Romans
Greeks
British
Asian Empires
Egyptians
200

This common medical procedure reportedly gets its name after Julius Ceasar, though whether it is related to his birth or death is unknown.

Cesarean Section

200

This man is considered the Father of Philosophy.

Socrates

200

The founder of the Britons.

William the Conqueror

200

This Emperor of Japan was forced to stand next to General McArthur at the end of World War II in order to portray to the world that America, and McArthur, were bigger than Japan, and ?. 

Hirohito

200

Known as the boy king, some have said that due to his lack of heir that he may well have been a she.

Tut

400

The brother of Romulus, considered the namesake of Rome, was killed by Romulus to ensure the Roman territory would bare his name out of jealousy.

Remus.

400

The man whose name is the namesake of the Oath all doctors must take, but also is the origin of the popular synonym of the word bunk.

Hippocrates

400

Considered the crown jewel of the British empire.

India

400

This military leader of the pre-Ottomans repelled attacks from Crusaders twice in their attempts to take Jerusalem.

Saladin.

400

This Pharaoh, known to have been a real individual, is portrayed as an enemy of the Jews and the biblical brother of Moses.

Rameses

800

This God of Music and Medicine is one of the few gods whose name is kept the same between the Greek and Roman mythos.

Apollo

800

This man was the leader of the fabled 300 Spartans who purportedly held off an army of "millions." Also, chances are if you've ever considered kicking your sibling off of your spot on the couch, you've thought of his famous phrase "This. Is. Sparta."

Leonidas

800

Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived is the simple way to remember the fates of the many wives of this infamous British monarch.

Henry VIII

800

This British soldier became a fabled hero in the Arabic world, helping the Asia Minor Arabs repel the Turks during World War I.

Lawrence of Arabia

800

This is the last leader of the Ptolemic Dynasty, famously killed by an asp.

Cleopatra

1600

Ceasar, Pompey, and Crassus make up this group in Roman history.

First Triumvirate

1600

This is the form of government the Greeks operated under.

Democracy

1600

This king sent thousands of soldiers to the shores of his North American colonies, thinking he would be able to quash a "small rebellion."

King George

1600

The first Emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang, was buried in a tomb with nearly a thousand of these men, meant to protect him in the afterlife.

Terracotta Army Soldiers

1600

This Godess of Fertility, is the namesake of a universally celebrated Christian holiday, and her symbol was unfortunately hijacked by the Nazis as the swastika as a reference to a pure race.

Ishtar

2000

This Emperor moved the capital of the Empire eastward, to be closer to the Persian empire. He then had the capital named after him, though today we know the city as Istanbul.

Constantine

2000

The women of the Greek world were fierce and largely independent compared to other cultures of the time period, even being known to carry one of these up their sleeves, meant to fend off their husband or another man who made...unwanted advances towards her as a way of shaming him in public because of the scar left behind.

Serrated Dagger

2000

This leader of a sovereign nation, while wholly independent, can technically be deposed by Queen Elizabeth II if she so desired.

Justin Trudeau

2000

This man, the sixth king of the Babylonian Kingdom, is famous for having created the first written code of laws, of which every modern nation has drawn inspiration from.

Hamurabi

2000

The God of lost souls, he is often projected as a jackal, and confused with Wepwawet, his brother, considered to have been the one to give the first pharaoh his power.

Anubis