Tyranny



  1. Tyranny Game
  2. Tyranny Synonym
  3. Tyranny Quotes
Tyranny

Tyranny – Gold Edition, the ultimate Tyranny experience that includes every Tyranny Expansion and all additional DLC. Experience a story-driven RPG where your choices mean all the difference in the world. Tyranny's quests are executed in a non-linear fashion, and even small decisions, such as who you currently have in your party and what you did during the 'Conquest' phase, can greatly alter the.

Please select which sections you would like to print:

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Join Britannica's Publishing Partner Program and our community of experts to gain a global audience for your work! TyrannySian Lewis
Senior Lecturer in Ancient History, School of Classics, University of St Andrews. Author of Ancient Tyranny. Her contributions to SAGE Publications's Encyclopedia of Political Theory...

Tyranny, in the Greco-Roman world, an autocratic form of rule in which one individual exercised power without any legal restraint. In antiquity the word tyrant was not necessarily pejorative and signified the holder of absolute political power. In its modern usage the word tyranny is usually pejorative and connotes the illegitimate possession or use of such power.

Evolution of the concept

For the ancient Greeks, a tyrant was not necessarily a bad ruler; in its original form (tyrannos) the word was used to describe a person who held absolute and personal power within a state, as distinct from a monarch, whose rule was bound by constitution and law. Some tyrants were usurpers who came to power by their own efforts; others were elected to rule; and still others were imposed by intervention from outside. Certain rulers, such as Phalaris, tyrant of Akragas in Sicily, who allegedly burned his enemies alive in a brazen bull, were bywords for uncontrolled cruelty and self-indulgence, but others, such as Pittakos at Mytilene, were remembered favourably in later sources as wise and moderate rulers who brought prosperity and peace to their cities. Later on in classical history, however, the word gradually acquired more of its modern flavour, implying a ruler whose sole motivation was power and personal gain, and as a result its use in public life became controversial. The idea of tyranny has thus been at the center of debate about legitimacy in rulership and the balance of power between ruler and people. Since Roman times philosophers have argued for the moral right of the citizen to overthrow a tyrant whatever the law and have debated the point at which monarchic rule becomes tyrannical.

Classic definitions

The best-known definition of tyranny comes from Aristotle’s Politics: “Any sole ruler, who is not required to give an account of himself, and who rules over subjects all equal or superior to himself to suit his own interest and not theirs, can only be exercising a tyranny.” Aristotle presents tyranny in a very negative light, as a form of monarchy that has deviated from the ideal, and by listing the characteristics of the tyrant—he comes to power by force, has a bodyguard of foreigners to protect him, and rules over unwilling subjects—Aristotle suggests that a tyrant was always a violent usurper. Peisistratus, tyrant of Athens, is a classic example; he made three attempts to seize power, finally succeeding in a military coup in 546 bce by using forces from outside, and ruled for 30 years.

But tyranny was more complex than Aristotle implies. Peisistratus did not dismantle the structure of government, and assemblies of the people continued to be held and magistrates continued to be appointed under his rule. Most notably, he was succeeded by his two sons, Hippias and Hipparchos, turning the rule into a hereditary one. Some tyrants had power conferred on them by the state, such as Clearchus at Heracleia on the Black Sea, who was appointed in 364 bce to resolve a civil conflict, whereas others, such as Mausolus and Artemisia of Halicarnassus (creators of the Mausoleum, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World), ruled with tyrannical power but were in constitutional terms satraps (governors) within the Persian Empire.

Get exclusive access to content from our 1768 First Edition with your subscription. Subscribe today

But even if there was no simple definition of a tyrant, there were classical rulers who, for a long or short period of time, dominated a state and had the ability to do whatever they wanted—found cities, move populations, wage war, create new citizens, build monuments, or accumulate money. Those rulers had certain fundamental features in common. They were sole rulers with direct and personal power over the state, unconstrained by political institutions. Their power was dependent not on a right to rule but on their own ability to command and retain control. All tyrants aimed to hand power on within their family, and some succeeded in establishing a rule lasting many generations.

Although few surviving classical authors have anything good to say of tyrants, they were generally successful in government, bringing economic prosperity and expansion to their cities. The Aristotelian view suggests that tyrants were inevitably unpopular, ruling a cowed citizenry who feared and hated them and wished only to be free. But some tyrants were chosen by the state to rule with a specific purpose: to put an end to civil war, to impose a new code of law, or to offer leadership in a time of danger. Indeed, it was often proposed that a sole ruler with overall control of military and political affairs was the best option in wartime. Though opposed to monarchy on principle, the Romans during the republic (509–27 bce) would in times of threat appoint a dictator, one individual who was granted complete control over the army and state for a period of six months, a position described by the historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus as an “elective tyranny.” In the 4th century bce, some philosophers, most notably Plato, saw tyranny of a certain kind as positive. Plato described the ideal state as based on the rule of an enlightened and self-controlled monarch, the “philosopher king,” who would live a virtuous life himself and could impose the best constitution on his subjects.

Tyranny of the majority
Quick Facts
Welcome to the Tyranny Wiki
The Fatebinder's handbook to Obsidian Entertainment's Tyranny.
Please feel free to contribute by creating new articles or expanding on existing ones.
Tyranny
We are currently maintaining 2,492 articles!


Check out the guides for Tyranny's expansions:


Bastard's Wound

It is set in a world where the epic struggle between good and evil is over. Kyros the Overlord reigns supreme after the back of the defenders of good was cast upon the stones of fate and shattered into a myriad pieces. You are the Fatebinder and one of Kyros' war leaders, stabilizing the freshly conquered land so that it may provide its bounty for the betterment of Kyros' realm...

  • Character creation (New Game+)
  • Spells
  • Combat
    • Attack and defense
    • Damage and afflictions
Factions

Locations and random encounters


Act II

Side quests

Endings
Characters by faction and location

Companions


Weapons
Tyranny of the majority

Armor
Tyranny

Miscellaneous

We are currently maintaining 6,911 pages (2,492 articles)!
Recent changes | New pages | Missing pages

If there's anything missing on the wiki, use the box below to start a new article:

You can also create new pages using the search box. Just type a new title, click 'Go', and near the top of the results page, there will be a link to create the new page.

Tyranny Game

How to help
See how you can help contribute to Tyranny Wiki! Remember to maintain a standard for grammar and punctuation in your contributions, please.
Register
Register an account to keep track of your contributions.
Main page sections: 1 · 2 · 3 · 4. Changes for the main page can be proposed here.

Tyranny Synonym


Tyranny Quotes

Retrieved from 'https://tyranny.gamepedia.com/Tyranny_Wiki?oldid=34515'