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31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
History,CuriositiesJUN 8, 2026

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend

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We love a good revenge story, whether it’s Batman hunting Gotham’s criminals or the Count of Monte Cristo destroying his betrayers. But real-life history delivers payback that’s even wilder than fiction.
People online have been sharing history’s greatest acts of vengeance, featuring icons and everyday people who pulled off some of the most diabolical payback schemes.
For example, there's the story of the French Resistance, who cut the Eiffel Tower’s elevator cables so Hitler would have to climb over 1,600 stairs just to hoist his flag. Or the story of Caesar crucifying pirates for underestimating his ransom.
Some of these stories feel like cathartic justice. Others are just terrifyingly brutal.

#1

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
It's unbelievably petty, but: when France was lost during WW2, some people in Paris cut the elevator cables in the Eiffel Tower so Hitler would have to take the stairs.
31points

#2

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
Buenos Aires Argentina, 1936. The Anchorera family, one of the oldest and most powerful families of the Buenos Aires aristocracy - dating back to the 1700s- lives in a mansion in front of the San Martin Square called "San Martin Palace" (now the ceremonial headquarters of the Chancellery) and a few blocks away they ordered the construction of a basilica designed as a family crypt that could be seen in all its splendor from the mansion.

The Anchorenas were (are) very conservative and when one of the sons wanted to marry the daugther of a millionaire family they opposed to the wedding considering her a "new rich inmigrant" (her parents were irish) and the couple split up.

Years later, the rejected girlfriend, Cora Kanavagh sold 3 of her homestead and ordered the construction of the largest, most massive building in all of south America at that time and chose to build it right between the mansion and the basilica, completely covering the view.

The anchorena would see the "Kavanagh building" every time they looked out the window. And now the only access to the basilica is through a small street named after her.
28points

Long before courts and cops, our ancestors in the Pleistocene era lived in a lawless wild west. If someone stole your mammoths, you couldn’t call 911. You had to handle it yourself or risk becoming an easy target.

That’s where revenge comes in. Experts believe that revenge isn’t just a petty tantrum; it’s actually an ancient survival mechanism hardwired into our biology.

A swift and brutal payback sent a loud public message to the tribe. It protected your resources, family, and life.

#3

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
Peter The Great had his wife's lover's head cut off, and kept pickled in a jar in their bedroom where she could always see it.
25points

#4

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
Much of the marble used by the Soviet Union in its memorial to the fallen of WW2 came from Hitler’s own office.
22points

Scientists have found that the urge to get even is tied to how your DNA builds your brain’s reward system.

Certain variations change how you process dopamine after someone crosses you. For some people, their genetic makeup makes the prospect of punishing a wrongdoer feel incredibly rewarding. It might also make them more likely to hold a grudge.

Studies of related traits such as aggression, punishment behavior, and personality typically find heritability estimates ranging from about 30% to 50%.

#5

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
In November 1002 the English king Æthelred ordered the murder of Englands Danish inhabitants. Among the victims were the sister and brother-in-law of the Danish king Swein Forkbeard, arguably the most powerfull viking leader at the time. He did not take it well and spend the next decade raiding England and finally conquering it in 1013.
19points

#6

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
Pierre Picaud, shoemaker who was betrayed by his friends and got his fiancee stolen. He returned years later and slowly and methodically took them out in elaborate fashion. His story became the basis of the novel the Count of Monte Cristo.
Report
18points

#7

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
The Gauls sacked Rome then for the next 200 years Rome built the best fighting force in the world and conquered Gaul in the end.
18points

Historically, humanity has been split into two totally different camps when it comes to getting even.

You’ve got the peaceful school of thought, popularly summed up by the famous warning: “An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.”

On the flip side, the pro-revenge camp includes some of history’s most famous thinkers, philosophers, and texts.

The ultimate pragmatist of the Renaissance, Niccolò Machiavelli wrote a book on power (The Prince, 1513) and viewed revenge as cold, hard math.

For him, brutal payback was the only way to secure long-term peace and authority.

Even the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle linked revenge to honor and righteous anger.

#8

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
During the Sengoku (Warring States) period in Japan in the 16th century, Azai Nagamasa, a local warlord in the northwest, reneged on his alliance with the most powerful warlord of the time Oda Nobunaga, and rebelled against the Oda clan while Nobunaga was waging war with someone else, thus trapping Nobunaga in an unexpected pincer attack.

