Wikihistory – Finding the World’s Leaders through the Ages through Wikipedia Social Networks - Peter Gloor
All software development has been done by Patrick de Boer
The goal of this project at the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence is to create an interactive history book of the most important people of all times from Wikipedia. In a first step towards that goal, we focus on the English Wikipedia, extracting its 800,000 people pages. In future work we intend to repeat this process with other language Wikipedias, to get an understanding of the key influencers over time in different cultures.
In this first prototype created from the English Wikipedia, all people pages are dated, by extracting the dates of birth and of death of each individual. Moreover, the links originating and pointing to their Wikipedia page are gathered. Using this information, 4900 networks through history, from 3000 BC to 1900 CE are calculated, as shown in figure 1. From all the links originating and pointing back to a particular people page, only the links to and from people living at the same time as the person discussed on that page are included.
For instance, in the graph shown in figure 1 above, from all the links to the page about Plutarch, only the links from and to Hadrian, Caesar, and Nero are kept, while the links to Pyrrhus, who died well before Plutarch was born, and the pages to medieval historian Syncellus and modern historian Pisani are ignored as well. Repeating this process leads to 4900 unique networks. For each of these networks, the most central people are determined using the popular PageRank algorithm. To get a second selection criteria among all the influencers, their indegree, i.e. other people pages pointing back to them, is taken. The following list shows the top 50 most influential people of all times, ranked by the Wikipedians, ordered by pagerank and indegree (the number in this list).
name
|
indegree
|
PageRank
|
|
1
|
George_W._Bush
|
4721
|
1
|
2
|
William_Shakespeare
|
3914
|
1
|
3
|
Sidney_Lee
|
3093
|
1
|
4
|
Jesus
|
2176
|
1
|
5
|
Charles_II_of_England
|
1519
|
1
|
6
|
Aristotle
|
1400
|
1
|
7
|
Napoleon
|
1361
|
1
|
8
|
Muhammad
|
1123
|
1
|
9
|
Charlemagne
|
949
|
1
|
10
|
Plutarch
|
925
|
1
|
11
|
Julius_Caesar
|
890
|
1
|
12
|
William_III_of_England
|
890
|
1
|
13
|
Homer
|
820
|
1
|
14
|
Bede
|
799
|
1
|
15
|
Athanasius_of_Alexandria
|
775
|
1
|
16
|
Dante_Alighieri
|
755
|
1
|
17
|
Gautama_Buddha
|
747
|
1
|
18
|
Tiberius
|
697
|
1
|
19
|
Cyril_of_Alexandria
|
684
|
1
|
20
|
Bernard_of_Clairvaux
|
655
|
1
|
21
|
Moses
|
645
|
1
|
22
|
Tacitus
|
610
|
1
|
23
|
Edward_III_of_England
|
582
|
1
|
24
|
Justinian_I
|
532
|
1
|
25
|
David
|
522
|
1
|
26
|
Ashoka
|
486
|
1
|
27
|
Origen
|
337
|
1
|
28
|
Septimius_Severus
|
334
|
1
|
29
|
Polybius
|
307
|
1
|
30
|
Confucius
|
302
|
1
|
31
|
Alexander_Severus
|
278
|
1
|
32
|
Patriarch_Eutychius_of_Alexandria
|
276
|
1
|
33
|
Tutankhamun
|
253
|
1
|
34
|
Akhenaten
|
238
|
1
|
35
|
Ramesses_II
|
228
|
1
|
36
|
Pope_Benjamin_I_of_Alexandria
|
172
|
1
|
37
|
Teti
|
151
|
1
|
38
|
Amenemhat_II
|
146
|
1
|
39
|
Pepi_II_Neferkare
|
145
|
1
|
40
|
Merneith
|
144
|
1
|
41
|
Terence
|
142
|
1
|
42
|
Cato_the_Elder
|
141
|
1
|
43
|
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