The first dictator of the Roman empire was Titus Lartius Flavus and he was appointed in 501 BC.
The most famous dictator of the Roman Empire
He ruled the Roman Empire as a dictator from 49BC to 44BC.
No, Julius Caesar was the last dictator of the Roman republic. The man called the first ruler of the Roman empire or the first emperor was Augustus Caesar, the adopted son of Julius.
Julius Caesar became the first Roman dictator who was appointed for life (dictator perpetuus, dictator in perpetuity).
A dictator was chosen to rule the Roman Republic, not the Empire, during times of crisis to provide decisive leadership. The most notable example is Julius Caesar, who was appointed dictator perpetuo (dictator for life) in 44 BCE. This appointment was controversial and ultimately led to his assassination, marking a pivotal moment in the transition from Republic to Empire. After Caesar, the title of dictator became less common as the imperial system established itself.
Lenin was the first dictator of the Soviet Union.
assassinatedFlavus was the first designated dictator. Dictator was a temporary office created in times of national emergency, when the country was under martial law. Cincinnatus famously was summoned from his plowing and, once the crisis was over, resigned the dictatorship, and returned to his plow. There are over forty dictators listed in Roman archives. However, Julius Caesar is the only one created Dictator in Perpetuus. Following Caesar's assassination, his heir, Octavius, became the Emperor of Rome, known as Caesar Augustus, although his official title was Princeps.
it was that he was the first dictator and made the professional army
It depends what you consider to be a dictator. The German Empire itself was rather like a dictator, destroying many cultures and replacing them with their own. But Wilhelm was not a dictator as the citizens of Germany voted for the next kaiser.
It was an Empire lead by a dictator.
Adolf