Nobunaga, being the military genius that he was, not only survived the pincer attack, but would go on to destroy the treacherous Azai clan who dared to stab him in the back when he least expected it. He then had Nagamasa's skull lacquered in gold to be used as a cup for drinking sake.
15points

#9

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
Probably the treaty of Versailles of 1918. The French were clearly not over the humiliating defeat of 1870.
15points

#10

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
The legend of Peter the I of Portugal and Inês de Castro. Some details are legend, others are fact. King's son who falls in love with a galician lady-in-waiting, which angers both his father and the castillian court, due to possible grave political ramifications. He insists on staying with her, and the couple has 3 children.

Finally the father has had enough and sends 2 men to k**l her, which they do in front of one of the children.
Dude loses it, chases the murderers and rips their heart out, earning the nickname of both Just and Cruel. Legend has it he tore the heart of one killer through the front and the other through the back.

Then, he has the corpse of his lover placed on the throne. Organizes a marriage/coronation ceremony (can't remember which), forcing the entire court to kiss the corpse's hands as if recognizing their lawful portuguese queen.
13points

For power-seekers, revenge serves as a clear warning that you are not to be trifled with. In societies where the rule of law is weak, it acts as a tool to maintain order and deter bullies.

“People who are more vengeful tend to be those who are motivated by power, by authority and by the desire for status. They don’t want to lose face,” says social psychologist Ian McKee.

#11

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
Genghis Khan sent a trade mission with a great amount of wealth to the Khwarazmian Empire in 1219. Ambassadors including trade ambassadors were considered near sacred to Mongolians. You did not harm them for any reason and to do so was considered a great insult to the empire. When the trade mission reached the town of Otrar the governor of the city had them k****d and took the goods that they were bringing for himself.

Genghis Khan then sent another ambassador mission to the shah in order to try to reconcile the situation (aka they wanted the Governor responsible) there are many conflicting reports upon what happened but all of them are bad with at least one of the ambassadors being k****d. This caused Genghis Khan declare war on them. The war swallowed the empire and destroyed it and according to conservative estimates caused the d***h of about 1-2 million people which was a heavy percentage of the population.
12points

#12

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
When Alexander the Great reached the Persian capital of [Persepolis], he and his men sacked the city. The most common thought for why he did so is due to Xerxes I invading Greece in 480 BCE, burning villages, cities and the Parthenon of Athens, until he was defeated and turned back to Persia. This invasion of the Persian wars was long remembered by the Greeks and is given as the primary motivation for why Alexander burned Persepolis.
12points

Ian McKee’s study found that students who highly value authority, tradition, and social dominance are the most likely to support revenge and retribution.

People with these personality traits are naturally less forgiving and less benevolent.

They place very little value on universal connectedness or empathy. Instead, their worldview focuses strictly on hierarchy and punishment.

They also see payback as a justified tool to enforce rules and maintain social order.

#13

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
I'd say that Basil II's revenge against the Bulgarians is a strong contender. So the story goes, Basil II had been leading the Byzantine army against the Bulgarians in a bloody war for about 15 years. After the Battle of Kleidion in 1014, Basil captured about 15,000 Bulgarian soldiers. He ordered them into groups of 100 and stabbed out the eyes of 99 men in each group. The last man had one eye destroyed and was given the task of using that eye to lead the rest of his group back home across the wilderness. Supposedly, the Bulgarian king had a stroke and died when he saw the army of blinded men march in. Needless to say, Basil won that war.
12points

#14

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
In China a consort of the Emperor murdered the queens dog and then fed it to her.

The queen then had the arms and legs cut off the consort and inserted her still living torso into a large jar of wine.

She lived for quite a while.
10points

#15

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
Sikh History has a number of instances when their martyrs were avenged. In 1704, the Mughal Empire’s governor of Sirhind (northern India, Panjab region) sentenced the two youngest sons (ages 5 & 7) of the 10th Guru - Guru Gobind Singh, to be bricked alive. Alongside the children was their elderly grandmother, the Guru’s mother, who hearing the news passed away immediately. In 1710, an army of Sikhs led by Baba Banda Singh Bahadur ransacked numerous towns under Mughal control & set them free. Upon reaching Sirhind they burned the city down.

