Question:
fictional people in books/stories who rise to great power and fall to their demise?
skate or die amirite
2009-12-02 21:52:25 UTC
fictional people in books/stories who rise to great power and fall to their demise?
Does anyone know any fictional characters who rise to lots of power and then fall to their defeat? Must be non-fiction.

I'm asking this because i have to make a childrens book about Napoleon's empire and its fall. Napoleon came from the lowest class level, became a very succesful officer, and won the favor of the French people and crowned himself king. Then he lead France to becoming most arguably the most power nation in the world until his empire's demise began once they were defeated after trying to conquer Russia. In case you didn't know
Six answers:
anonymous
2009-12-02 22:08:49 UTC
I guess you could look at Hitler...? I mean he had enormous power and fell pretty hard.
anonymous
2009-12-02 22:20:37 UTC
I don't know whether you are looking for fiction or non-fiction, so I'll include both. King Arthur comes to mind. Depending how far back you want to go, you could also use Oedipus Rex or the Mayor of Casterbridge. If you are looking for a character that children will recognize and relate to, my best guess is King Arthur. The only historical figure I know of that fits this description is Hitler.
Mistress Boleyn
2009-12-03 08:57:52 UTC
I can come up with several people from the Tudor era.



Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, Sir Thomas More (in a sense), Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, Thomas Cromwell, Anne Boleyn, Catherine Howard, Jane Grey, Queen Mary Stuart of Scotland (sorta?).
Snarkasaurus
2009-12-02 22:14:06 UTC
you ask for fictional characters then say "must be non-fiction"?????

if fictional characters are what you're asking for:



Javert from Les Misérables by Victor Hugo

Haemon from Antigone by Sophocles

Miss Minchin from A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett

Patrick McKenna from Angels and Demons by Dan Brown

all of these characters (with the exception of Haemon) do not rise to power in the sense of ruling countries, but in the sense of ruling over the lives and actions of others
InkHart
2009-12-02 21:59:33 UTC
Alexander the Great

Napoleon isn't a fictional character. He was real. Why does your question ask for "fictional" characters?
anonymous
2016-10-15 03:56:32 UTC
i'm uncertain if this suits a toddler's e book, yet Anne Boleyn must be a great occasion. She became a hassle-free lady interior the Tudor court docket who manuvered King Henry VIII into making her his queen. She cunned and connived for years to get Henry to set aside his old spouse, Catherine of Argon, and to marry her. finally, she have been given to her place of potential, yet she nonetheless wasn't able to bear a son for King Henry, so he had her head chopped off. O_o talk a pair of fall from potential... So, i'm uncertain if it is precisely what you're finding for, whether it is the final occasion i ought to think of of.


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