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Meet Mansa Musa I of Mali

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  • Meet Mansa Musa I of Mali

    Meet Mansa Musa I of Mali – the richest human being in all history










    A new study has produced an inflation-adjusted list of the richest people of all time



    John Hall


    Tuesday 16 October 2012


























    17K




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    When we think of the world’s all-time richest people, names like Bill Gates, Warren Buffet and John D Rockefeller immediately come to mind.

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    But few would have thought, or even heard of, Mansa Musa I of Mali – the obscure 14th century African king who was today named the richest person in all history.
    With an inflation adjusted fortune of $400 billion, Mansa Musa I would have been considerably richer than the world’s current richest man, Carlos Slim, who ranks in 22nd place with a relatively paltry $68 billion.
    The list, compiled by the Celebrity Net Worth website, ranks the world’s 24 richest people of all time. The list advertises itself as the top 25, but 26 names appear in the list.
    Although the list spans 1000 years, some aspects of wealth appear consistent throughout history; there are no women on the list, only three members are alive today, and 14 of the top 25 are American.
    The list uses the annual 2199.6 per cent rate of inflation to adjust historic fortunes – a formula that means $100 million in 1913 would be equal to £2.299.63 billion today.
    Mansa Musa I ruled West Africa’s Malian Empire in the early 1300s, making his fortune by exploiting his country’s salt and gold production. Many mosques he built as a young man still stand today.
    After Mansa Musa I death in 1331, however, his heirs were unable to hang on to the fortune, and it was substantially depleted by civil wars and invading armies.
    Second on the list are the Rothschild family, whose descendants are still among the richest people on the planet. Starting out in banking in the late 18th Century, Mayer Amschel Rothschild’s finance house accumulated a total wealth of $350 billion. The money has since been divided between hundreds of descendants, many of whom are business leaders today.
    Meanwhile John D. Rockefeller, third on the list, is the richest American to have ever lived, worth $340billion in today's USD at the time of his death in 1937.
    In comparison, the poorest man on the list is 82-year-old Warren Buffett, who at his peak net worth, before he started giving his fortune to charity, was $64billion.
    Here’s the full list of the ‘26 richest people of all time’:
    1. Mansa Musa I, (Ruler of Malian Empire, 1280-1331) $400 billion
    2. Rothschild Family (banking dynasty, 1740- ) $350 billion
    3. John D Rockefeller (industrialist, 1839-1937) $340 billion
    4. Andrew Carnegie (industrialist, 1835-1919) $310 billion
    5. Tsar Nicholas II of Russia (last Emperor of Russia, 1868-1918) $300 billion
    6. Osman Ali Khan, Asaf Jah VII (last ruler of Hyderabad, 1886-1967) $236 billion
    7. William the Conqueror (King of England, 1028-1087) $229.5 billion
    8. Muammar Gaddafi (former Libyan leader, 1942-2011) $200 billion
    9. Henry Ford (Ford Motor Company founder, 1863-1947) $199 billion
    10. Cornelius Vanderbilt (industrialist, 1794-1877) $185 billion
    11. Alan Rufus (Fighting companion of William the Conqueror, 1040-1093) $178.65 billion
    12. Bill Gates (Founder of Microsoft, 1955- ) $136 billion
    13. William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey (Norman nobleman, ??-1088) $146.13 billion
    14. John Jacob Astor (businessman, 1864-1912) $121 billion
    15. Richard Fitzalan, 10th Earl of Arundel (English nobleman, 1306-1376) £118.6 billion
    16. John of Gaunt (son of Edward III, 1330-1399) £110 billion
    17. Stephen Girard (shipping and banking mogul, 1750-1831) $105 billion
    18. Alexander Turney Stewart (entrepreneur, 1803-1876) $90 billion
    19. Henry, 1st Duke of Lancaster (English noble, 1310-1361) $85.1 billion
    20. Friedrich Weyerhaeuser (timber mogul, 1834-1914) $80 billion
    21. Jay Gould (railroad tycoon, 1836-1892) $71 billion
    22. Carlos Slim (business magnate, 1940- ) $68 billion
    23. Stephen Van Rensselaer (land owner, 1764- 1839) $68 billion
    24. Marshall Field (Marshall Field & Company founder, 1834-1906) $66 billion
    25. Sam Walton (Walmart founder, 1918-1992) $65billion
    26. Warren Buffett (investor

  • #2
    Interesting that none of the sheiks are listed

    Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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    • #3
      Nor the Queen or Pope...

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      • #4
        Africas richest man today is climbing the charts rapidly. Imagine when he gets that license for his oil refinery.

        --------------------------------------------------------------------

        Africa's Richest Man Bets Big on Oil Refinery
        Aliko Dangote Set to Spend $9 Billion on Refinery Project as Wave of Consumerism Sweeps the Continent

        By DREW HINSHAW
        Dec. 27, 2013 11:18 p.m. ET
        LAGOS, Nigeria—Africa's richest man sat barefoot on his new yacht in a lagoon here after another night of about three hours sleep.

        The day was filled with meetings about his cement company and preparations for a polio-fighting trip with fellow billionaire Bill Gates. His BlackBerry buzzed every few minutes with messages from the president of Benin, and a former U.S. ambassador wanted some face time.

        "You don't see any sign of stress on me," Aliko Dangote said with a tight smile. The 56-year-old businessman said he was getting an energy boost from a weeklong fast that limits him to six glasses of watermelon juice a day.

        For two decades, Mr. Dangote (pronounced DAHN-go-tay) has turned his relentlessness, connections and entrepreneurial bets on the rise of Africa into a fortune estimated at about $22 billion.

        http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/...10322347689090
        "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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        • #5
          Not to mention that he gave much of his wealth away on a trip to Mecca, case should be made that he was the real Santa Claus only coming from the south rather than from the North Pole.
          Last edited by Stonigut; December 29, 2013, 02:31 PM.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Stonigut View Post
            Not to mention that he gave much of his wealth away on a trip to Mecca,
            Who did he give his wealth to? Al-Queda?

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            • #7
              Apparently to as many people as he could, word is that his giveaways created significant inflation from Arabia through the mediterranean and some say had a stimulus effect on the Italian Renaissance. Google him up and you can read the details, sounds like the script for the most improbable story, but it looks like it happened.

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              • #8
                That is because no one knows how much the papacy is worth

                Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

                Comment


                • #9
                  And also the assets are not owned by the Pope as an individual.
                  "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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