Then towards the 1730s/1740s the Mughal governors of Panjab had a strong enough grip to exile Sikhs out of the region, leaving their shrines empty almost. The holiest site of the Sikhs - Sri Darbar Sahib (the Golden Temple) in Amritsar was taken over by Massa Ranghar, who defiled the holy site by smoking tobacco in the vicinity & having prostitutes entertain him there. Sikhs at this point were in Rajasthan state, it was a shoot on site sort of deal if any Sikhs were spotted in Panjab let alone the holy city of Amritsar. Yet still, the fearless Bhai Mehtab Singh accompanied by Bhai Sukha Singh disguised themselves as Muslim tax collectors and rode on horseback to Amritsar. Upon reaching they paid their respects to Sri Darbar Sahib before entering, once they entered they see that Ranghar is drunk. Being disguised as tax collectors they show him a bag full of gold coins, the drunk Ranghar stuck his head in the bag of coins to closely admire them. With great swiftness, Bhai Mehtab Singh took his sword out and beheaded Massa Ranghar. A fight broke out between Ranghar’s thugs and the two Sikhs but they were able to make it out and meet back with the rogue Sikh military camped out in Rajasthan. There, the Sikh army played field hockey with Ranghar’s head being the ball. Even today you can go to Rajasthan where the Budha Dal (sikh military) camped out, the tree is still there for where they played hockey with Ranghar’s head. If you go to the Golden Temple and go to the Akaal Takht museum in the complex, you will see the very sword of Bhai Mehtab Singh which was used to behead Massa Ranghar.
10points

Culture changes what triggers your inner John Wick.

Research found that Americans get vengeful when their personal rights are violated, driven by pure anger.

Collectivist cultures (like those in Korea) get vengeful when their sense of duty and obligation is threatened. In such cultures, revenge is contagious — if you insult one person, you insult the whole tribe.

#16

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
I'm going to give it to Nicolo Tartaglia, who was the victim of a French invasion (his name means "stammerer" because his jaw got a saber through it, giving him speech problems).

How did he get his revenge? He learned mathematics (couldn't afford a tutor so he did it on his own, pretty much) and developed ballistics so the cannons could get revenge for him.
9points

#17

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
Bar Kokhba rebelled against Rome. He was initially successful in establishing an independent area. Nevertheless, Rome crushed the rebellion, and as revenge committed genocide against the Jews, sent survivors into diaspora, and went so far as to rename Judea as Syria-Palestina.
8points

#18

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
I think Hitler had one great F--- you towards the French. At the end of WW1 the Germans signed the Armistice in a traincart on a small portion of military train tracks in France. The tracks where removed and the cart was stored in a building close by. The cart was given the name: Wagon de l'Armistice. When in WW2 N**i Germany conquered France Hitler ordered the cart to be broken out of the building, the military tracks to be laid again and the cart to be placed at the exact same location for the new armistice to be signed. Afterwards the building in which the cart had been on display was completely destroyed, and the cart was moved to Berlin, where it was destroyed by Hitler's orders in 1945 so none could take away his revenge.
8points

But payback comes with a steep psychological cost.

Instead of giving you closure, studies show that getting even keeps you trapped in a cycle of overthinking. By constantly dwelling on the grudge, you keep the wound open and prolong your own unhappiness.

In an experiment, it was found that people who punished cheaters actually felt much worse than people who just let it go.

If you don’t get revenge, your brain trivializes the event and moves on.

#19

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
The United States, throughout the Cold War, spent billions and billions of dollars to win an arms race against the USSR. In the end, among other things, having to spend so much on military expenditures, the Soviets went bankrupt.

Fast forward 30 years, then look out your window.
8points

#20

31 Times In History Revenge Was Served So Perfectly It Became The Stuff Of Legend
Turning Confederate General Robert E. Lee's family home in the north into a mass Cemetery for soldiers.
7points

If vengeance makes us miserable, why are we wired this way?

Kevin Carlsmith, a social psychologist at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York, says if you ask people why they seek revenge, they’re likely to tell you their goal is catharsis.

“Punishing others in this context — what they call ‘altruistic punishment’ — is a way to keep societies working smoothly. You’re willing to sacrifice your well-being in order to punish someone who misbehaved.”

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