Circumstances of Darius II's Accession" in Jaarbericht Ex Oriente Lux 34 (1995-1996) 45-49
  19. Plutarch, Lives: Life of Dion. (About/Wikisource)
  20. Plut. Dion. 28-58
  21. Diodorus Siculus. "The Library of History". 16.91-95. Archived from the original on 4 March 2010.
  22. LeCoq, P. (1986). "Arses". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. II, Fasc. 5. p. 548.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  23. "Seleucus I Nicator". Livius.
  24. The Mausoleum of Antiochus II Theos
  25. Han 2010, pp. 5132-5137.
  26. "Seleucus III Keraunos". Livius.org.
  27. Livy, 35.35
  28. Lahiri, B. (1974). Indigenous States of Northern India (Circa 200 B.C. to 320 A.D.) , Calcutta: University of Calcutta, pp.24-5
  29. "Seleucus IV Philopator". Livius.org.
  30. Diodorus 32.9d & 10.1; Zabdiel: I Maccabees 11.17; Josephus AJ 13.118.
  31. Makk. 13.31; Diod. Sic. 33.28; App. Syr. 68. 357; Iust. 36.1.7.; Oros. 5.4.18.
  32. Sallust, Bellum Jugurthinum 5, 9, 11, 12
  33. Diod. Exc. Vales. xxxv. p. 605
  34. Suetonius, Julius, c. 82.
  35. Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews XIX.1.3.
  36. cf. Tac. Ann. XII 66–67.
  37. Suet. Claud. 43
  38. Greenhalgh 1975, pp. 30, 37, 45, 47–54.
  39. Tacitus, Histories III.84, III.85
  40. Suetonius, Life of Domitian 14;16
  41. Cassius Dio, Roman History, Book LXXII, pg. 117.
  42. Lampridius, Historia Augusta. "Life of Commodus," pg. 306.
  43. Dio, 74:10
  44. Cassius Dio, lxxiv, 17.5; Historia Augusta, Didius Julianus, 8.8.
  45. Gibbon, Ibid. p. 115
  46. Goldsworthy, Adrian (2009). How Rome Fell: death of a superpower. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 74. ISBN 978-0-300-16426-8.
  47. Crevier, Jean Baptiste Louis (1814). The History of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Constantine, Volume 8. F. C. & J. Rivington. pp. 236–237.
  48. Vagi 2000, p. 290.
  49. Bédoyère 2017, p. 236.
  50. Cassius Dio, Roman History LXXX.20
  51. Southern, Pat. The Roman Empire from Severus to Constantine, Routledge, 2001, p. 63
  52. Southern, Pat. The Roman Empire from Severus to Constantine, Routledge, 2001, p. 67
  53. Potter, David.S. The Roman Empire At Bay AD 180-392, Routledge, 2004, ISBN 0-203-67387-5, pg.234-238.
  54. Potter, David.S. The Roman Empire At Bay AD 180-392, Routledge, 2004, ISBN 0-203-67387-5, pg. 241
  55. Bowman, Alan K., The Cambridge Ancient History: The Crisis of Empire, A.D. 193-337, Cambridge University Press, 2005, pg. 38
  56. Potter, David.S. The Roman Empire At Bay AD 180-392, Routledge, 2004, ISBN 0-203-67387-5, pg. 252
  57. Historia Augusta, The two Gallieni, XIV.4–11
  58. Polfer, Michel (2000), "Postumus (A.D. 260-269)", De Imperatoribus Romanis
  59. Aurelius Victor 33.8; Eutropius 9.9.1
  60. Potter, David Stone, The Roman Empire at Bay, AD 180-395, Routledge, 2004, pg. 266
  61. Southern, Pat (2001). The Roman Empire from Severus to Constantine. Routledge. p. 119
  62. Meijer 2004, p. 103.
  63. Syvanne 2015, p. 172.
  64. Aurelius Victor, Epitome de Caesaribus, 37:4
  65. Southern, Patricia (May 15, 2015). The Roman Empire from Severus to Constantine. Routledge. p. 193. ISBN 9781317496946.
  66. Leadbetter, William. Carinus (283–285 A.D.).
  67. Panegyrici Latini 8:12; Aurelius Victor, Book of Caesars 39.40; Eutropius, Abridgement of Roman History 22; Orosius, Seven Books of History Against the Pagans 7:25.6
  68. Aurelius Victor, Epitome de Caesaribus, 41:21:23
  69. An Encyclopedia of World History, Ibid
  70. Gibbon, p. 960
  71. Ambrose, Patrologia Latina, Ep. 40.32
  72. Susan Wise Bauer, "The History of the Medieval World: From the Conversion of Constantine to the First Crusade", W. W. Norton & Company, 22 Feb 2010 (p.68)
  73. Historia nova, IV. 53 which relies heavily on the history by the pagan Eunapius
  74. Carr, John (2015). Fighting Emperors of Byzantium. Pen & Sword. pp. 40–43. ISBN 1783831162.
  75. Jones, Arnold Hugh Martin, John Robert Martindale, John Morris, The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, volume 2, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN 0-521-20159-4, pg. 316
  76. Birley, Anthony (2005), The Roman Government in Britain, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-925237-4 pg. 460
  77. Procopius, III.3.9; translated by Dewing, pp. 75ff
  78. Priscus of Panium 2015, p. 129.
  79. Aston, William. (1998). Nihongi, Vol. 1, pp. 328–333.
  80. John of Antioch, fragment 203; Marcellinus, sa 461; Fasti vindobonenses priores, No 588. Procopius (VII.14–15) does not mention the Emperor's return from Hispania and said that Majorian died of dysentery: it is possible that the news has been put about by Ricimer (Fik Meijer, Emperors Do not Die in Bed, Routledge, 2004, ISBN 0-415-31201-9, p. 155). Victor of Tonnena erroneously claims that Majorian reached Rome and was killed there, and puts this event in 463 (Chronica, s.a. 463).
  81. Cassiodorus, Chronicles, s.a. 465.
  82. Cassiodorus, Chronicle, 1293; Marcellinus Comes, Chronicon, s.a.472; Procopius of Caesarea, Bellum Vandalicum, vii.1–3. Chronica gallica anno 511 (n. 650, s.a. 472) records both versions.
  83. Fasti vindobonenses priores, n. 606, s.a. 472.
  84. Halsall, Guy (2007). Barbarian migrations and the Roman West, 376-568. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 282.
  85. Amory, Patrick (1997). People and Identity in Ostrogothic Italy, 489–554. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-51152-306-9. pg. 69
  86. Wolfram, Herwig (1988). History of the Goths. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-05259-5. pg. 283
  87. Shahbazi, A. Sh. (1988). "Bahrām VI Čōbīn". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. III, Fasc. 5. London et al. pp. 514–522.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  88. http://denstoredanske.dk/Danmarks_geografi_og_historie/Danmarks_historie/Danmark_før_Reformationen/Erik_2._Emune
  89. http://www.roskildehistorie.dk/1100/billeder/krige/blodgilde/blodgilde.htm
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